A further note to add - when's the last time you browsed through senior
infrastructure jobs and counted how many want some programming skills
along with W2K3, E2K3, etc?  Enough to think one of these days I might
need to bite the bullet and take some classes... once you start
scripting you definitely see the advantages of "the dark side" and can't
imagine how you functioned without it :)

Fortunately though I'm not looking for work - the rumors of our demise
are greatly exaggerated :)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Rich Milburn
MCSE, Microsoft MVP - Directory Services
Sr Network Analyst, Field Platform Development
Applebee's International, Inc.
4551 W. 107th St
Overland Park, KS 66207
913-967-2819
----------------------------------------------------------------------
"I love the smell of red herrings in the morning" - anonymous

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Alain Lissoir
Sent: Thursday, December 01, 2005 9:57 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] FSMO role transfer

Once you are known for your automation capabilities (WSH, MONAD,
programming
tools, Perl, whatever), believe me there are companies (usually with
large
deployments) that are more than happy to hire you on a project. I cannot
say
that it is the case for all companies (it is also a question of
awareness),
but as far as I'm concerned, all my professional experience has been
made
this way because of scripting/automation (from CMD to any kind of
programming and automation technique). Once they know how much time they
can
save, how fast things can be done, they are more than happy to pay to
price
to get this type of knowledge on board.

/Alain

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tom Kern
Sent: Thursday, December 01, 2005 7:25 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] FSMO role transfer

While I agree with the "scripting making you a better admin" part, I've
never worked for an employer who offered me more $$ because of
scripting.
Or any interview or employer who cared other than "thats cool" attitude
when
i wrote a script to automate something.
maybe i'm working for the wrong people.
 
I've just been teaching myself VBScript in the past few months and I've
written some scripts for my employer alone and with the help of this
list(alot of help) and lately i've been gainng the confidence no to rely
on
this list as much, but my scripting is more for my own personal benfit
and
knowldge rather than $$ driven because my employer has never indicated
that
the ability to script was something that was a real value in his/her
mind. 
Scripting, to the employers i've worked for seems more like knowing
about
this list-  a personal resource that you as an employee chose to use to
perform your job better or gain more info, but not something that in and
of
itself is valued, it seems. 
 
Again, i could be working for the wrong people.
 
Also, ironically, i've yet to work in a Windows shop where i met someone
who
knew how to script.
 
In fact, in Joe's salary chart of $35,000 to $240,000, I fall in the
next to
last category. I started at the first/lowest range and in less than 4
years
got to ~ the next to last one without knowing any scripting at all. 
 
i guess thats a sign of the lack of uniformity in the industry.
 
on the other hand, i think you should know how to script to be a good
admin
and i've been busting my butt of late to do just that.
but like i said, its just for my own knowldge that i choose to do so.
i don't expect any $$ for it or advance in my career....
 
just my random thoughts...

 
On 12/1/05, joe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

        Wow I feel heat directed at me....  :o)
        
        A non-scripting admin can not survive very well if at all in a
large
org 
        unless the org is willing to spend a lot of money for extra
admins
to cover
        the overhead of wading through the GUI. Take my last ops
position as
an
        example. Three people handling a Fortune 5 AD. Couldn't feasibly
done with 
        the GUI. How long does it take you to enter 100 new subnets?
What if
you
        need to expire 8,000 users a day until you have expired all
200,000
users?
        Is that real admin work or is it clerk work if you are simply
clicking on 
        something in a GUI? If I were a manager of a business, I would
rather pay a
        contractor or other service $10 or $15 an hour to click buttons
for
        something like that than pay $40,$60,$100, $150 an hour to
someone
who is 
        supposed to keep things running.
        
        So back to the 100 subnets question. How long in Sites and
Services?
Hours?
        What are the chances of a mistake? High? Now you write a script
to
do it,
        how long? Maybe hours to write it and then seconds to minutes to
run
for 
        ever after? Chances of a mistake? Low for entry, also severely
reduced for
        supplied data if script has sanity checks in it? Also once in
script
form it
        is that much easier to say put on a web site and delegate to
others
to do by 
        entering basic answers to basic questions in a form.
        
