Guido,
Thanks for
pointing that out. I had never tried it so I wasn't sure. It's not
such a big deal anymore then.
I just got access to the ADMT v3 beta so I'm going to try
it out. See what else it has.
Mike
From: Grillenmeier, Guido
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, August 10, 2005
3:04 PMTo: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.orgSubject: RE:
[ActiveDir] Setting the default UPN when migrating accounts using
ADMT
afaik that's a non-configurable option in ADMT - same for
v3 (release date is slipping every time I mention the last one I know - so I
won't mention it hoping it will stay ;-)
However, I've been using the v3 Beta quite successfully for
a while and didn't have a stability issue or any other things go wrong once - as
such I wouldn't want to touch v2 any more as v3 really runs much
better.
Regarding your actual "problem": not sure why you wouldn't
want ADMT to use the root-domain's suffix for the UPN on your
accounts => they also have the child domain's suffix as an implicit UPN
anyways (i.e. you user can logon as [EMAIL PROTECTED] AND as [EMAIL PROTECTED]).
Ofcourse you might have other reasons for not having the
extra UPN with the root-name - but beware that you don't loose the ability to
logon with the child-domain suffix due to this.
/Guido
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Celone,
MikeSent: Mittwoch, 10. August 2005 21:42To:
'ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org'Subject: [ActiveDir] Setting the
default UPN when migrating accounts using ADMT
In my test lab I
have a single Win2k3 root domain and 2 child domains. I am using ADMT 2
(when is 3 coming out, it's been in Beta for over a year now) to migrate the
accounts over. Everything works great except for the UPN. For some
reason it's always taking the name of the root domain and not of the child
domains. Is there a way to make ADMT use the child domain UPN.
I figured I'd ask
before I write a script to do it for me.
Mike