Applies To: Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2
The dfsrmig command migrates SYSVOL replication from File Replication Service (FRS) to Distributed File System (DFS) Replication, provides information about the progress of the migration, and modifies Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) objects to support the migration.
For examples of how to use this command, see the Examples section later in this document.
Syntax
dfsrmig [/SetGlobalState <state> | /GetGlobalState | /GetMigrationState | /CreateGlobalObjects |
/DeleteRoNtfrsMember [<read_only_domain_controller_name>] | /DeleteRoDfsrMember [<read_only_domain_controller_name>] | /?]
Parameters
Parameter |
Description |
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/SetGlobalState <state> |
Sets the desired global migration state for the domain to the state that corresponds to the value specified by state. To proceed through the migration or the rollback processes, use this command to cycle through the valid states. This option enables you to initiate and control the migration process by setting the global migration state in AD DS on the PDC emulator. If the PDC emulator is not available, this command fails. For information about the states for migration and rollback, see SYSVOL Migration States. You can only set the global migration state to a stable state. The valid values for state, therefore, are 0 for the Start state, 1 for the Prepared state, 2 for the Redirected state, and 3 for the Eliminated state. Migration to the Eliminated state is irreversible and rollback from that state is not possible, so use a value of 3 for state only when you are fully committed to using DFS Replication for SYSVOL replication. |
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/GetGlobalState |
Retrieves the current global migration state for the domain from the local copy of the AD DS database, when run on the PDC emulator. Use this option to confirm that you set the correct global migration state. Only stable migration states can be global migration states, so the results that the dfsrmig command reports with the /GetGlobalState option correspond to the states you can set with the /SetGlobalState option. You should run the dfsrmig command with the /GetGlobalState option only on the PDC emulator. Active Directory replication replicates the global state to the other domain controllers in the domain, but replication latencies can cause inconsistencies if you run the dfsrmig command with the /GetGlobalState option on a domain controller other than the PDC emulator. To check the local migration status of a domain controller other than the PDC emulator, use the /GetMigrationState option instead. |
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/GetMigrationState |
Retrieves the current local migration state for all domain controllers in the domain, and determines whether those local states match the current global migration state. Use this option to determine if all domain controllers have reached the global migration state. The output of the dsfrmig command when you use the /GetMigrationState option indicates whether or not migration to the current global state is complete, and it lists the local migration state for any domain controllers that have not reached the current global migration state. Local migration state for domain controllers can include transition states for domain controllers that have not reached the current global migration state. |
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/CreateGlobalObjects |
Creates the global objects and settings in AD DS that DFS Replication uses. You should not need to use this option during a normal migration process, because the DFS Replication service automatically creates these AD DS objects and settings during the migration from the Start state to the Prepared state. Use this option to manually create these objects and settings in the following situations: · A new read-only domain controller is promoted during migration. The DFS Replication service automatically creates the AD DS objects and settings for DFS Replication during the migration from the Start state to the Prepared state. If a new read-only domain controller is promoted in the domain after this transition, but before migration to the Eliminated state, then the objects that correspond to the newly activated read-only domain controller are not created in AD DS causing replication and migration to fail. · In this case, you can run the dfsrmig command with the /CreateGlobalObjects option to manually create the objects on any read-only domain controllers that do not already have them. Running this command does not affect the domain controllers that already have the objects and settings for the DFS Replication service. · The global settings for the DFS Replication service are missing or were deleted. If these settings are missing for a particular domain controller, migration from the Start state to the Prepared state stalls at the Preparing transition state for the domain controller. In this case, you can use the dfsrmig command with the /CreateGlobalObjects option to manually create the settings.