        Don't create 100 subnets in small org? What other items do you
do
that are
        no-brainer work that could be scripted. If you didn't have that
workload how
        much other work could you get done? Rarely are admins ever
really
doing hard
        admin type thinking/troubleshooting work constantly except for
the
folks who
        take on escalations from lower level admins. Possibly this is
different in 
        the SBS world and there is no repetitive work being done that
isn't
better
        served by a script, I don't have that experience, I would expect
however
        that there is quite a bit that could be scripted or else Susan
wouldn't have 
        the I would rather see something safe from MS than a script from
someone in
        the backroom attitude.
        
        A saying I have used here in the past that I always used at work
is
that you
        can't be too busy cutting down trees to sharpen your axe. It
applies
both to 
        training and scripting. If you are too busy to do nothing but
the
work in
        front of you, you will never see the edge of the forest as you
get
slower
        and slower at doing what you are doing. At some point you have
to
step back 
        and spend some time to make yourself more informed or more
efficient. The
        more time you spend getting more efficient, the more time you
have
to keep
        yourself informed and get even more efficient.
        
        Finally scripting requires understanding of how things are
working,
using 
        the GUI doesn't. Trying to script processes forces a person to
learn
more
        about the product they are supporting and could very likely get
them
to
        learn enough that the next time they encounter a failure, they
fully
or at 
        least more fully troubleshoot versus changing things in the GUI
until it
        works.
        
        If you look at an admin making $35k a year versus one making
$60k a
year
        versus one making $80k a year versus one making $150k a year
versus
one 
        making over $240k a year you are probably not looking at a raise
in
salary
        because someone knows the GUI better than the others. If you see
someone who
        rose through those salary ranks in say 5 years, it isn't because
they knew 
        the GUI keyboard shortcuts.
        
        Understanding scripting makes you more valuable both because you
can
operate
        more efficiently and because you "tend" to have a better grasp
of
how things
        work because you are forced to learn the details which are
covered
by the 
        GUI. Not only that, you can troubleshoot better because you have
more
        options to you. I recently ran into an issue where someone
entered a
bad
        value for a DL expansion server. The value was so bad the GUI
didn't
even 
        display it, instead it said the DL had no expansion server. The
admin I was
        helping actually told me I was wrong when I said it was set and
it
was in
        fact set incorrectly because the GUI said it wasn't set. That is
kind of 
        scary to me. The GUI is an interpretation of what is there.
Don't
trust it
        that much.
        
          joe
        
        
        -----Original Message-----
        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rocky
Habeeb
        Sent: Wednesday, November 30, 2005 5:18 PM
        To: [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> 
        Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] FSMO role transfer
        
        Susan,
        
        "THANK YOU
        
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!
        !!!!!!!!!!!"
        
        There are a >LOT< of people on this list that do not believe
that
real
        Admins use the GUI.  Some believe that you're not a real Admin
if
you do.  I
        do.  I have to.  I can't allocate time to learn scripting right
now
because 
        I'm overworked as is.  I'll just leave it at that.
        
        RH
        ______________________________________________
        
        
        -----Original Message-----
        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Susan
Bradley, CPA
        aka Ebitz - SBS Rocks [MVP]
        Sent: Wednesday, November 30, 2005 4:09 PM
        To: [email protected]
        Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] FSMO role transfer
        
        
        <stupid question alert>
        
        If the task is that trivial
        If the benefit is so great 
        Why isn't it part of the AD snap ins as a one button task?
        
        <sincerely, who needs scripting when you can ask for a
gui/wizard or
button
        instead>
        
