The most critical thing with an AD migration is to have a rock-solid DNS
in place before you migrate the first domain controller.  If you aren't
sure how to do that, I highly recommend a consultant for the design
piece, and to assist you with building the root of the forest and the
DNS.

I opted to do an in-place migration from NT4 to Windows 2003 AD, because
I have 32 domains and there's only one of me.  I'd like to do a domain
consolidation, but again, there's only one of me.  The in-place actually
worked fine, even on our 8-year-old domain controllers.  The process is
essentially to take an NT4 domain controller, replicate to all BDCs,
then bring the BDCs down and hold them in reserve.  Upgrade the PDC
in-place to Windows 2003.  It's messier than a clean install, but a
whole lot faster, and users don't have to get new accounts.  Once the
upgrade is done, the PDC will ask you if you want to promote the
machine, which you do.  Promote it, and then promote another server
(non-domain-controller is easiest) to be your BDC (those roles don't
really exist anymore, but it's the easiest way to refer to them).
Upgrade the domains and then the forest to native mode when all DCs are
2003.

Bringing up new domains and new user accounts is, of course, preferable,
but also much more time-consuming and will require the users to log onto
the new accounts.  In our case, we have too small a support organization
for that to be feasible.  The in-place made the whole migration almost
completely transparent to the users; I doubt most knew that anything
changed at all.  They DID notice when OWA went from the 5.5 interface to
2003, and boy, were they all happy about that!  I probably got more
thank-yous for that than anything over the course of the last 25 years
of playing with servers.

For Exchange, I'd recommend bringing up a brand-spanking-new Exchange
2003 server, creating a connection agreement with your 5.5 site, then
moving mailboxes.  Migrate your public folders and connectors, then
remove the connection agreements and bring down the 5.5 box.  When all
Exchange servers are at 2003, upgrade to native mode.  

Be careful of the Active Directory migration process creating disabled
user accounts that have the Exchange mailbox properties attached to them
(this happened to me with 4 domains).  Don't delete those accounts - run
the Active Directory cleanup tool to merge those with the non-disabled
accounts that don't have the Exchange properties. 

All of this stuff is documented extensively in whitepapers and best
practices documents, etc., but because no one who doesn't know your
environment can really tell you the best way to go, no one can point you
to a single document that will tell you how best to do a migration in
YOUR environment.  A consultant is where you'd want to turn for that,
someone who can come in, study your environment, and then make the
appropriate recommendations.

Thanks,

Geni Hawkins

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Albert Duro
Sent: Thursday, February 22, 2007 8:25 AM
To: Exchange Discussions
Subject: Re: [off-topic] Upgrading from NT4 domains to Win 2003 AD

Wow, this is ancient history and faded memories.  All I can offer is
that MS documentation was abundant and pretty much all that was needed.
But what's needed most is studying, planning, more studying, and more
planning.  And, although you offer few details, it sounds like you have
a substantial site architectural job ahead of you.  It's probably not
what you want to hear, but you need a consultant who knows how to do
this.

----- Original Message -----
From: "titanic panic" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Exchange Discussions" <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, February 21, 2007 11:38 AM
Subject: [off-topic] Upgrading from NT4 domains to Win 2003 AD


> Hello all,
>
> Please forgive the off-topic question, but I couldn't resist asking
> this knowledgeable group of admins their advice on this question.
>
> We are finally moving off our NT4/Exch5.5 systems and would like to
> upgrade to Win2003 AD/Exch 2003.  We have 5 offices, all of which are
> using NT4 domains and trusts between the offices over PPTP VPN links.
>
> What is the most highly recommended book/documentation to perform this
> scary and Herculean task?
>
> Thanks,
>
> joon
>
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