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14.5 Upgrade ProcessThe upgrade process to Windows Server 2003 should be straightforward for most deployments. No forest restructuring is required, no user profile or workstation changes are necessary assuming you are running the latest service pack and hotfixes, and there should be no need for political turf battles over namespace usage and ownership like there might have been with Windows 2000. We are going to outline five high-level steps that you should follow to upgrade to Windows Server 2003. They include performing an inventory of your domain controllers and clients to determine if there will be any compatibility showstoppers. You are then ready to do a trial run and perform extensive testing to see what impact the upgrade may have on functionality. Next, you have to prepare your forest and domains with ADPrep, which we've already discussed in some depth. Finally, you'll upgrade your domain controllers to Windows Server 2003. In Section 14.6, we will describe what to do after you've upgraded your domain controllers as far as monitoring, raising functional levels, and taking advantage of new features goes. 14.5.1 Inventory Domain ControllersA good first step before you start the upgrade process is to do a complete inventory of all of the hardware and software that is on your domain controllers. You'll then want to contact your vendors to determine whether they've already done compatibility testing and can verify support for Windows Server 2003. The last thing you want to do is start the upgrade process and find out halfway through that a critical monitoring application or backup software that runs on your domain controllers does not work correctly. Much of this testing can be done in your own labs, but it is always good to check with the vendors and get their seal of approval. After all, if a problem does arise, you'll want to make sure they are supporting the new platform and won't push back on you. Next you'll want to ensure you have all the necessary hotfixes and service packs installed. A good overview of Microsoft's recommendations is documented in Microsoft Knowledge Base Article 331161. What you need to install depends on how long you plan on having your Windows 2000 domain controllers around. If you plan on a quick upgrade, you'll only need to do the minimal amount of patching required. But if you are going to have a prolonged migration, you should consider applying all the current fixes and service packs. After you are sure that your hardware and software is fully up to date and will work under Windows Server 2003, you'll then want to do a very thorough check of your current domain controllers and make sure they are running without error. Go through the event logs and resolve any errors and warnings that may be occurring. The dcdiag and netdiag commands are useful for identifying potential issues. Also, if you don't already trend CPU and memory statistics, you'll need to start. The reason for collecting all this data is that if problems occur after the upgrade to Windows Server 2003, you'll want to narrow it down to whether it was previously a problem or if it is new, most likely as a result of the upgrade. If you don't collect this data, you are setting yourself up for trouble. A good compatibility test is to run the /checkupgradeonly switch with the Windows Server 2003 installer (winnt32.exe). X:\> i386\winnt32.exe /checkupgradeonly This command will go through the steps as if you were upgrading, but it will check only the applications you have installed and the status of the forest. If you have not run ADPrep yet, it will return an error about that. At this point you'll also want to check the status of your backups. Before you run ADPrep you should have successful backups for at least two domain controllers in every forest and every FSMO role owner. You should also ensure that your disasterrecovery procedures are well documented and have been tested. 14.5.2 Inventory ClientsThe good news as far as clients go is that there aren't a lot of requirements for them to work in a Windows Server 2003 forest. In fact, there are no changes required for Windows XP and Windows 2000 machines. For NT 4.0 clients, you should have at least Service Pack 3, and Microsoft recommends Service Pack 6a. For Windows 98 and Windows 95 clients, they will need the DS Client installed as described in Microsoft Knowledge Base Article 323466 or to have their OS upgraded to Windows 2000 or later (not a bad idea anyway if you can get away with it). Other than that, your clients are fine as is. That said, any wise AD administrator would make sure the clients are thoroughly tested before starting the upgrade. Especially with a new version of Active Directory, there are undoubtedly issues that have yet to be discovered, and you don't want to be the first to find them after you've already upgraded! 14.5.3 Trial RunWhile we can go on all day about how easy the upgrade process is, the proof is in the proverbial pudding. We consider it a mandatory step that before you upgrade your first production domain controller to Windows Server 2003, you go through extensive testing in a "production-like" Active Directory forest. So what do we mean by "production-like"? That depends on how much time and resources you have. Perhaps the best way to simulate your production environment is to actually take a production domain controller from each domain in the forest off of the network and put it on a private network. You can then build up the forest on the private network, and all the data that is in production is now in the test environment you just set up. Before we go any further, we want to make it clear that this is the most painstaking option for building a test network, because Active Directory does not self-heal after you put the domain controller on the private network. In fact, you may encounter problems getting the DC to work at all since it cannot initially contact any of the FSMO masters. Microsoft has stated that they'd like to make this process easier and even suggested they may document how to do it, but at the time of publication of this book, nothing of the sort was available. Your other alternative is to populate the test forest with as much of the data from production as possible. If you already have provisioning scripts or a metadirectory that feeds your production Active Directory environment, you may be able to utilize a similar process to populate the test forest. Once you have a test forest that simulates production up and running, you should add as many clients as possible that represent your users and the various operating systems you support. If you are running Exchange 2000, you should also install it, along with any other directory-enabled applications. Sounds tedious? It is necessary to cover your bases no matter how trivial Microsoft says the upgrade will be. The last thing you want to happen is a major blow-up and then having to explain to your CIO that you didn't do very extensive testing because Microsoft said the upgrade was easy. The key with the trial run is to document everything thoroughly. If you see anomalies, be sure to document them and follow up to determine whether it is going to be a problem. By the time you are done with the trial-run period, you should have an end-to-end document that describes how you are going to upgrade, how long you plan to wait before you raise functional levels, and in what priority you are going to enable new features. 14.5.4 Prepare the Forest and DomainsAs we outlined earlier, before you can promote the first Windows Server 2003 domain controller into your forest, you have to run the ADPrep command. After you've done the DC and client inventories and determined there are no showstoppers to moving forward, you should run ADPrep. First, you must run ADPrep /forestprep, and after the changes have replicated throughout the forest, you need to run ADPrep /domainprep in every domain. Pretty easy, right? There are a couple of gotchas to be aware of with the schema. 14.5.4.1 Exchange 2000If you've installed Exchange 2000 into the forest before running ADPrep, you have to correct some mistakes that were made in the Exchange 2000 schema extensions. Specifically, both ADPrep and Exchange 2000 define labledURI, houseIdentifier and secretary attributes, but Exchange 2000 does not use the correct LDAP display names (lDAPDisplayName) as defined in RFC 2798. If you run ADPrep after Exchange 2000 has been installed without fixing these attributes, you can end up with duplicate schema objects with different lDAPDisplayName attributes. To solve the problem, you must run the inetorgpersonfix.ldf file that is located in \support\tools\support.cab. This LDIF file fixes the lDAPDisplayName attributes of the three attributes. First save the inetorgpersonfix.ldf file, then import it using the ldifde utility. Here is an example where we will be importing into the mycorp.com forest: ldifde.exe /i /f inetOrgPersonFix.ldf /c "DC=X" "DC=mycorp,DC=com" Note that inetorgpersonfix.ldf uses DC=X as the forest path, which is why we needed to use the /c switch to replace it with our own forest path. 14.5.4.2 SFU 2.0If you've installed Microsoft Services For UNIX (SFU) 2.0 in your Windows 2000 forest, you can run across a similar to issue as the one just described with Exchange 2000. The problem again comes back to an incorrectly defined attribute. In this case it is the uid attribute. Microsoft has developed a hotfix for this issue, which is described in Microsoft Knowledge Base Article 293783.
14.5.5 Upgrade Domain ControllersNow comes the easy part. You may be wondering how we could possibly say that doing the upgrade is the easy part. Perhaps we should preface it with this: if you've done all your homework, this will be the easy part. All of the hard work comes from doing the DC and client inventory, checking for compatibility issues, monitoring, checking event logs, getting a representative baseline, performing mock upgrades, etc. By the time you get the point of actually doing the upgrades in production, it should be second nature to you. You can proceed with the upgrade process as slowly or as quickly as you want. Windows Server 2003 domain controllers are fully compatible with Windows 2000 domain controllers. They can also serve any role in a forest, including acting as a global catalog server, any FSMO master, ISTG or Bridgehead server. |
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