HI,

You have a physical host that is a DC, and you then have a server as a guest VM 
(that is presumably joined to the DC’s domain?)

If the physical machine goes bust, you’re going to have to create a new DC, and 
rejoin the machine to the new domain. This means your previous user accounts on 
the member server will no longer be valid, and various other oddities may occur 
(depending on the apps you are using). I’d consider virtualising your DC as 
well.

Cheers
Ken

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Greg Keogh
Sent: Saturday, 26 March 2011 11:02 AM
To: 'ozDotNet'
Subject: RE: [OT} Rated songs lost as well

Hi Ken, as a part of my recent DC upgrade, I did make a small move to 
virtualisation. I used to have physical DC and server boxes, both old hot and 
noisy. I now have a physical DC and the server is a Hyper-V machine inside it. 
I could have taken it a step further and had a host OS which then has a virtual 
DC and server, but I ran into some obstacles.

As the host I originally considered using the stripped down Windows 2008 (I 
forget it’s name) which has nothing but a command prompt. I actually installed 
it and was so shocked by how primitive the interface was that I asked in this 
group if I wasn’t going mad, and I wasn’t. It was just too much bother to 
administer things from the command prompt. I then considered using a Linux host 
(virtual box?) for the DC and server and maybe others, but once again the 
learning curve was too time consuming.

I’m happy with the currently setup. Now that I’ve been reminded, I’m going to 
take a backup of the Hyper-V files that contain my server. If the box explodes, 
then recreating the DC is a relatively trivial matter, as it’s just a DC and 
jukebox. I can then easily restore the virtual server which took days to 
prepare.

Greg

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