Re: Making Vista PC a member of domain-Profile
- From: Mike <Mike@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2008 05:13:01 -0700
Kerry,
Thanks again for the reply. The DSL connection has been reliable from a
standpoint of outages, almost none in the year the we have used Bellsouth in
this location. I have a notebook that is already part of the domain and am
going to take it with me to see how it interacts on the VPN, with regard to
the main office network. Perhaps I should leave everything as is for the
users, and only use the VPN to look at issues at the remote office and RDP to
users machines when they have a problem. I only have 3 users at the remote
office, and a total of 30 employees altogether, if numbers matter to any of
this.
Thanks again!
Mike
"Kerry Brown" wrote:
It would all depend on the DSL connection. What's the uplink speed on the.
DSL and how stable is it? If you are accessing a database then I'd
definitely stick with terminal services for that. If the VPN goes down there
is always the possibility of a corrupted database. RDP over the VPN gives
another layer of security above RDP over the Internet. I would try joining
one computer and see what kind of speed you get. I have tried this with 2.5
Mb DSL and with 4.0 Mb cable and it was too slow. There were a lot of
Kerberos errors as well. With a DC at the remote office it was acceptable.
You also might want to try joining a Vista computer at the main office just
to make sure there are no Vista related problems.
--
Kerry Brown
MS-MVP - Windows Desktop Experience: Systems Administration
http://www.vistahelp.ca/phpBB2/
"Mike" <Mike@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:40AD6024-C73C-4795-BA7A-A39EE3BA62ED@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Kerry,
I have a T1 on my end and 6 Mb DSL on the remote site. I do not have a DC
at the branch office. I have not tried to join any PC's over this VPN at
all.
No roaming profiles, and my domain is at the 2003 functional level. I am
running SBS 2003 with two additional DC's if that helps/makes a
difference.
I have Sonicwall TZ-190 appliances on both ends. I established the VPN
last
weekend, and have connected to remote printers and figured that making the
Vista machines join the local network would be fairly straightforward.
Currently these users connect to the home office via Terminal Services.
What would be your advice, give the infrastructure?
Thanks for the info and any additional advice.
Mike
"Kerry Brown" wrote:
How fast is the VPN? Do you have a domain controller at the branch
office?
Have you successfully joined XP computers over the same VPN? Connecting
computers to an active directory domain can be a recipe for disaster
which
has nothing to do with Vista.
If you are using a standard DSL or cable Internet connection for the VPN
you
will run into speed problems with using Active Directory over a slow
connection unless you have a domain controller at the branch office. I
highly recommend you make sure the underlying infrastructure can support
active directory before you do this. Joining a branch office to a
corporate
network is not as easy as just establishing a VPN.
As far as joining Vista computers to the domain here are some links that
may
help.
http://technet2.microsoft.com/WindowsVista/en/library/1bd36fc2-1fc6-4edf-847f-d4be4305516a1033.mspx?mfr=true
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb742618(TechNet.10).aspx
As long as you are not using roaming profiles and the AD domain is at the
2003 level and up to date you shouldn't run into any problems joining a
Vista computer to the domain as long as the underlying network
infrastructure is sound. Getting the VPN routing, DNS, NETBIOS, etc.
configured so active directory works over it may give you fits. Vista
itself
shouldn't be a problem.
--
Kerry Brown
MS-MVP - Windows Desktop Experience: Systems Administration
http://www.vistahelp.ca/phpBB2/
"Mike" <Mike@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:F8B8F64C-5001-4473-B18C-74B1579599A4@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Hi,
I need to go to a branch office and make several Vista machines members
of
our corporate domain (they were set up as stand alone machines because
we
did
not a a VPN at the branch office, but now we do). When I make the
machines
members of the domain, what issues will I run into copying profile
settings
(documents, printers, etc) into their domain account from their
non-domain
account.
Thanks,
Mike
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