On Thu, Aug 7, 2014 at 3:13 PM, Charles F Sullivan
<[email protected]> wrote:
> I have always just exported this Reg key:
> HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\LanmanServer\Shares
> Of course you could easily script the export using reg.exe in a batch file.
>
> As long as the file server at both ends is Windows, as opposed to say a NAS
> or SAMBA Server, I don't think it should matter what version of Windows the
> source and target are.

No, they will be Windows servers. A 1 node cluster, actually, as the
DR for the 2 node production cluster.

> This is awfully simple, but it has always worked for me.  Just remember to
> restart the Server service after you import the Reg file.
>
> In my DR testing I don't have to do anything like this, to be honest, since
> the backup software includes the System State.

True, but we won't be running restores. We have 2 sites, and SAN
replication set up between them So the data on disk exists at the
other site already. We would need to fire up the Windows boxes there;
rename them to have the production server name; mount the SAN volume
as disk drive. Import the share settings.

And no users should be the wiser. They still see a server with the
same name; the share permissions are the same as before; the NTFS
folder permissions are already there on the disk.

If you can afford it, this is the way to do DR. :-) No long wait for
restores. I have 1 file server that has something like 4TB of data and
3M+ files (user folders and departmental shares). That would take
forever to restore - open, write, close, verify all those small files
...


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