|
The following method will show you what GCs Exchange has
discovered and believes are viable servers: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/316300/en-us
. While this will not tell you the exact GC Exchange is using, it could
be using multiple GCs, it will help you narrow down the list. You could
then use a network capture or look at netstat –ao, assuming Windows 2003,
which will list the current connections and the process ID that owns them. If
this still does not help you track it down you can enable Regtrace and have PSS
help interpret the output. Thanks, -Steve From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Stu Packett I got 'mad.exe' results, but not those specific port numbers.
Would the port number be different for all servers? From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tony Murray How about “netstat –b” ? Look for mad.exe
connecting to port 3268 (or 3269 for SSL). Tony From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Stu Packett Isn't the 'Login Server' the same as the Domain Controller?
If I do a 'set.exe' from a command prompt, I get the same info as
"LOGONSERVER". What I need specifically, is the Global Catalog
server (unless I'm going about this incorrectly). From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Blair, James Stu, Download and configure BGINFO and check to "Login Server"
attribute... http://www.sysinternals.com/Utilities/BgInfo.html James Blair From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Stu Packett We have a
strange situation here where one of our Exchange servers keeps getting 8026 and
2102 errors. This causes our users on that Exchange server to temporarily
lose connection to the Exchange server. Also, my Unity server just failed
over to the secondary Unity server at exactly the same time my last Exchange
8026 error happened. This leads me to believe I may have a problem with a
global catalog server. Is there a way to determine what GC each server is
using? Thanks in
advance. This communication, including any attachments, is confidential. If you are not the intended recipient, you should not read it - please contact me immediately, destroy it, and do not copy or use any part of this communication or disclose anything about it. Thank you. Please note that this communication does not designate an information system for the purposes of the Electronic Transactions Act 2002. |
Title: How To Determine What GC a Server is Using?
- RE: [ActiveDir] How To Determine What GC a Server is Usin... Steve Linehan
- Re: [ActiveDir] How To Determine What GC a Server is... Al Mulnick
- RE: [ActiveDir] How To Determine What GC a Server is... Dmitri Gavrilov
- RE: [ActiveDir] How To Determine What GC a Serve... Dmitri Gavrilov
- RE: [ActiveDir] How To Determine What GC a Server is... Michael B. Smith
