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Active Directory Disaster Recovery

You're reading from  Active Directory Disaster Recovery

Product type Book
Published in Jun 2008
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781847193278
Pages 252 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Florian Rommel Florian Rommel
Profile icon Florian Rommel
Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters close

Active Directory Disaster Recovery
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
1. Preface
1. An Overview of Active Directory Disaster Recovery 2. Active Directory Design Principles 3. Design and Implement a Disaster Recovery Plan for Your Organization 4. Strengthening AD to Increase Resilience 5. Active Directory Failure On a Single Domain Controller 6. Recovery of a Single Failed Domain Controller 7. Recovery of Lost or Deleted Users and Objects 8. Complete Active Directory Failure 9. Site AD Infrastructure Failure (Hardware) 10. Common Recovery Tools Explained Sample Business Continuity Plan Bibliography

Proper Change Management


It seems to be quite common in small-or medium-sized organizations to let the IT department decide upon the changes to be implemented in the infrastructure. This can include application server upgrades and DCs.

Moreover, this process is usually done with an attitude of "inform the IT manager and that's it". Whenever administrators hear about Change Management, there is a lot of resistance because of the perceived additional bureaucracy.

To ensure full accountability and proper management of your IT infrastructure, however, Change Management is a necessity, and implementing it can save your infrastructure from accidents and unsupervised changes, which can cause problems with other parts of your AD of which the person implementing the change was not aware.

Generally, the process could be seen as shown in the following figure. Stakeholders are the parties who depend on the AD, such as heads of business units, the IT manager, and the CFO. It is important that the change...

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