Best practices for setting up virtual servers on Windows Server 2012 R2

I am creating a Web server from scratch with Windows Server 2012 R2. I expect to have a host server, and then 3 virtual servers...one that runs all of the web apps as a web server, another as a Database Server, and then on for session state.  I
expect to use Windows Server 2012 R2 for the Web Server and Database Server, but Windows 7 for the session state.
I have an SATA2 Intel SROMBSASMR RAID card with battery back up that I am attaching a small SSD drive that I expect to use for the session state, and an IBM Server RAID M1015 SATA3 card that I am running Intel 520 Series SSD's that I expect to
use for Web server and Database server.
I have some questions. I am considering using the internal USB with a flash drive to boot the Host off of, and then using two small SSD's in a Raid 0 for the Web server (theory being that if something goes wrong, session state is on a different drive), and
then 2 more for the Database server in a RAID 1 configuration.
please feel free to poke holes in this and tell me of a better way to do it.
I am assuming that having the host running on a slow USB drive that is internal has no effect on the virtual servers after it is booted up, and the virtual servers are booted up?
DCSSR

I am creating a Web server from scratch with Windows Server 2012 R2. I expect to have a host server, and then 3 virtual servers...one that runs all of the web apps as a web server, another as a Database Server, and then on for session state.  I
expect to use Windows Server 2012 R2 for the Web Server and Database Server, but Windows 7 for the session state.
I have an SATA2 Intel SROMBSASMR RAID card with battery back up that I am attaching a small SSD drive that I expect to use for the session state, and an IBM Server RAID M1015 SATA3 card that I am running Intel 520 Series SSD's that I expect to
use for Web server and Database server.
I have some questions. I am considering using the internal USB with a flash drive to boot the Host off of, and then using two small SSD's in a Raid 0 for the Web server (theory being that if something goes wrong, session state is on a different drive), and
then 2 more for the Database server in a RAID 1 configuration.
please feel free to poke holes in this and tell me of a better way to do it.
I am assuming that having the host running on a slow USB drive that is internal has no effect on the virtual servers after it is booted up, and the virtual servers are booted up?
There are two issues about RAID0:
1) It's not as fast as people think. So with a general purpose file system like NTFS or ReFS (choice for Windows is limited) you're not going to have any great benefits as there are very low chances whole RAID stripe would be updated @ the same time (I/Os
need to touch all SSDs in a set so 256KB+ in a real life). Web server workload is quite far away from sequential reads or writes so RAID0 is not going to shine here. Log-structures file system (or at least some FS with logging capabilities, think about ZFS
and ZIL enabled) *will* benefit from SSDs in RAID0 properly assigned. 
2) RAID0 is dangerous. One lost SSD would render whole RAID set useless. So unless you build a network RAID1-over-RAID0 (mirror RAID sets between multiple hosts with a virtual SAN like or synchronous replication solutions) - you'll be sitting on a time bomb.
Not good :)
StarWind VSAN [Virtual SAN] clusters Hyper-V without SAS, Fibre Channel, SMB 3.0 or iSCSI, uses Ethernet to mirror internally mounted SATA disks between hosts.

Similar Messages

  • Best practice for install oracle 11g r2 on Windows Server 2008 r2

    Dear all,
    May I know what is the best practice for install oracle 11g r2 on windows server 2008 r2. Should I create a special account for windows for the oracle database installation? What permission should I grant to the folders where Oracle installed and the database related files located (datafiles, controlfiles, etc.)
    Just grant Full for Administrators and System and remove permissions for all others accounts?
    Also how should I configure windows firewall to allow client connect to the database.
    Thanks for your help.

    Hi Christian,
    Check this on MOS
    *RAC Assurance Support Team: RAC Starter Kit and Best Practices (Windows) [ID 811271.1]*
    https://support.oracle.com/CSP/main/article?cmd=show&type=NOT&doctype=BULLETIN&id=811271.1
    DOC Modified: 14-DEC-2010
    Regards,
    Levi Pereira

  • (Request for:) Best practices for setting up a new Windows Server 2012 r2 Hyper-V Virtualized AD DC

    Could you please share your best practices for setting up a new Windows Server 2012 r2 Hyper-V Virtualized AD DC, that will be running on a new WinSrv 2012 r2 host server.   (This
    will be for a brand new network setup, new forest, domain, etc.)
    Specifically, your best practices regarding:
    the sizing of non virtual and virtual volumes/partitions/drives,  
    the use of sysvol, logs, & data volumes/drives on hosts & guests,
    RAID levels for the host and the guest(s),  
    IDE vs SCSI and drivers both non virtual and virtual and the booting there of,  
    disk caching settings on both host and guests.  
    Thanks so much for any information you can share.

