1 |
Select Create a new Active Administrator database. |
2 |
Click Next. |
5 |
NOTE: If the Trust Server Certificate check box is not selected, Active Administrator will walk the validation chain until it finds a valid authority. |
7 |
If using an Azure SQL Managed instance, select SQL Server Authentication, enter a SQL user ID that has login privilege for the SQL Managed instance, and enter the password for the SQL account. |
8 |
Click Next. |
11 |
2 |
Select Use an existing Active Administrator database. |
5 |
NOTE: If the Trust Server Certificate check box is not selected, Active Administrator will walk the validation chain until it finds a valid authority. |
7 |
If using an Azure SQL Managed instance, select SQL Server Authentication, enter a SQL user ID that has login privilege for the SQL Managed instance, and enter the password for the SQL account. |
8 |
The characters in the password will be hidden. Each character will be represented by a displayed dot. Select Show Password to display the password. |
9 |
Click Test Connection to validate the database. |
10 |
NOTE: After you complete the configuration wizard, you can use the Active Administrator Console to manage archive databases by selecting Configuration | Archive Databases. |
1 |
Select Create a new Active Administrator Archive database. |
2 |
Click Next. |
5 |
NOTE: If the Trust Server Certificate check box is not selected, Active Administrator will walk the validation chain until it finds a valid authority. |
7 |
If using an Azure SQL Managed instance, select SQL Server Authentication, enter a SQL user ID that has login privilege for the SQL Managed instance, and enter the password for the SQL account. |
8 |
The characters in the password will be hidden. Each character will be represented by a displayed dot. Select Show Password to display the password. |
10 |
Click Next. |
14 |
1 |
4 |
NOTE: If the Trust Server Certificate check box is not selected, Active Administrator will walk the validation chain until it finds a valid authority. |
6 |
If using an Azure SQL Managed instance, select SQL Server Authentication, enter a SQL user ID that has login privilege for the SQL Managed instance, and enter the password for the SQL account. |
7 |
The characters in the password will be hidden. Each character will be represented by a displayed dot. Select Show Password to display the password. |
8 |
Click Test Connection to validate the archive database. |
9 |
NOTE: You can set more options to purge events, GPO history, and Active Directory® backups, and to archive events in the Active Administrator Console. |
2 |
The Active Administrator Path Selection page displays the default path to the folder where the Active Administrator data is stored.
The install process creates the ActiveAdministrator share, which contains five subfolders in which Active Administrator data is stored: ActiveTemplates, ADBackups, Config, GPOHistory, and GPORepository. You can create your own share as long as it resides on a server that is accessible by all Active Administrator users. Make sure the share has sufficient hard drive capacity. You can estimate that each GPO initially takes 2MB to back up. Each version saved thereafter is significantly smaller, about 10k on average. If you have a large Active Directory database, you should have 10GB available.
IMPORTANT: If you create a share manually, you must use the name ActiveAdministrator for that share. Set authenticated users full control on the share permissions. If you would like to restrict permissions further, you can change the NTFS permissions. |
2 |
Click Next. If the folder you entered does not exist, you receive a confirmation message. |
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