Hi,
I look after the day to day running of a Windows 2003 SBS Server.
I need to know what is "best practice" when it comes to downloading and installing Windows updates (the ones that come up with a yellow shield in the system tray).
The reason I ask is because of what happened yesterday.
My server is set to notify me of Windows updates I need - towards the end of the day I download and install them and once everyone's logged off I reboot the server.
I do this only because I didn't want that irritating nag screen coming up every few minutes (it seems) and I feared that I may accidentally click on "Restart Now" instead of "Restart Later" (especially as the buttons are identical !).
Yesterday, however, my IT Support company - during their weekly dial-in "housekeeping" - went ahead to download AND install the waiting updates. This has happened before, but thankfully the only problem it caused me was the irritating nag screen.
However, on this occasion one of the updates was a Security Update for Exchange SP2 and immediately all my users were disconnected from the Exchange server in the middle of their work - most were reconnected about 5 minutes later when the update was finished, one had to be manually "reconnected" for some reason.
I don't know if it's connected (though it'd be an incredible coincidence if not), but about 20 minutes later I started getting complaints from 2 departments that their jobs hadn't come out of their network printers (1 each dept). I looked on the server and there were no jobs in the queue, neither would my test page come out from the server. I knew it wasn't an IP issue as I could use the web browser to view the status of each printer. All the other network printers continued working fine.
A few hours later, the problem was cured by an engineer opening up the Services and re-starting the Print Spooler service (even though - as far as I can see - it hadn't stopped).
Could one of the other Windows updates (there were 3 but I don't know the names of the others) have caused this printing problem or is it un-connected ?
I'd really appreciate any feedback.
Regards,
Julia
I look after the day to day running of a Windows 2003 SBS Server.
I need to know what is "best practice" when it comes to downloading and installing Windows updates (the ones that come up with a yellow shield in the system tray).
The reason I ask is because of what happened yesterday.
My server is set to notify me of Windows updates I need - towards the end of the day I download and install them and once everyone's logged off I reboot the server.
I do this only because I didn't want that irritating nag screen coming up every few minutes (it seems) and I feared that I may accidentally click on "Restart Now" instead of "Restart Later" (especially as the buttons are identical !).
Yesterday, however, my IT Support company - during their weekly dial-in "housekeeping" - went ahead to download AND install the waiting updates. This has happened before, but thankfully the only problem it caused me was the irritating nag screen.
However, on this occasion one of the updates was a Security Update for Exchange SP2 and immediately all my users were disconnected from the Exchange server in the middle of their work - most were reconnected about 5 minutes later when the update was finished, one had to be manually "reconnected" for some reason.
I don't know if it's connected (though it'd be an incredible coincidence if not), but about 20 minutes later I started getting complaints from 2 departments that their jobs hadn't come out of their network printers (1 each dept). I looked on the server and there were no jobs in the queue, neither would my test page come out from the server. I knew it wasn't an IP issue as I could use the web browser to view the status of each printer. All the other network printers continued working fine.
A few hours later, the problem was cured by an engineer opening up the Services and re-starting the Print Spooler service (even though - as far as I can see - it hadn't stopped).
Could one of the other Windows updates (there were 3 but I don't know the names of the others) have caused this printing problem or is it un-connected ?
I'd really appreciate any feedback.
Regards,
Julia