    A bit of non essential additional info:
    We are small to midrange school district who, after close to 20 years on Novell networks, have decided to design and create a new Microsoft network and migrate all of our data and services
    over to the new infrastructure .   We are planning on rolling out 2012 r2 servers with as much Hyper-v virtualization as possible.
    During the last few weeks we have been able to find most of the information we need to undergo this project, and most of the information was pretty solid with little ambiguity, except for
    information regarding virtualizing the DCs, which as been a bit inconsistent.
    Yes, we have read all the documents that most of these posts tend point to, but found some, if not most are still are referring to performing this under Srvr 2008 r2, and haven’t really
    seen all that much on Srvr2012 r2.
    We have read these and others:
    Introduction to Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) Virtualization (Level 100), 
    Virtualized Domain Controller Technical Reference (Level 300),
    Virtualized Domain Controller Cloning Test Guidance for Application Vendors,
    Support for using Hyper-V Replica for virtualized domain controllers.
    Again, thanks for any information, best practices, cookie cutter or otherwise that you can share.
    Chas.

  • Best practices for setting up projects

    We recently adopted using Captivate for our WBT modules.
    As a former Flash and Director user, I can say it’s
    fast and does some great things. Doesn’t play so nice with
    others on different occasions, but I’m learning. This forum
    has been a great source for search and read on specific topics.
    I’m trying to understand best practices for using this
    product. We’ve had some problems with file size and
    incorporating audio and video into our projects. Fortunately, the
    forum has helped a lot with that. What I haven’t found a lot
    of information on is good or better ways to set up individual
    files, use multiple files and publish projects. We’ve decided
    to go the route of putting standalones on our Intranet. My gut says
    yuck, but for our situation I have yet to find a better way.
    My question for discussion, then is: what are some best
    practices for setting up individual files, using multiple files and
    publishing projects? Any references or input on this would be
    appreciated.

