Chuck,

Both sites are subnetted uniquely:
Site A being 10.64.x.x - 255.255.0.0 
Site B bring 10.128.x.x - 255.255.0.0

As far as as I know the FSMO role ilies solely with the server in Office A
Office A, the HQ, is of course a GC and there is one in Office B where our Datacenter 
is

-----Original Message-----
From: Chuck Robinson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, March 01, 2003 2:51 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] AD Design Guidance


Also,
Do you have your Sites and Subnets setup correctly?
How are your FSMO Roles divided?
Where are your GC's?

Chuck

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Friese, Casey
Sent: Friday, February 28, 2003 2:00 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] AD Design Guidance


I have uncovered what I believe is a problem with our Active Directory
design.  I'm looking for assurance that it is indeed a problem judging from
the symptoms that I am seeing and I'm also looking for recommendations on
how to correct it.

I've walked into the company just weeks after a consultant started
implementing the AD design.  Now, 8 months later and 10 servers later I
believe that the design is flawed.  Here are my symptoms:

Any administration activity done on the servers such as setting
permissions/re-writing permissions, opening property sheets within Exchange
System Manager, Viewing properties sheets of OU objects/group policies, etc.
All of these tasks take a long period of time to complete or display.

>From the client end we see hanging connections - one moment a share is 
>available, the next permission is denied or the connection can't be 
>made.  Opening files from the network sluggish and at times dhcp 
>settings are lost.

We have 2 offices:
Our HQ is in office A
Our Datacenter is in office B

Office A has 1 Windows 2000 Server and was the first server built in the
Forest.  This server is doing File/Print, DHCP, WINS, DNS for it's location
among doing it's specialized tasks for the domain.

Office B has 9 Windows 2000 Servers - among those 9 is a DC, 1 is an E2K
server and 1 is an ISA server.  The DC provides file/print, DHCP, WINS, DNS
for it's location.  The E2K server is the mail server for both locations and
the ISA server is the Firewall for both locations.

Office A is connected to Office B via 256kbps Split T1 used for both voice
and data.  Office B is connected to the internet via full T1 which is
responsible for handling all internet requests.

Both sites, office A and B, belong to the same parent domain - company.com
with each client's dns set as clientname.company.com

First questions: Are there any flaws with the above design?  The most
noticeable thing to me is that Office A and B communicate of a 256kbps
shared line.  I'm not an expert with AD, in fact, It's new to me but from
what I understand anything done in Office B has to go to the Head Server in
Office A.  These is where I believe my problems lie.

What I would like to do is break these two sites apart and have
officeA.company.com and officeB.company.com - I think this is the correct
approach but I'm not sure. My main concern is our Exchange 2000 Server and
out ISA server because they're both linked heavily into the AD so totally
redoing the design is a bit tough.  Alternatively, I have started
entertaining the idea of moving the server in Office A to the Office B
location making Office B the root domain and any new sites child domains.

I apologize for the length and if I've confused anyone - I'm confused
myself.  I just want to know if I'm blaming the symptoms on the right thing
and how I should proceed.

Thanks,
Casey
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