A trip to Ireland the other week for an email deployment took longer than I expected. No time on site to see what was happening and no project management time meant that the deployment was a “Turn up and do it” style.
Existing site: Single SBS 2003 domain, circa 30 users, mixture of local desktop and remote laptop.
Required outcome: Integrate to new domain accessed over VPN. Use existing hardware for DC and file and print. Deploy new Exchange 2007 into existing org and move mailboxes.
Gotchas:
VPN issues meant we could not get domain connectivity or move schema master to local box.
I had not had sufficient experience with 2008 Server.
.Net 3.5 on 2008 means decidedly unhelpful errors with Exchange 2007. In addition to the other installations, use ServerManagerCmd -i net-framework
Notes to the wise:
Read your notes and don’t guess.
Deploy .Net Framework 3.0 despite Exchange saying it has a .Net installation and is happy. It isn’t.
Four days including travel both ways. Migration complete and users happy including a load of client side updates and use of my spring clean document. In isolation I would probably have had more trouble but I was part of a team of 3 people doing the work and had help very late on Sunday evening from Nathan Winters as I couldn’t see the wood for the trees. Installing Exchange 2007 into an organisation is fairly straight forward. Doing it on a site you have never visited into an org you don’t know and to a deadline is enough to give you a nosebleed.
I didn’t even get any Guinness.
1 comment:
.Net Framework 3.0 latest version has more advance features which support more software's
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