Author: "Loon, EJ van - SPLXM" <Eric-van.Loon AT KLM DOT COM>
Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2008 16:45:46 +0200
Hi *SM-ers! One of my customers is trying to restore a complete node (lets say NODE-A) to a new node (lets say NODE-B) . We tried both the VIRTUALNODENAME parameter and the "access another nodes data
Author: Howard Coles <Howard.Coles AT ARDENTHEALTH DOT COM>
Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2008 09:57:29 -0500
You can't restore systemstate to another node, from my understanding. The best way to do this (if you can) is to rename the node you want to do the restore on to match that of the original box. Then
Author: "Loon, EJ van - SPLXM" <Eric-van.Loon AT KLM DOT COM>
Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2008 17:17:00 +0200
Hi Christian! In fact, the user wants to duplicate a production server (SERVER-A), so he wants SERVER-B to be an exact copy of SERVER-A after the restore. So, we would like to restore the file level
Author: "Loon, EJ van - SPLXM" <Eric-van.Loon AT KLM DOT COM>
Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2008 17:19:58 +0200
Hi Howard! This is not an option, because then you would end-up with two Windows boxes with the same machine name on the network and, as far as I know, that's not allowed within a domain. And shuttin
Author: "Huebner,Andy,FORT WORTH,IT" <Andy.Huebner AT ALCONLABS DOT COM>
Date: Fri, 26 Sep 2008 16:34:13 -0500
The following conditions must be met to use TSM to duplicate a windows server: The source and target nodes cannot be on the same network The source and target nodes cannot communicate with the AD at