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July 2000

The Active Directory Migration Tool


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AD gets an eraser

On March 2000, Microsoft released the Active Directory Migration Tool (ADMT—you'll find it at http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/library/ planning/activedirectory/admt.asp). Third-party migration tools are richer in features, but ADMT is free and is a must for anyone trying to design an Active Directory (AD) structure. The tool is only about a 2.5MB download, which you can obtain quickly—even if you don't have access to a Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) or cable modem.

AD is a pretty good offering, but it requires you to do a lot of designing and planning. And you'd better implement your plan right the first time because undoing things in AD is difficult—I often liken AD to a pencil without an eraser.

Now, ADMT serves as AD's eraser. ADMT mainly moves user accounts and similar information en masse from an existing Windows 2000 or Windows NT 4.0 domain into an existing Win2K domain. Being able to move accounts and related information from one domain to another is the key to domain consolidation.

The World Before ADMT
Suppose you have two NT 4.0 domains—FIRST and SECOND—that contain several thousand users (not to mention machine accounts), and some higher-up tells you to combine those two domains into one larger domain named ALLFOLKS. You'd have to recreate the FIRST and SECOND user accounts in ALLFOLKS. Now and then, you'd find that FIRST contained a user account whose name also appeared in SECOND, resulting in a collision. If both domains contain a johnsmith, one of those users will have to become johnsmith01 or some other variation.

How would you recreate all those user accounts? You could type them in one at a time or use a command-line tool such as the Adduser utility in the Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 Resource Kit. But Adduser isn't good at handling name collisions. Suppose further that ALLFOLKS is a Win2K domain, and you want to put all of the FIRST users in one organizational unit (OU) and the SECOND folks in another OU. Adduser won't help with that task either, but ADMT will.

A Timesaver
If you have ADMT, you can use it to copy the user accounts from the source domains (FIRST and SECOND) to the target domain (ALLFOLKS). To transfer the accounts, you first install ADMT. The Help file says you should install ADMT only on a Win2K domain controller in the target domain. However, I've successfully migrated user accounts while running ADMT on a Win2K Pro machine in the target domain. One restriction you must abide by, however, is that the target domain must be a native-mode Win2K domain.

Next, you'll need administrative powers in both the target and source domains. But ADMT is pickier than older cross-domain tools are. For example, if you used Netdom to move machine accounts from FIRST to ALLFOLKS, you could log on to an ALLFOLKS machine as an ALLFOLKS administrator. Then, to establish that you're simultaneously a FIRST administrator, you could execute a Net Use command to some resource on a FIRST domain controller.

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Reader Comments
<br><i>I've never run into the problems you mention. Make sure that all the trust relationships are in place. Make sure that member servers recognize the domain administrator groups in their own domain as administrators. You can always log on to those member servers using the command net use \\machinename\ipc$ /user:domainname\username to ensure that you have administrator powers.<br></i>

Mark Minasi December 01, 2000


<br>I need assistance with the topic Mark Minasi discussed in Inside Out: "The Active Directory Migration Tool" (July 2000). We're trying to migrate a Windows NT 4.0 domain to a Windows 2000 domain using the Active Directory Migration Tool (ADMT). However, the tool fails to migrate the SIDs. Whether we select the check box to migrate the SIDs or leave the check box blank, ADMT still passes on a message saying that the SIDs will not be migrated. <br>
Also, when we try to migrate a computer, the agents are dispatched, but they fail to run on the remote computer and indicate that access is denied. The article mentions that you can run the agents by hand, but the article doesn't provide any other details about the process.<br>

Paul Williams December 01, 2000


I have just setup a new network with Win2k as the server. I need to get all of my user information from a Windows NT 4 server, located on another domain. There is a trust relationship between both domains, and I've verified it both ways, but when I run ADMT, I get an error that it cannot proceed becuase I am not an administrator on the other domain, however, I clearly am. Could you give me help on how to proceed?

Dan June 22, 2001


can you put the same password to the admin account for both machine??
you must verify you are an admin in the other domain, i think there is something in the mmc to change ...

jb December 10, 2002


Hello,

We have bought a new server to replace our old (hardware) SBS2000 server.

Can you offer an suggestions on how to recreate the old server on the new?

The old server is running SBS2k (AD,ISA,exchange,file server) I see that the Active Directory Migration Tool can create all the accounts on the new server, but does that also create the exchange mail boxes, move all the mail across, create the same directory shares + permissions + files & the ISA configuration on the new server?

Can you point me to some tools that will make this run smoothly with as little downtime as possible?

Thanks in advance,


Paul November 11, 2003


I have a NT 4.0 domain and a new Server with Windows Server 2003.

I want to migrate the Users and computer accounts from the NT domain to the Windows Server 2003 Active Directory.

Active Directory on the server is in "Windows 2000 mixed mode". When I run the Active Directory Migration Tool v2 I get the error "The target domain is not native mode." I've tried raising it to Native Mode but then it is no longer able to access the NT domain.

Any suggestions on how to migrate the users and accounts?

Anonymous User December 26, 2004


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