From: v-branee@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ("Brandy Nee [MSFT]")
Date: Fri, 03 Mar 2006 04:11:52 GMT
Hello John,Thank you for posting to the SBS Newsgroup. I understand that you reverse the File Redirection Group Policy. If I have misunderstood your concern, please let me know. Please take your time to read through my reply and then perform the steps: =========If there are a large number of clients that need to restore their "My Documents" folders back to their local user profile location, we can choose the second option "Redirect the folder back to the local userprofile location when policy is removed". We may use the following steps:1. Create a new GPO.2. Configure the "Folder Redirection" policy to redirect the "My Documents" folders to the same network share as the the previous GPO.3. On the "My Documents Properties" window, click the Settings tab.4. Select the "Redirect the folder back to the local userprofile location when policy is removed" option box, and click OK.5. On the client, please refresh the group policy settings by logging of and logging on the system again. 6. On the domain controller, delete the GPO created and configured in Step 1~Step 4.7. Log off and log on the client system to see if the problem has been solved.=========If the amount of clients is not large, we can manually copy My Document folder back to client workstation: 1. On the client workstation, take the workstation offline. Copy the content from My Document to folder on local drive (Recommended: C:\Documents and Settings\[User]\My Documents). Since the computer is offline, it will copy the content from offline cache and it will not occupy the network resource.2. On the SBS server, open Server management and navigate to Group Policy Management Console.3. Right click the Group Policy Object which you enabled Folder Redirection and click Edit.4. Navigate to User Configuration\Windows Settings\Folder Redirection\My Documents. Right click My Document and click Properties.5. In the Settings tab, Click to select "Leave the folder in the new Location when policy is removed". Click Apply.6. In the Target tab, Click Combo box next to "Setting:" and select "Not configured". Click OK.7. Log on the Client workstation in to the domain.8. Right click My Documents and click properties9. Click Move button. 10. Choose the local folder that you copy the content in the Step #1. Click Apply. 11. You will be prompted with dialog "Would you like to move all of the document?". Please click NO. 12. Click OKHope it helps! if you have any updates, please feel free to let me know. I am looking forward to hearing from you! Best regards,Brandy NeeMicrosoft CSS Online Newsgroup SupportGet Secure! - www.microsoft.com/security======================================================This newsgroup only focuses on SBS technical issues. If you have issues regarding other Microsoft products, you'd better post in the corresponding newsgroups so that they can be resolved in an efficient and timely manner. You can locate the newsgroup here: http://www.microsoft.com/communities/newsgroups/en-us/default.aspxWhen opening a new thread via the web interface, we recommend you check the "Notify me of replies" box to receive e-mail notifications when there are any updates in your thread. When responding to posts via your newsreader, please "Reply to Group" so that others may learn and benefit from your issue.Microsoft engineers can only focus on one issue per thread. Although we provide other information for your reference, we recommend you post different incidents in different threads to keep the thread clean. In doing so, it will ensure your issues are resolved in a timely manner. For urgent issues, you may want to contact Microsoft CSS directly. Please check http://support.microsoft.com for regional support phone numbers.Any input or comments in this thread are highly appreciated.======================================================This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.--------------------
From: john@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxNewsgroups: microsoft.public.windows.server.sbsSubject: Remove Folder RedirectionDate: 2 Mar 2006 10:18:54 -0800Organization: http://groups.google.comLines: 44Message-ID: <1141323534.464989.314010@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>NNTP-Posting-Host: 67.43.130.51Mime-Version: 1.0Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"X-Trace: posting.google.com 1141323540 6289 127.0.0.1 (2 Mar 2006 18:19:00 GMT)
X-Complaints-To: groups-abuse@xxxxxxxxxxNNTP-Posting-Date: Thu, 2 Mar 2006 18:19:00 +0000 (UTC)User-Agent: G2/0.2X-HTTP-UserAgent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1),gzip(gfe),gzip(gfe)
Complaints-To: groups-abuse@xxxxxxxxxxInjection-Info: z34g2000cwc.googlegroups.com; posting-host=67.43.130.51;posting-account=WWgs4wwAAACrGJT1nJ-lwv0sQJZ6yQ58Path: TK2MSFTNGXA03.phx.gbl!TK2MSFTNGP08.phx.gbl!newsfeed00.sul.t-online.de!t-online.de!news.glorb.com!postnews.google.com!z34g2000cwc.googlegroups.com!not-for-mail
Xref: TK2MSFTNGXA03.phx.gbl microsoft.public.windows.server.sbs:248821X-Tomcat-NG: microsoft.public.windows.server.sbsAbout a year ago I was providie instructions on how to redirect the "MyDocuments" folder on my PC only to the network:1. Create a new Security Group and place the user(s) that you want toredirect the My Documents folder for in the security group.2. Open the Group Policy Management console.3. Right click on the Default Domain Policy , and then click Edit .4. Click User Configuration , click Windows Settings , and then clickFolder Redirection.5. Right-click My Documents Folder , and then click Properties.6. In the Settings box, click Advanced - Specify the location forvarious user groups, and then click Add .7. Click the Browse button next to the Security Group Membership box,and then click the security group that you created in Step 1 from thedomain list.8. Click Target Location Folder , and then use a UNC path to thelocation where you want the My Documents folder to be located.9. Click the Settings