Bookmark
Tom Resing

tom-resing

Tom Resing is Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist in SharePoint Development, Installation and Configuration. He is an experienced web strategist and engineer. Tom has moved from Pascal at the Naval Research Lab in 1992 to business ownership and SharePoint Consulting today and currently drives SharePoint deployments for MicroLink's customers.

Read Tom's blog
Visit MicroLink website

 

Find a SharePoint Product

SharePoint Products

SharePoint Events

<<  May 2012  >>
 Sun  Mon  Tue  Wed  Thu  Fri  Sat 
    1  2  3  4  5
  6  7  8  9101112
13171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
Browse by Company:
SharePoint 2007 Upgrade with a Domain Migration PDF Print E-mail
SharePoint Administration
Written by Tom Resing   
Sunday, 15 February 2009 21:29

review5 (Rating: 5 out of 5)

Tzunami Deployer maps SharePoint users from one domain to another, complete with file history and ownership.  A business unit of a larger company has hired MicroLink for a SharePoint Migration Project. We've done a lot of upgrades from the 2003 technologies to the 2007 products, but this one has a twist ...

The group's SharePoint Portal Server 2003 environment exists in a legacy Active Directory Forest. The new Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 environment will be on a new Active Directory Forest. You could consider it an upgrade with a domain migration. The upgrade is fairly straightforward, but a mapping is required for the domain migration. Each user in the old domain maps to a new user account in the new domain. Each user's permissions and file ownership in 2003 in the old domain will be transferred to the corresponding user account in the new domain in the SharePoint 2007 Environment.

Moving from one forest to another is a common scenario, especially in Mergers and Acquisitions, but relatively little documentation exists for this scenario in SharePoint. Apparently, there is little out of the box included to help with this besides one stsadm operation, migrateuser, for transferring permissions. Of the many vendors that offer Third Party SharePoint Migration tools, at least three don't cover this domain migration scenario. Transferring file ownership from one user to another doesn't even seem to be on the radar of AvePoint, Metalogix or Quest.

Tzunami Migration Solution

One 3rd party tool does help with domain migrations and even transfers file ownership. Take a look at the following two screenshots from a Tzunami Deployer migration scenario on my test VM's. The first (figure 1) is a Team Site on WSSv2 in the fictional BoscoCorp.local forest. The second (figure 2) is the deployed Team Site in MOSS 2007 on the fictional Popsco.local forest. In this example, there was no trust between the two forests, but the users were still correctly across domains.
 

Behind the scenes, Tzunami Deployer is reading information from the SPS 2003 source and writing to the SharePoint 2007 API. Tzunami support assured me that they do not write directly to the database in SharePoint 2007. Good thing, as this is a strict no-no for support from Microsoft. This limitation became especially clear when I asked why my SPS Portal site hadn't transferred. As you can see from the above screen shots, Tzunami does an excellent job on a Team Site Migration. However, a limitation of the API prevents creation of Collaboration Portal Site Collection Templates, so this step must be completed manually.

In Figure 3 you can see a screenshot of the product. It shows the project I created for the above Team Site migration. You see a Site Collection, Popsco Portal, that was created in Central Admin with the Collaboration Portal Site Collection Template. The Bosco Administrator Site shown in the first two figures was moved under this Site Collection using the Deployer project shown above.

Review first published on Tom Resing's blog.

 
Read Reviews and Learn More

Visit vendor website


View Related Products

 

 

 

 
Comments (1)
1 Wednesday, 23 September 2009 13:45
cawood
Hi Tom, the information in this article about Metalogix SharePoint Site Migration Manager (SSMM) is incorrect. SSMM fully supports the scenario you’ve described--including mapping users during a migration or upgrade.

Add your comment

Your name:
Comment: