Forum Discussion
SladeBeard
Jan 23, 2018Copper Contributor
Recovering on premises Server 2016 Domain Controller
I have (had) a single on premises domain controller built on Server 2016. The server was backed up to the Azure Recovery Services Vault. The on premises domain controller was the primary domain contr...
SladeBeard
Jan 25, 2018Copper Contributor
Thanks for the reply Kent. The failed server is a physical on premises domain server. It was used as the basis for building the rest of the domain. It has been backed up to the Azure environment but is the only AD domain server.
I had a look at the link you sent. It appears that this document refers to Server 2003. As the server is a 2016 server operating in an Azure infrastructure, I would have thought there would be a be recovery mechanism based on modern AD constructs and drawing on the data stored in Azure. Am I incorrect in this assumption and the approach as outlined in your document still stands?
Kent Gaardmand
Jan 25, 2018Steel Contributor
The basic of AD restore have not really changed, its unfortunate that its a physical server.
How was the server backed up, direct agent or through DPM - More info would help explain what restore options you have.
If you just used the mars agent and backed up the system state, then you reinstall the server and then the agent, then restore the system state. the problem her is that you have to insure that windows has the same update level as before or you will encounter problems.
If you used DPM or protected in such a manner that you could restore it as a VM, i would deploy the Hyper-V role to you server and restore the entire DC.
How was the server backed up, direct agent or through DPM - More info would help explain what restore options you have.
If you just used the mars agent and backed up the system state, then you reinstall the server and then the agent, then restore the system state. the problem her is that you have to insure that windows has the same update level as before or you will encounter problems.
If you used DPM or protected in such a manner that you could restore it as a VM, i would deploy the Hyper-V role to you server and restore the entire DC.