        David Adner wrote:
        > I'm not debating the effort it takes to make the change.  I'm
saying I 
        don't
        > see the point in devoting whatever amount of effort it takes
for
        > something that's going to provide benefit only, IMO, an
extremely
rare
        > case.  And if that case happened, the corrective action is
also a 
        > trivial process.  And again, I'm not saying I don't see your
point; I just
        don't agree with it.
        >
        >
        >> -----Original Message-----
        >> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
        >> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Bahta
        >> Nathaniel V Contractor NASIC/SCNA
        >> Sent: Wednesday, November 30, 2005 12:32 PM 
        >> To: [email protected]
        >> Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] FSMO role transfer
        >>
        >> That process is trivial in itself.  It does not take much to
transfer 
        >> the roles before you conduct maintenance on a server.  Why
not do
it?
        >> It will save you cleaning up metadata after you seize a role
of a
        >> failed operations master.  Sounds like a stitch in nine saves
time 
        >> concept to me.  I do not intend on taking every proactive
measure
        >> either, but when it comes to the small and quickly
implemented
        >> measures that could save plenty of time, I try to utilize all
of
them 
        >> available.
        >>
        >> Is that agreeable?
        >>
        >> Nathaniel Vincent Bahta
        >>
        >> -----Original Message-----
        >> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
        >> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
David
Adner
        >> Sent: Wednesday, November 30, 2005 1:24 PM 
        >> To: [email protected]
        >> Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] FSMO role transfer
        >>
        >> Any proper maintenance plan has a backout plan and a recovery
plan, 
        >> so I am preparing for the possibility of an unexpected
problem.
If
        >> I'm pulled into a dark room because something goes wrong then
I
        >> should feel confident I'll leave that room with my hide
mostly 
        >> intact; it may be slightly singed, but I can live with that.
If
        >> management isn't the reasonable type then that's a different
issue.
        >>
        >> If your philosophy is to take every proactive measure ahead
of
time 
        >> possible, then that's fine.  I just don't see the point with
regards
        >> to FSMO roles when the recovery action is a relatively
trivial
        >> process.  This is obviously a matter of personal preference
so
I'm 
        >> not trying to convince others to change.  I just found the
concept
        >> unusual so I thought I'd share.
        >>
        >>
        >>> -----Original Message-----
        >>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
        >>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
        >>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

        >>> Sent: Wednesday, November 30, 2005 10:16 AM
        >>> To: [email protected]
        >>> Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] FSMO role transfer 
        >>>
        >>> I would rather, as stated earlier, assess the risk and then
act
        >>> appropriately. The original poster never defined
'maintenance'
in
        >>> detail.
        >>>
        >>> The original post did state that the box would be down for
~2
hours
        >>> for maintenance. This is clearly more than a patch and a
        >>>
        >> reboot. We've
        >>
        >>> been over that scenario and concluded that it carries a
lesser
risk. 
        >>>
        >>> As joe said, if the maintenance all goes badly wrong, do
        >>>
        >> you want to
        >>
        >>> be pulled into a dark room and questioned as to why you did
not 
        >>> prepare for that eventuality?
        >>>
        >>>
        >>> neil
        >>>
        >>>
        >>> -----Original Message-----
        >>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
        >>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Susan
        >>> Bradley, CPA aka Ebitz - SBS Rocks [MVP] 
        >>> Sent: 30 November 2005 15:29
        >>> To: [email protected]
        >>> Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] FSMO role transfer
        >>>
        >>> Okay define maintenance please?
        >>>
        >>> Patching?
        >>> Service Pack?
        >>> Applying QFEs?
        >>> Performance tuning?
        >>> What?
        >>> 
        >>> Is there a level of maintenance that would cause you to move
FSMO's
        >>> and not?
        >>>
        >>> Like for example, if I'm patching, I've tested the patch,
I'm
        >>> reasonably expecting a favorable outcome otherwise I
wouldn't be

        >>> deploying, I have a backup.
        >>>
        >>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
        >>>
        >>>
        >>>> I think we've missed the essence of the original post :) 
        >>>>
        >>> The DCs are
        >>>
        >>>> not just being rebooted, they are being 'maintained' and
        >>>>
        >>> will be down
        >>>
        >>>> for ~ 2 hours. That means to me, that either a s/w or h/w 
        >>>>
        >> change is
        >>
        >>>> going to occur which could go horribly wrong. Faced with
this
        >>>> situation, I would definitely transfer the roles.
        >>>> If the DC were merely being rebooted and nothing else is 
        >>>>
        >>> scheduled to
        >>>
        >>>> occur, I would not transfer roles.
        >>>> The above 2 scenarios are very different - if one were to
        >>>>
        >> perform a
        >>
        >>>> risk analysis the actions taken to mitigate those risks
would
be
        >>>> suitably different.
        >>>> neil
        >>>>
        >>>>
        >>
---------------------------------------------------------------------
        >> -
        >>
        >>>> --
        >>>> *From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        >>>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf Of
        >>>>
        >>> *David Adner
        >>>
        >>>> *Sent:* 29 November 2005 23:26 
        >>>> *To:* [email protected]
        >>>> *Subject:* RE: [ActiveDir] FSMO role transfer
        >>>>
        >>>> I would only agree if you told me your DC's regularly 
        >>>>
        >> fail to come
        >>
        >>>> back after a reboot. And if you did tell me that I'd have
to
say
        >>>> you're doing something wrong.
        >>>> I suppose I don't consider rebooting a DC to be quite the 
        >>>>
        >> dangerous
        >>
        >>>> act as others do. To what degree is this taken? If it holds
        >>>>
        >>> a standard
        >>>
        >>>
        >>>> Primary zone do you transfer that role, too? If it's the 
        >>>>
        >>> PDCE of the
        >>>
        >>>> forest root domain and you transfer the role, do you also
        >>>>
        >>> reconfigure
        >>>
        >>>> the new PDCE to manually synchronize time from an
authoritative

