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Demotion

Posted 05-27-2008 at 07:52 PM by Bob_McMillen
This morning I was scheduled to demote a domain controller that I replaced last week. Sounds easy enough. I've done it hundreds of times.

All you need to do is go to a run command and type "dcpromo". Isn't it funny you always have to start something to shut it down? Why not type "DCdemote"?
After typing in the command I clicked for all the prompts to finish.

While it was going through its demotion I thought I would catch up on a little reading. When suddenly I heard a beep. The message said the RPC service is unavailable. I checked out all the event logs and found that my server, which I’m trying to demote, no longer thinks it’s a domain controller.

How can I demote a domain controller that no longer thinks it’s a domain controller ?
I then pulled up a list of all the shares and noticed the netlogon and syslog file share were missing. These are required in order for a domain controller to act appropriately. I have seen this problem several times but never as I was about to demote a server.

The fix for this is to go into the registry and reset the burflags. This allows active directory to rebuild the shares that may have been truncated by a previous update or other corruption. Since I had already transferred the master roles to the new server all I had to do was set the registry to a non authoritative restore.


After running this command the shares returned as I had hoped. I then ran the DC promo command once again. Unfortunately, I got the same error as the sysvol share once again deleted itself. After resetting the burflags two more times I decided to look for another solution.

I ran the replication monitor and it said there were problems replicating. I then ran DCDIAG and it showed me the IP address of the server was different than it actually was. Now this was looking like a dns problem so I opened up the dns manager. I looked for this incorrect IP address that DCDIAG was telling me, but I couldn’t find it. Then it dawned on me that someone had probably created a hosts file that pointed to the incorrect address.

A hosts file always trumps a DNS server entry.
I was correct. After deleting this address and running a flush dns command I was able to get farther during the demotion.

Then I received a new error. This one said that I did not have enough privileges to run the demotion when I was logged on as the administrator. Someone had removed rights to the administrator and gave them to their own account. Rather than search through what rights were missing I was able to type in his username and password and complete the demotion. Now I have a lot of time to find out how the administrator account was changed.

What which should have only taken 10 minutes ended up taking close to 4 hours. Wil the challenges never end? I met someone who used to be in IT during the DOT COM, and now sells lemonade on the street. They look much happier.
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