Is it valid that if I reboot the DC after Windows Updates, let's say, that I should reboot all the other servers as well? Exchange, File, etc... There is no BDC.
3rd party support we had, stating that because it was the DNS/DC that it needed to be started up first then wait and then turn all the other servers on. Or if you reboot the DC, then you need to shutdown the others or reboot them as well after it has come back up.
I have to disagree with everybody. If your Exchange Server looses connectivity with the Global Catalog for an extended period of time, then the Info Store will shut down. So the need to do this will depend on how long it takes for your DC to recycle. Exchange will automatically try to reconnect to the GC, but after a few failed attempts it will shut down and a reboot is in order.
Yes, but if the DC is also the GC and it takes too long to come back up, then the Exchange server may stop functioning...that was Mark's point I believe.
I'm Certifiable, not cert-ified.
It just means my answers are from experience, not a book.
Windows spits out errors in the event viewser all day long which aren't errors (this is an exaggeration of course but I am trying to show a point), which is why I am looking for some validity on if anything will "cease to function". If it spits out errors but cotinues to function, that is fine.
Exchange will log very specific errors that it has lost connectivity with the Global Catalog. When that happens you should plan on rebooting Exchange, plain and simple.
Other servers should not be affected by this situation but Exchange is dependent on the GC and anything more than a minute or two will cause you other problems.
If there is an update for one windows 2003 server, wouldn't the same update need to be applied to each server? Then requiring reboot anyway (eventually)...
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