        >>>> source? I mean, if we're going to work under the
        >>>>
        >> assumption that a
        >>
        >>>> reboot is a regularly catastrophic causing event then
        >>>> 
        >> it's probably
        >>
        >>>> time to switch OS's.
        >>>> Is it possible something unexpectedly horrible can happen
        >>>>
        >>> as part of a
        >>> 
        >>>
        >>>> reboot? Sure. But it better be the exception. And with
        >>>>
        >>> regards to FSMO
        >>>
        >>>
        >>>> roles, which, barring some specific technical requirement
they
be 
        >>>> readily available, the temporary outage of them is
typically a
        >>>> transparent event and shouldn't require added
        >>>>
        >>> administrative overhead
        >>> 
        >>>> in transferring them back and forth. Accepting that a
        >>>>
        >> catastrophic
        >>
        >>>> event is an exception, then you follow your documented and
tested
        >>>> activities to recover from that exception; ie: you seize
        >>>>
        >> the roles,
        >>
        >>>> restore from backup, etc.
        >>>>
        >>>>
        >>>> 
        >>>
--------------------------------------------------------------
        >>> ----------
        >>>
        >>>>     *From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        >>>>     [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On
        >>>>
        >> Behalf Of *Rich
        >>
        >>>>     Milburn 
        >>>>     *Sent:* Tuesday, November 29, 2005 4:26 PM
        >>>>     *To:* [email protected]
        >>>>     *Subject:* RE: [ActiveDir] FSMO role transfer 
        >>>>
        >>>>     Yeah but having "seize the FSMOs instead of moving
        >>>>
        >> them" as your
        >>
        >>>>     fallback plan is like making sure you have a current
backup
in 
        >>>>     case "yanking the power cord instead of Start >
Shutdown >
        >>>>     Restart" causes file system corruption J
        >>>>
        >>>>
        >>>> 
        >>>
//------------------------------------------------------------
        >>> ----------
        >>> -///
        >>>
        >>>>     ///Rich Milburn///
        >>>>     ///MCSE, Microsoft MVP - Directory Services/// 
        >>>>     Sr Network Analyst, Field Platform Development
        >>>>     Applebee's International, Inc.//
        >>>>     //4551 W. 107th St//
        >>>>     //Overland Park//, KS 66207// 
        >>>>     //913-967-2819//
        >>>>
        >>>>
        >>>
//------------------------------------------------------------
        >>> ----------
        >>> //
        >>> 
        >>>>     ///"I love the smell of red herrings in the morning" -
        >>>>
        >>> anonymous//
        >>>
        >>>>
        >>>>
        >>>>
        >>
--------------------------------------------------------------------- 
        >> -
        >>
        >>>> --
        >>>>
        >>>>     *From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        >>>>     [mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf
Of
        >>>>     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        >>>>     *Sent:* Tuesday, November 29, 2005 11:56 AM 
        >>>>     *To:* [email protected]
        >>>>     *Subject:* Re: [ActiveDir] FSMO role transfer
        >>>>
        >>>>     If something went wrong you could still seize the FSMO 
        >>>>
        >>> roles as an
        >>>
        >>>>     option rather than doing a transfer. Of course the
        >>>>
        >>> procedures for
        >>>
        >>>>     all of these for the 5 FSMOs should be documented just
in
case 
        >>>>     needed..
        >>>>
        >>>>     Chuck
        >>>>
        >>>>     /
        >>>>
        >>>>
        >>>
-------------------------------------------------------------- 
        >>> ----------
        >>>
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