On Thu, Sep 3, 2015 at 1:27 PM, Sean Martin <[email protected]> wrote: > Where is it documented that Microsoft does not support DFS for home > directories. I know its not supported for roaming profiles and redirected app > data directories, but haven't seen that statement for home directories.
That's what my boss told me, who's been doing lead research into this. I said I would ask on the mailing list for alternatives, in that case ... And in our case, the home folders are also using folder redirection and offline files, at the same time. Maybe that's the reason? > > - Sean > >> On Sep 3, 2015, at 9:53 AM, Michael Leone <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> Here's my current situation - my users all get assigned 1 of 4 file >> servers, as their home profile (depends on what department they work >> for, and which server is closest). Then Group Policy initiates a >> folder redirection of "My Documents" and "Desktop". Additionally, the >> GPO turns on Offline files (pointing at the same server).. >> >> Here's the problem - I have a lot of users who end up being >> transferred around, and hence at some point, we have to move thir >> files from server A to server B; change their group membership so now >> a GPO which redirects to server B; and we have to clear the offline >> folders cache on the old workstation, else it continues to point at >> server A, and files never sync properly. >> >> This is aggravating, to say the least. >> >> We thought of using DFS (set up a new namespace, adding these 4 file >> servers to it; change all the users to use the DFS namespace to store >> their home profile (and moving all the files there). That way, I never >> have to move files, I need less GPOs, I don't have the offline files >> headache, etc. >> >> Problem is, using DFS for home folders is officially not supported by MS ... >> >> So what are others doing in this situation? There must be others with >> such issues of having to move user folders, etc. >> >> I could make 1 central file server for all home profiles, but if there >> are ever any network hiccups, then you can't reach your files. (so I'd >> still need offline files). >> >> We looked at AppSense, and while it can alleviate some of the issues, >> it can't fix all of them. >> >> > >
