I'm still working on this server with no network cable plugged in.

I tried firing up Management Console to see what was there. Got an error 
message that it couldn't load. After the hair on the back of my neck relaxed, I 
realized the Repair Install was done with SP1 media. After apply SP2, I could 
view the Active Directory stuff as usual. Everything looks as it should in 
there. I have set both DHCP Server and DNS Server services to manual.

Under these circumstances, would an Active Directory restore be necessary? By 
the time this server gets back to its home, about 2 weeks will have gone by 
since it synced up.

----------------------

Bob Hartung
Dir of I.T.
Wisco Industries, Inc.
736 Janesville St.
Oregon, WI 53575
Tel: (608) 835-3106 x215
Fax: (608) 835-7399
e-mail: bhartung(at)wiscoind.com
  _____  

From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:[email protected]]
To: NT System Admin Issues [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tue, 22 Nov 2011 09:23:41 -0600
Subject: Re: Bringing a Win2K3 server back online

Yes, he did.  Missed that. Twice.  :)


In which case, restoring and just putting it back out there is not a good idea. 
    


You want to perform a normal restore, and let the DC sync back up via 
replication
http://www.petri.co.il/restore-windows-server-2003-active-directory.htm    


Don't perform an authoritative restore.   (Or, just DCPROMO it twice and 
rebuild, but that's more timely for no good reason)
    

  



    

 ASB    
 http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker    
 Harnessing the Advantages of Technology for the SMB market…

    

  


On Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 9:59 AM,  <[email protected]> wrote:
      
But he said it is a domain controller...  
  
  
  
  


  
   "Andrew S. Baker"  <[email protected]>   

11/22/2011 08:57 AM  
  
     
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Subject   Re: Bringing a Win2K3 server back online
  
  
  
      
  




  
  
  
It's just a member server.  You should have no issues  with bringing it back 
online.  

Just be sure to rejoin the domain.  

-ASB: http://about.me/Andrew.S.Baker  

Sent from my Motorola Droid  

On Nov 22, 2011 9:32 AM, "Bob Hartung" <[email protected]>  wrote:  
We had a file server at a remote location suffer corruption  from a software 
install gone bad. The server would appear to be booting  normally, making it to 
the Windows 2003 splash screen with the progress  indicator. Unfortunately, the 
screen would then go black and the system  would reboot. The same thing would 
happen trying to boot in Safe Mode and  Last Known Good Configuration.
  
  This server is the only server at this remote location and acts as a file  
server, DHCP server and domain controller. This server and PCs at this  
location are in their own subnet (172.17.x.x) but is a member of our single  AD 
domain. The subnet at my location is 172.16.x.x.
  
  Since this location doesn't have an IT person on staff, it was decided  
they'd ship to server back to me so I could restore it from a tape backup.  
When I received the server, I decided I'd start by trying a Repair Install.  It 
couldn't hurt since I was eventually planning on a restore from tape  anyway. 
At this point, the server has been offline for about a week.
  
  The Repair Install actually seems to have worked. The system came up with  
its normal desktop background but then stopped before loading the desktop  
icons with a requirement to activate the operating system. I did that and  the 
desktop came up. I have not hooked the server up to the network here  yet.
  
  After all that, here's my question. Will I cause a lot of AD problems if  I 
assign this server a 172.16.x.x IP address and bring it up and let it  sync up 
with our domain? I want to make sure it's functioning properly.  Also, I've 
never done a Repair Install before. Does a Repair Install change  things to a 
system that need to be manually reconfigured?
  
  Any advice would be appreciated.
  
  Thanks.
  
  
  ----------------------
  
  Bob Hartung
  Dir of I.T.
  Wisco Industries, Inc.
  736 Janesville St.
  Oregon, WI 53575
  Tel: (608)  835-3106 x215
  Fax: (608)  835-7399
  e-mail: bhartung(at)wiscoind.com    

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