I resolved my DFS issue from last week (pilot error :)). My question is this: 
Is there a reason not to leverage DFS for most file shares? It seems to me like 
it's a good way to be able to down a server (read: patch and reboot) and keep 
the file shares available, but I also know with something that's new to me 
makes it easy to overlook something simple.

I'd guess it's not a good idea to DFS *every* file share, just mission-critical 
ones? In the scenario I care about the sites are all connected at 10Mbit or 
better and there's no more than 40 users connected to any one server at a time 
and 55 is the total user count. All storage is local, no SAN /iSCSI, etc.

I did find this too:
http://blogs.technet.com/b/askds/archive/2010/11/01/common-dfsr-configuration-mistakes-and-oversights.aspx

Seems like the only downside - as long as you're paying attention to things 
listed in the link above - is using 2x/3x+ of the overall disk space as without 
DFSR, and possible traffic if you are a huge environment with very slow 
connections.
David Lum
Sr. Systems Engineer // NWEATM
Office 503.548.5229 // Cell (voice/text) 503.267.9764



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