    Hi,
    Here are some of my suggestions:
    1) Set up a style guide for all your standard slides. Eg.
    Title slide, Index slide, chapter slide, end slide, screen capture,
    non-screen capture, quizzes etc. This makes life a lot easier.
    2) Create your own buttons and captions. The standard ones
    are pretty ordinary, and it's hard to get a slick looking style
    happening with the standard captions. They are pretty easy to
    create (search for add print button to learn how to create
    buttons). There should instructions on how to customise captions
    somewhere on this forum. Customising means that you can also use
    words, symbols, colours unique to your organisation.
    3) Google elearning providers. Most use captivate and will
    allow you to open samples or temporarily view selected modules.
    This will give you great insight on what not to do and some good
    ideas on what works well.
    4) Timings: Using the above research, I got others to
    complete the sample modules to get a feel for timings. The results
    were clear, 10 mins good, 15 mins okay, 20 mins kind of okay, 30
    mins bad, bad, bad. It's truly better to have a learner complete
    2-3 short modules in 30 mins than one big monster. The other
    benefit is that shorter files equal smaller size.
    5) Narration: It's best to narrate each slide individually
    (particularly for screen capture slides). You are more likely to
    get it right on the first take, it's easier to edit and you don't
    have to re-record the whole thing if you need to update it in
    future. To get a slicker effect, use at least two voices: one male,
    one female and use slightly different accents.
    6) Screen capture slides: If you are recording filling out
    long window based databse pages where the compulsory fields are
    marked (eg. with a red asterisk) - you don't need to show how to
    fill out every field. It's much easier for the learner (and you) to
    show how to fill out the first few fields, then fade the screen
    capture out, fade the end of the form in with the instructions on
    what to do next. This will reduce your file size. In one of my
    forms, this meant the removal of about 18 slides!
    7) Auto captions: they are verbose (eg. 'Click on Print
    Button' instead of 'Click Print'; 'Select the Print Preview item'
    instead of 'Select Print Preview'). You have to edit them.
    8) PC training syntax: Buttons and hyperlinks should normally
    be 'click'; selections from drop down boxes or file lists are
    normally 'select': Captivate sometimes mixes them up. Instructions
    should always be written in the correct order: eg. Good: Click
    'File', Select 'Print Preview'; Bad: Select 'Print Preview' from
    the 'File Menu'. Button names, hyperlinks, selections are normally
    written in bold
    9) Instruction syntax: should always be written in an active
    voice: eg. 'Click Options to open the printer menu' instead of
    'When the Options button is clicked on, the printer menu will open'
    10) Break all modules into chapters. Frame each chapter with
    a chapter slide. It's also a good idea to show the Index page
    before each chapter slide with a progress indicator (I use an
    animated arrow to flash next to the name of the next chapter), I
    use a start button rather a 'next' button for the start of each
    chapter. You should always have a module overview with the purpose
    of the course and a summary slide which states what was covered and
    they have complete the module.
    11) Put a transparent click button somewhere on each slide.
    Set the properties of the click box to take the learner back to the
    start of the current chapter by pressing F2. This allows them to
    jump back to the start of their chapter at any time. You can also
    do a similar thing on the index pages which jumps them to another
    chapter.
    12) Recording video capture: best to do it at normal speed
    and be concious of where your mouse is. Minimise your clicks. Most
    people (until they start working with captivate) are sloppy with
    their mouse and you end up with lots of unnecessarily slides that
    you have to delete out. The speed will default to how you recorded
    it and this will reduce the amount of time you spend on changing
    timings.
    13) Captions: My rule of thumb is minimum of 4 seconds - and
    longer depending on the amount of words. Eg. Click 'Print Preview'
    is 4 seconds, a paragraph is longer. If you creating knowledge
    based modules, make the timing long (eg. 2-3 minutes) and put in a
    next button so that the learner can click when they are ready.
    Also, narration means the slides will normally be slightly longer.
    14) Be creative: Capitvate is desk bound. There are some
    learners that just don't respond no matter how interactive
    Captivate can be. Incorporate non-captivate and desk free
    activities. Eg. As part of our OHS module, there is an activity
    where the learner has to print off the floor plan, and then wander
    around the floor marking on th emap key items such as: fire exits;
    first aid kit, broom and mop cupboard, stationary cupboard, etc.
    Good luck!

  • What is the best practice for setting up warehouse inventory for oil & gas tank farm

    Hi, i want to know the best practice for setting up warehouse inventory for oil & gas tank farm. SAP has these levels for inventory management in warehouse environment: warehouse-aisle-shelf-bin. To me the bin seems to be the central location for inventory. So do i set up each oil tank as a bin location?

    Hi,
    Please refer below link:
    https://help.sap.com/saphelp_sbo900/helpdata/EN/ad/4f233a7b864c7cbe2b57ad09246adb/content.htm
    SAP Business One 9.0 Training - Feb 6, 2013 - Warehouse Bins - YouTube
    Thanks & Regards,
    Nagarajan

  • Best practice for setting or detecting screen size?

    Hi All,
    Trying to determine a best practice for setting or detecting the screen size. For playbook and iOS, I can set them. But for Android, the number of devices is too large so I'd rather detect. My first choice is to use the stage.stageHeight and stage.stageWidth. This works fine if I set my stage properties with standard meta data:
    [SWF(height="320", width="480", frameRate="64", backgroundColor="#010101")]
    However, if I use the application descriptor file to set the stage dimentions (as suggested by Christian Cantrell here http://www.adobe.com/devnet/flash/articles/authoring_for_multiple_screen_sizes.html)
    <initialWindow>
    <aspectRatio>landscape</aspectRatio>
    <autoOrients>false</autoOrients>
    <width>320</width>
    <height>480</height>
    <fullScreen>true</fullScreen>
    </initialWindow>
    Then the stage.stageHeight and stage.stageWidth are not the correct numbers when my main class is added to the stage. Sometime after the main class is added to the stage, then those numbers are fine. Is there an event I can wait for to know that the stage.stageHeight and stage.stageWidth are correct?
    Thanks in advance!

    Hi Lee,
    Thanks for the quick response! However, for some reason the heightPercent & widthPercent metadata tags are not working as expected for me.
    I have a wrapper class that I target for compiling, WagErgApplePhone.as where I've got my metadata
    [SWF(heightPercent="100%", widthPercent="100%", frameRate="64", backgroundColor="#010101")]
    sets some stage properties
    stage.quality=StageQuality.LOW;
    stage.scaleMode = StageScaleMode.NO_SCALE;
    stage.align = StageAlign.TOP_LEFT;
    and instantiates my main class
    var main:Main = new Main();
    addChild(main);
    my main class constructor even waits for the stage
    public function Main(){
    if (stage) init();
    else addEventListener(Event.ADDED_TO_STAGE, init);
    in my init function, stage.stageHeight traces out as 375 (expecting 320).
    i have a function which is called via a button press event by the user, and stage.stageHeight traces out correctly (320) there. that's what makes me think that if i wait long enough, i can get the correct stageHeight before init/drawing. but i'm not sure what event to listen for, or if there's another trick.
    if i use Capabilities.screenResolutionX and Capabilities.screenResolutionY the correct values are provided for mobile, but these values are not useful for the desktop and web version of the app. if there's no other solution, i'll execute different code depending on platform.
    again, for reference, my app descriptor:
    <initialWindow>
    <aspectRatio>landscape</aspectRatio>
    <autoOrients>false</autoOrients>
    <width>320</width>
    <height>480</height>
    <content>bin-iOS/WagErgApplePhone.swf</content>
    <title>WAG ERG</title>
    <fullScreen>true</fullScreen>
    <renderMode>cpu</renderMode>
    </initialWindow>
    looking forward to any other ideas to try out & thanks so much for your thoughts! if you want to really dig in, this is an opensource project at code.google.com/p/wag-erg/

  • Best practice for installation oracle 11g rac on windows 2008 server x64

    hello!
    can somebody tell me a good book or an other kind of literature regarding "best practice for installation oracle 11g rac on windows 2008 server x64"? thx in advance!
    best regards,
    christian

    Hi Christian,
    Check this on MOS
    *RAC Assurance Support Team: RAC Starter Kit and Best Practices (Windows) [ID 811271.1]*
    https://support.oracle.com/CSP/main/article?cmd=show&type=NOT&doctype=BULLETIN&id=811271.1
    DOC Modified: 14-DEC-2010
    Regards,
    Levi Pereira

  • Best practices for 2 x DNS servers with 2 x sites

    I am curious if someone can help me with best practices for my DNS servers.  Let me give my network layout first.
    I have 1 site with 2 x Windows 2012 Servers (1 GUI - 10.0.0.7, the other CORE - 10.0.0.8) the 2nd site connected via VPN has 2 x Windows 2012R2 Servers (1 GUI - 10.2.0.7, the other CORE - 10.2.0.8)  All 4 servers are promoted to DC's and have DNS services
    running.
    Here goes my questions:
    Site #1
    DC-01 - NIC IP address for DNS server #1 set to 10.0.0.8, DNS server #2 set to 127.0.0.1 (should I add my 2nd sites DNS servers under Advanced as well? 10.2.0.7 & 10.2.0.8)
    DC-02 - NIC IP address for DNS server #1 set to 10.0.0.7, DNS server #2 set to 127.0.0.1 (should I add my 2nd sites DNS servers under Advanced as well? 10.2.0.7 & 10.2.0.8)
    Site #2
    DC-01 - NIC IP address for DNS server #1 set to 10.2.0.8, DNS server #2 set to 127.0.0.1 (should I add my 2nd sites DNS servers under Advanced as well? 10.0.0.7 & 10.0.0.8)
    DC-02 - NIC IP address for DNS server #1 set to 10.2.0.7, DNS server #2 set to 127.0.0.1 (should I add my 2nd sites DNS servers under Advanced as well? 10.0.0.7 & 10.0.0.8)
    Under the DNS management > Forward Lookup Zones > _msdcs.mydomain.local
    > properties > Name Servers should I have all of my other DNS servers, or should I have my WAN DNS servers? In a single server scenario I always put my WAN DNS server but a bit unsure in this scenario. 
    Under the DNS management > Forward Lookup Zones > _msdcs.mydomain.local > properties > General > Type should all servers be set to
    Active Directory - Integrated > Primary Zone? Should any of these be set to
    Secondary Zone?
    Under the DNS management > Forward Lookup Zones > _msdcs.mydomain.local > properties > Zone Transfers should I allow zone transfers?
    Would the following questions be identical to the Forward Lookup Zone mydomain.local as well?

