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Supported on: Windows Server 2016, Windows Server 2019, and Windows Server 2022 |
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Required permissions: Domain user privilege is required. |
The Active Administrator® Foundation Service (AFS) periodically checks the Knowledge Consistency Checker (KCC) configuration for each site and alerts when the replication topology generation functionality of the KCC has been explicitly disabled. While disabling the KCC is a valid administrator action, it can result in poorly-tuned replication topologies.
Clear the fifth bit (16) of the <Root Domain>\Configuration\Sites\<Site name>\NTDS Site Settings\options value to re-enable inter-site topology generation.
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Supported on: Windows Server 2016, Windows Server 2019, and Windows Server 2022 |
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Required permissions: Domain user privilege is required. |
The Active Administrator® Foundation Service (AFS) periodically checks the Knowledge Consistency Checker (KCC) configuration for each site and alerts when the replication topology generation functionality of the KCC has been explicitly disabled. While disabling the KCC is a valid administrator action, it can result in poorly-tuned replication topologies.
Clear the first bit (1) of the <Root Domain>\Configuration\Sites\<Site name>\NTDS Site Settings\options value to re-enable inter-site topology generation.
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Supported on: Windows Server 2016, Windows Server 2019, and Windows Server 2022 |
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Required permissions: Domain user privilege is required. |
All files and folders that File Replication Service (FRS) manages are uniquely identified internally by a special file identifier. FRS uses these identifiers as the canonical identifiers of files and folders that are being replicated. If FRS receives a change order to create a folder that already exists, which by definition has a different file identifier than the duplicate folder, FRS protects the conflicting change by leaving the original directory structure intact, and renaming the conflicting directory to a unique name so that underlying files and folders can be preserved. The conflicting folder is given a new name in the following format: <FolderName>_NTFRS_<GUID>, where <FolderName> is the original name of the folder and <GUID> is a unique character string, such as 001a84b2.
Common causes of this condition are:
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Supported on: Windows Server 2016, Windows Server 2019, and Windows Server 2022 |
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Required permissions: Domain user privilege is required. |
The Active Administrator® Foundation Service (AFS) periodically checks the Knowledge Consistency Checker (KCC) configuration for each site. If universal group membership caching is disabled and there are no global catalogs in the site, an alert is issued.
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