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/DeleteRoNtfrsMember [<read_only_domain_controller_name>] |
Deletes the global AD DS settings for FRS replication that correspond to the specified read-only domain controller, or deletes the global AD DS settings for FRS replication for all read-only domain controllers if no value is specified for read_only_domain_controller_name. You should not need to use this option during a normal migration process, because the DFS Replication service automatically deletes these AD D You use this option to manually delete the AD DS settings only when the automatic deletion fails on a read-only domain controller and stalls the read-only domain controller for a long time during the migration from the Redirected state to the Eliminated state. |
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/DeleteRoDfsrMember [<read_only_domain_controller_name>] |
Deletes the global AD DS settings for DFS Replication that correspond to the specified read-only domain controller, or deletes the global AD DS settings for DFS Replication for all read-only domain controllers if no value is specified for read_only_domain_controller_name. Use this option to manually delete the AD DS settings only when the automatic deletion fails on a read-only domain controller and stalls the read-only domain controller for a long time when rolling back the migration from the Prepared state to the Start state. |
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/? |
Displays Help at the command prompt. Equivalent to running dfsrmig without any options. |
Remarks
- Dfsrmig.exe, the migration tool for the DFS Replication service, is installed with the DFS Replication service.
For a new Windows Server 2008 server, Dcpromo.exe installs and starts the DFS Replication service when you promote the computer to a domain controller. When you upgrade a server from Windows Server 2003 to Windows Server 2008, the upgrade process installs and starts the DFS Replication service. You do not need to install the DFS Replication role service to have the DFS Replication service installed and started. - The dfsrmig tool is supported only on domain controllers that run at the Windows Server 2008 domain functional level, because SYSVOL migration from FRS to DFS Replication is only possible on domain controllers that operate at the Windows Server 2008 domain functional level.
- You can run the dfsrmig command on any domain controller, but operations that create or manipulate AD DS objects are only allowed on read-write capable domain controllers (not on read-only domain controllers).
- Running dfsrmig without any options displays Help at the command prompt.
Examples
To set the global migration state to prepared (1) and initiate migration to or rollback from the Prepared state, type:
dfsrmig /SetGlobalState 1
To set the global migration state to start (0) and initiate rollback to the Start state, type:
dfsrmig /SetGlobalState 0
To display the global migration state, type:
dfsrmig /GetGlobalState
This example shows typical output from the dfsrmig /GetGlobalState command.
Current DFSR global state: ‘Prepared’
Succeeded.
To display the information about whether the local migration states on all of the domain controllers match the global migration state and the local migration states for any domain controllers where the local state does not match the global state, type:
dfsrmig /GetMigrationState
This example shows typical output from the dfsrmig /GetMigrationState command when the local migration states on all of the domain controllers match the global migration state.
All Domain Controllers have migrated successfully to Global state (‘Prepared’).
Migration has reached a consistent state on all Domain Controllers.
Succeeded.
This example shows typical output from the dfsrmig /GetMigrationState command when the local migration states on some domain controllers do not match the global migration state.
The following Domain Controllers are not in sync with Global state (‘Prepared’):
Domain Controller (Local Migration State) – DC Type
===================================================
CONTOSO-DC2 (‘Start’) – ReadOnly DC
CONTOSO-DC3 (‘Preparing’) – Writable DC
Migration has not yet reached a consistent state on all domain controllers
State information might be stale due to AD latency.
To create the global objects and settings that DFS Replication uses in AD DS on domain controllers where those settings were not created automatically during migration or where those settings are missing, type:
dfsrmig /CreateGlobalObjects
To delete the global AD DS settings for FRS replication for a read-only domain controller named contoso-dc2 if those settings were not deleted automatically deleted by the migration process, type:
dfsrmig /DeleteRoNtfrsMember contoso-dc2
To delete the global AD DS settings for FRS replication for all read-only domain controllers if those settings were not deleted automatically by the migration process, type:
dfsrmig /DeleteRoNtfrsMember
To delete the global AD DS settings for DFS Replication for a read-only domain controller named contoso-dc2 if those settings were not deleted automatically by the migration process, type:
dfsrmig /DeleteRoDfsrMember contoso-dc2
To delete the global AD DS settings for DFS Replication for all read-only domain controllers if those settings were not deleted automatically by the migration process, type:
dfsrmig /DeleteRoDfsrMember
Additional references
SYSVOL Replication Migration Guide: FRS to DFS Replication
Migrating to the Prepared State
Migrating to the Redirected State
Migrating to the Eliminated State
Rolling Back SYSVOL Migration to a Previous Stable State
SYSVOL Migration Series: Part 2–Dfsrmig.exe: The SYSVOL Migration Tool