    I am curious if someone can help me with best practices for my DNS servers.  Let me give my network layout first.
    I have 1 site with 2 x Windows 2012 Servers (1 GUI - 10.0.0.7, the other CORE - 10.0.0.8) the 2nd site connected via VPN has 2 x Windows 2012R2 Servers (1 GUI - 10.2.0.7, the other CORE - 10.2.0.8)  All 4 servers are promoted to DC's and have DNS services
    running.
    Here goes my questions:
    Site #1
    DC-01 - NIC IP address for DNS server #1 set to 10.0.0.8, DNS server #2 set to 127.0.0.1 (should I add my 2nd sites DNS servers under Advanced as well? 10.2.0.7 & 10.2.0.8)
    DC-02 - NIC IP address for DNS server #1 set to 10.0.0.7, DNS server #2 set to 127.0.0.1 (should I add my 2nd sites DNS servers under Advanced as well? 10.2.0.7 & 10.2.0.8)
    Site #2
    DC-01 - NIC IP address for DNS server #1 set to 10.2.0.8, DNS server #2 set to 127.0.0.1 (should I add my 2nd sites DNS servers under Advanced as well? 10.0.0.7 & 10.0.0.8)
    DC-02 - NIC IP address for DNS server #1 set to 10.2.0.7, DNS server #2 set to 127.0.0.1 (should I add my 2nd sites DNS servers under Advanced as well? 10.0.0.7 & 10.0.0.8)
    Under the DNS management > Forward Lookup Zones > _msdcs.mydomain.local
    > properties > Name Servers should I have all of my other DNS servers, or should I have my WAN DNS servers? In a single server scenario I always put my WAN DNS server but a bit unsure in this scenario. 
    Under the DNS management > Forward Lookup Zones > _msdcs.mydomain.local > properties > General > Type should all servers be set to
    Active Directory - Integrated > Primary Zone? Should any of these be set to
    Secondary Zone?
    Under the DNS management > Forward Lookup Zones > _msdcs.mydomain.local > properties > Zone Transfers should I allow zone transfers?
    Would the following questions be identical to the Forward Lookup Zone mydomain.local as well?
    Site1
    DC1: Primary 10.0.0.7. Secondary 10.0.0.8. Tertiary 127.0.0.1
    DC2: Primary 10.0.0.8.  Secondary 10.0.0.7. Tertiary 127.0.0.1
    Site2
    DC1: Primary 10.2.0.7.  Secondary 10.2.0.8. Tertiary 127.0.0.1
    DC2: Primary 10.2.0.8.  Secondary 10.2.0.7. Tertiary 127.0.0.1
    The DC's should automatically register in msdcs.  Do not register external DNS servers in msdcs or it will lead to issues. Yes, I recommend all zones to be set to AD-integrated. No need to allow zone transfers as AD replication will take care
    of this for you.  Same for mydomain.local.
    Hope this helps.  

  • Best practices for setting up users on a small office network?

    Hello,
    I am setting up a small office and am wondering what the best practices/steps are to setup/manage the admin, user logins and sharing privileges for the below setup:
    Users: 5 users on new iMacs (x3) and upgraded G4s (x2)
    Video Editing Suite: Want to connect a new iMac and a Mac Pro, on an open login (multiple users)
    All machines are to be able to connect to the network, peripherals and external hard drive. Also, I would like to setup drop boxes as well to easily share files between the computers (I was thinking of using the external harddrive for this).
    Thank you,

    Hi,
    Thanks for your posting.
    When you install AD DS in the hub or staging site, disconnect the installed domain controller, and then ship the computer to the remote site, you are disconnecting a viable domain controller from the replication topology.
    For more and detail information, please refer to:
    Best Practices for Adding Domain Controllers in Remote Sites
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc794962(v=ws.10).aspx
    Regards.
    Vivian Wang

  • Networking "best practice" for setting up a farm

    Hi all.
    We would like to set an OracleVM farm, and I have a question about "best practice" for
    configuring the network. Some background:
    - The hardware I have is comprised of machines with 4 gig-eth NICs each.
    - The storage will be coming primarily from a backend NAS appliance (Netapp, FWIW).
    - We have already allocated a separate VLAN for management.
    - We would like to have HA capable VMs using OCFS2 (on top of NFS.)
    I'm trying to decide between 2 possible configurations. The first would keep physical separation
    between the mgt/storage networks and the DomU networks. The second would just trunk
    everything together across all 4 NICs, something like:
    Config 1:
    - eth0 - management/cluster-interconnect
    - eth1 - storage
    - eth2/eth3 => bond0 - 8021q trunked, bonded interfaces for DomUs
    Config 2:
    - eth0/1/2/3 => bond0
    Do people have experience or recommendation about the best configuration?
    I'm attracted to the first option (perhaps naively) because CI/storage would benefit
    from dedicated bandwidth and this configuration might also be more secure.
    Regards,
    Robert.

    user1070509 wrote:
    Option #4 (802.3ad) looks promising, but I don't know if this can be made to work across
    separate switches.It can, if your switches support cross-switch trunking. Essentially, 802.3ad (also known as LACP or EtherChannel on Cisco devices) requires your switch to be properly configured to allow trunking across the interfaces used for the bond. I know that the high-end Cisco and Juniper switches do support LACP across multiple switches. In the Cisco world, this is called MEC (Multichassis EtherChannel).
    If you're using low-end commodity-grade gear, you'll probably need to use active/passive bonds if you want to span switches. Alternatively, you could use one of the balance algorithms for some bandwitch increase. You'd have to run your own testing to determine which algorithm is best suited for your workload.
    The Linux Foundation's Net:Bonding article has some great information on bonding in general, particularly on the various bonding methods for high availability:
    http://www.linuxfoundation.org/en/Net:Bonding

  • Best practiceS for setting up Macs on Network

    Greetings.
    We have six Macs on our Windows Server network; three iMacs and three laptops. We have set up all the machines and they are joined to the Active Directory. In the past, we have always created local users on the machines and then "browsed" to the server shares and mounted the them. We've learned things have improved/changed over the years and we're just now realizing we can probably have the machines set up to work better. So, I have a couple of questions for "best practices" when setting up each of the machines.
    1. Since we’re in a network environment, should we not set up “local logins/users” and instead have users login using their AD login? It seems having a local account creates some conflicts with the server since upgrading to lion.
    2. Should we set the computer to not ask for a “list of users” and instead ask for a username and password for logins?
    3. For the user that uses the machine most often, they can still customize their desktop when they use an AD login, correct?
    4. Should we set up Mobile User Accounts? What exactly does this do?
    Any other advice on how we should best be setting up the clients for our environment to make sure we are following best practices would be great!
    Thanks for any help!
    Jay

    Greetings.
    We have six Macs on our Windows Server network; three iMacs and three laptops. We have set up all the machines and they are joined to the Active Directory. In the past, we have always created local users on the machines and then "browsed" to the server shares and mounted the them. We've learned things have improved/changed over the years and we're just now realizing we can probably have the machines set up to work better. So, I have a couple of questions for "best practices" when setting up each of the machines.
    1. Since we’re in a network environment, should we not set up “local logins/users” and instead have users login using their AD login? It seems having a local account creates some conflicts with the server since upgrading to lion.
    2. Should we set the computer to not ask for a “list of users” and instead ask for a username and password for logins?
    3. For the user that uses the machine most often, they can still customize their desktop when they use an AD login, correct?
    4. Should we set up Mobile User Accounts? What exactly does this do?
    Any other advice on how we should best be setting up the clients for our environment to make sure we are following best practices would be great!
    Thanks for any help!
    Jay

  • Best Practice for setting bind variable when application loads

    I am using JDeveloper 11.1.2.3.
    When my application loads, the first unbounded page has a table populated by a named query.
    I would like to set the parameter used by the named query when the page loads, to populate the initial data that is displayed.
    What is the best practice for a solution to this issue?

    user6003393 wrote:
    I am using JDeveloper 11.1.2.3.
    When my application loads, the first unbounded page has a table populated by a named query.
    I would like to set the parameter used by the named query when the page loads, to populate the initial data that is displayed.
    What is the best practice for a solution to this issue?Hi,
    You can set the bind variable on VO by overriding prepareSession() method in Application Module check this http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E37975_01/web.111240/e16182/bcservices.htm#sthref357
    Setting bind variable on runtime http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E37975_01/web.111240/e16182/bcquerying.htm#CHDECJHD
    Zeeshan

