I have an interesting issue with a client network that I have been working on for about 20 hours now to no avail. I will try and keep this as brief as possible to get the ball rolling here:
Original Client Configuration
1 Windows 2000 AD
Mixed 2000 and XP workstations
New Configuration
A new Windows 2008 server was installed. The MS instructions to migrate to a 2003 AD first were completed and then the steps to turn over control (Operational master and GC) to the 2008 server were completed. Replication appeared to work fine; accounts added/modified on either server were replicated to the other.
Here's where it gets interesting. All of a sudden (was reported yesterday, could have started anytime) connectivity issues came up. Connection to shares on the new server is intermittent and no new systems can join the domain (get the path not found message).
Everything points to DNS and I have spent the last 15 hours or so attempting to figure out what is happening, to no avail. I have exhausted every "do this and try that" link I could find and still have the same issue. Again, don't want to fill this up with every troubleshooting step I've taken but will say that all of the 'obvious' DNS issues have been resolved. Here are some of the things known as of now:
• NSLOOKUP (from non-connecting client) is returning valid name servers
• _ldap._tcp._<domain> returns correct value(s) [note: returns both the old and new servers)
• DNS on the AD server is pointing to itself and resolves OK
• DNS on client side is set only to AD server
• AD Server (new) is multi-homed; I turned one NIC off (ensured DNS was listening on active): no luck
Is there any way to "trace" a login/join attempt to see which server is attempting to authenticate the workstation? One other item to note: There are two Windows 2000 clients in the environment, neither has any issue connecting like the XP systems do...go figure.
I realize this is not an ideal network/AD configuration but it did seem to work fine for a couple months. I am open to just about anything at this point…desperate even.
Thanks,
Tony
Original Client Configuration
1 Windows 2000 AD
Mixed 2000 and XP workstations
New Configuration
A new Windows 2008 server was installed. The MS instructions to migrate to a 2003 AD first were completed and then the steps to turn over control (Operational master and GC) to the 2008 server were completed. Replication appeared to work fine; accounts added/modified on either server were replicated to the other.
Here's where it gets interesting. All of a sudden (was reported yesterday, could have started anytime) connectivity issues came up. Connection to shares on the new server is intermittent and no new systems can join the domain (get the path not found message).
Everything points to DNS and I have spent the last 15 hours or so attempting to figure out what is happening, to no avail. I have exhausted every "do this and try that" link I could find and still have the same issue. Again, don't want to fill this up with every troubleshooting step I've taken but will say that all of the 'obvious' DNS issues have been resolved. Here are some of the things known as of now:
• NSLOOKUP (from non-connecting client) is returning valid name servers
• _ldap._tcp._<domain> returns correct value(s) [note: returns both the old and new servers)
• DNS on the AD server is pointing to itself and resolves OK
• DNS on client side is set only to AD server
• AD Server (new) is multi-homed; I turned one NIC off (ensured DNS was listening on active): no luck
Is there any way to "trace" a login/join attempt to see which server is attempting to authenticate the workstation? One other item to note: There are two Windows 2000 clients in the environment, neither has any issue connecting like the XP systems do...go figure.
I realize this is not an ideal network/AD configuration but it did seem to work fine for a couple months. I am open to just about anything at this point…desperate even.
Thanks,
Tony