tab. By default, both of the following settingsare enabled:When enabled, the Grant the user exclusive rights to My Documents checkbox sets permissions on the folder for the User and System to fullpermissions.If you click to clear the check box, no change is made to thepermissions on the folder. When enabled, the Move the contents of MyDocuments to the new location check box moves the contents to the newlocation. If you click to clear the check box, then the contents remainwhere they are.10. In the Policy Removal box, click either Leave the folder in the newlocation when the policy is removed, or Redirect the folder back to thelocal userprofile location when the policy is removed. By default, thefirst option is selected.11. Click Apply , click OK , and then quit Group Policy Editor.12. Bring up a CMD prompt and type "GPUpdate /force"12. Have the user(s) log off and then log on again.These instructions worked great. I would now like to put everythingback to the way it was so I attempted to follow these instruction inreverese but the folder and files are still being redirected.If anyone knows what I might be doing wrong or could provide properinstructions in reverse it would be greatly apprecited :-)
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Client Document Redirection
Client Document Redirection
You can redirect all users' My Documents folders from their client computers to a shared folder on the computer running Windows Small Business Server 2003 where they can be backed up regularly. A cached copy of My Documents is stored on the users' computers. Users can work on documents even when disconnected from the network. Each time they log off of or log on to the network, the copy of their My Documents folder on their client computer synchronizes with the server copy.
Redirecting users' documents to the server can use a lot of disk space. It is recommended that you use disk quotas to help control the amount of disk space occupied by users' files. The disk partition where the Users shared folder is located has the following quota settings by default:
•
Disk space is limited to: 1 GB
•
Warning level is set to: 900 MB
When you enable folder redirection, the My Documents folder is redirected to the folder called Users Shared Folders by default. If you redirect the My Documents folder to another location, you need to first set the correct permissions on the folder.
To set permissions on the shared network folder where each user's My Documents folder is redirected
1.
Click Start, and then click Windows Explorer.
2.
Right-click the folder to which you want to redirect the user's My Documents folder, and then click Sharing and Security.
3.
On the Sharing tab, choose Share this folder, click Permissions. Add the following users and groups if they are not present, and then assign them Full Control permissions:
•
Domain Users
•
Domain Admins
•
SBS Folder Operators
Note
It is recommended that you remove any previous users or groups from the list of group or user names.
4.
On the Security tab, click Advanced, and then clear the check box for Allow inheritable permissions from the parent to propagate to this object and all child objects. When prompted for how to assign the permissions, click Remove.
5.
Click Add, add the following users and groups if they are not present, and then assign them Full Control permissions:
•
Creator Owner
•
Domain Admins
•
SBS Folder Operators
•
SYSTEM
6.
Click Add, and then type Domain Users. In the Permissions Entry for All Users dialog box, click the Apply onto drop down box, click This folder only, and then select the following:
•
List Folder/Read Data
•
Read Attributes
•
Create Folders/Append Data
You can redirect all users' My Documents folders from their client computers to a shared folder on the computer running Windows Small Business Server 2003 where they can be backed up regularly. A cached copy of My Documents is stored on the users' computers. Users can work on documents even when disconnected from the network. Each time they log off of or log on to the network, the copy of their My Documents folder on their client computer synchronizes with the server copy.
Redirecting users' documents to the server can use a lot of disk space. It is recommended that you use disk quotas to help control the amount of disk space occupied by users' files. The disk partition where the Users shared folder is located has the following quota settings by default:
•
Disk space is limited to: 1 GB
•
Warning level is set to: 900 MB
When you enable folder redirection, the My Documents folder is redirected to the folder called Users Shared Folders by default. If you redirect the My Documents folder to another location, you need to first set the correct permissions on the folder.
To set permissions on the shared network folder where each user's My Documents folder is redirected
1.
Click Start, and then click Windows Explorer.
2.
Right-click the folder to which you want to redirect the user's My Documents folder, and then click Sharing and Security.
3.
On the Sharing tab, choose Share this folder, click Permissions. Add the following users and groups if they are not present, and then assign them Full Control permissions:
•
Domain Users
•
Domain Admins
•
SBS Folder Operators
Note
It is recommended that you remove any previous users or groups from the list of group or user names.
4.
On the Security tab, click Advanced, and then clear the check box for Allow inheritable permissions from the parent to propagate to this object and all child objects. When prompted for how to assign the permissions, click Remove.
5.
Click Add, add the following users and groups if they are not present, and then assign them Full Control permissions:
•
Creator Owner
•
Domain Admins
•
SBS Folder Operators
•
SYSTEM
6.
Click Add, and then type Domain Users. In the Permissions Entry for All Users dialog box, click the Apply onto drop down box, click This folder only, and then select the following:
•
List Folder/Read Data
•
Read Attributes
•
Create Folders/Append Data
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