  • Best Practices for Setting up a Windows 2012 R2 STD Domain Controller in a Remote Site

    So I'm looking for an article or writeup similar to the "Adding Domain Controllers in Remote Sites" TechNet article but for Windows Server 2012 STD R2.  Here is my scenario:
    1.  I want to setup the domain controller at Site A where the primary domain controller is located.  The primary domain controller is Windows Server 2008 R2. 
    2.  Once the DC is setup I plan on leaving it on our network for a few days before shipping it to remote Site B for installation
    Other key items:
    1.  The remote Site B will have a different IP range than Site A but will be connected to Site A via a single VPN tunnel.  All the DCs that replicate with each other are on the same domain. 
    2.  The 2012 DC that I setup for Site B (same domain in same forest) will be a DHCP, DNS, and WSUS server all replicating to the primary DC at Site A
    Questions:
    1.  What items can I setup while it's at Site A without effecting or conflicting with the existing network and domain controller?  Can I setup a scope once the DHCP role is added? 
    2.  All of our DCs replicate through Sites and Services, do I have to manually add this to our primary DC for the new DC going to remote Site B?  Or when does this happen automatically when I promote the DC? 
    All and all I'm just looking for a list of Best Practices for 2012 or a Step by Step Guide.  Any help would be appreciated. 

    Hi,
    Thanks for your posting.
    When you install AD DS in the hub or staging site, disconnect the installed domain controller, and then ship the computer to the remote site, you are disconnecting a viable domain controller from the replication topology.
    For more and detail information, please refer to:
    Best Practices for Adding Domain Controllers in Remote Sites
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc794962(v=ws.10).aspx
    Regards.
    Vivian Wang

  • Best Practice for SUP and WSUS Installation on Same Server

    Hi Folks,
    I have a question, I am in process of deploying SCCM 2012 R2... I was in process of deploying Software Update Point on SCCM with one of the existing WSUS server installed on a separate server from SCCM.
    A debate has started with of the colleague who says that the using remote WSUS server is recommended by Microsoft because of the scalability security  that WSUS will be downloading the updates from Microsoft and SCCM should be working as downstream
    server to fetch updates from WSUS server.
    but according to my consideration it is recommended to install WSUS server on the same server where SCCM is installed... actually it is recommended to install WSUS on a site system and you can used the same SCCM server to deploy WSUS.
    please advice me the best practices for deploying SCCM and WSUS ... what Microsoft says about WSUS to be installed on same SCCM server OR WSUS should be on a separate server then the SCCM server ???
    awaiting your advices ASAP :)
    Regards, Owais

    Hi Don,
    thanks for the information, another quick one...
    the above mentioned configuration I did is correct in terms of planning and best practices?
    I agree with Jorgen, it's ok to have WSUS/SUP on the same server as your site server, or you can have WSUS/SUP on a dedicated server if you wish.
    The "best practice" is whatever suits your environment, and is a supported-by-MS way of doing it.
    One thing to note, is that if WSUS ever becomes "corrupt" it can be difficult to repair and sometimes it's simplest to rebuild the WSUS Windows OS. If this is on your site server, that's a big deal.
    Sometimes, WSUS goes wrong (not because of ConfigMgr)..
    Note that if you have a very large estate, or multiple primary site servers, you might have a CAS, and you would need a SUP on the CAS. (this is not a recommendation for a CAS, just to be aware)
    Don
    (Please take a moment to "Vote as Helpful" and/or "Mark as Answer", where applicable.
    This helps the community, keeps the forums tidy, and recognises useful contributions. Thanks!)

  • Best practice for reinstalling anti virus on reinstalling windows

    Best practice for reinstalling anti virus after formatting drive and reinstalling windows No anti virus disc.
    Hasty

    Hello,
    I'd ask in the Windows forum on Microsoft Community.
    Karl
    When you see answers and helpful posts, please click Vote As Helpful, Propose As Answer, and/or Mark As Answer.
    My Blog:http://unlockpowershell.wordpress.com
    My Book:Windows PowerShell 2.0 Bible
    My E-mail: -join ('6F6C646B61726C40686F746D61696C2E636F6D'-split'(?<=\G.{2})'|%{if($_){[char][int]"0x$_"}})

Maybe you are looking for