Skip to main content

Top 20 of 2014

Hello everyone. These are the 20 most frequented views on my blog last year. I’m really surprised how many old posts continue to get visited. I guess some things in technology change slower than others. I’m guilty of running some pretty old platforms (by today’s standards.) New year resolution?

  1. Understanding the “AD Op Master is inconsistent” Alert
  2. How to Retrieve Your IP Address with PowerShell
  3. SCCM: Content Hash Fails to Match
  4. How to Use Dropbox to Synchronize Windows 7 Sticky Notes
  5. SCCM: Client Stuck Downloading Package with BIT*.TMP Files in Cache Directory
  6. Search Programs and Files No Longer Works in Windows 7 (Only Shows Headers)
  7. Using PowerShell to List Active Directory Trusts
  8. “Get Computer/IP Status” Activity Throws Raw Socket Error
  9. SCCM: Custom Data Discovery Records (DDRs) Using PowerShell
  10. SCCM: Integrating Dell Warranty Data Into ConfigMgr
  11. SCCM Clients Fail to Apply Policy
  12. SCCM: The Required Permissions for Creating Collections
  13. SCCM: Computers with Names Greater Than 15 Characters
  14. List Active Directory Subnets with PowerShell
  15. SSRS: The Variable Name Has Already Been Declared -- When Working with Temp Tables
  16. EXCEL: My First Use of Power Query (And I Love It)
  17. Using PreloadPkgOnSite.exe to Stage Compressed Copies to Child Site Distribution Points
  18. SCCM: Top Console Users Reports
  19. Executing Batch Files Remotely with PSExec
  20. List Domain Controllers with PowerShell

And that’s it! Hope you all have a spectacular 2015.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

using preloadpkgonsite.exe to stage compressed copies to child site distribution points

UPDATE: john marcum sent me a kind email to let me know about a problem he ran into with preloadpkgonsite.exe in the new SCCM Toolkit V2 where under certain conditions, packages will not uncompress.  if you are using the v2 toolkit, PLEASE read this blog post before proceeding.   here’s a scenario that came up on the mssms@lists.myitforum.com mailing list. when confronted with a situation of large packages and wan links, it’s generally best to get the data to the other location without going over the wire. in this case, 75gb. :/ the “how” you get the files there is really not the most important thing to worry about. once they’re there and moved to the appropriate location, preloadpkgonsite.exe is required to install the compressed source files. once done, a status message goes back to the parent server which should stop the upstream server from copying the package source files over the wan to the child site. anyway, if it’s a relatively small amount of packages, you can

How to Identify Applications Using Your Domain Controller

Problem Everyone has been through it. We've all had to retire or replace a domain controller at some point in our checkered collective experiences. While AD provides very intelligent high availability, some applications are just plain dumb. They do not observe site awareness or participate in locating a domain controller. All they want is the name or IP of one domain controller which gets hardcoded in a configuration file somewhere, deeply embedded in some file folder or setting that you are never going to find. How do you look at a DC and decide which applications might be doing it? Packet trace? Logs? Shut it down and wait for screaming? It seems very tedious and nearly impossible. Potential Solution Obviously I wouldn't even bother posting this if I hadn't run across something interesting. :) I ran across something in draftcalled Domain Controller Isolation. Since it's in draft, I don't know that it's published yet. HOWEVER, the concept is based off

sccm: content hash fails to match

back in 2008, I wrote up a little thing about how distribution manager fails to send a package to a distribution point . even though a lot of what I wrote that for was the failure of packages to get delivered to child sites, the result was pretty much the same. when the client tries to run the advertisement with an old package, the result was a failure because of content mismatch. I went through an ordeal recently capturing these exact kinds of failures and corrected quite a number of problems with these packages. the resulting blog post is my effort to capture how these problems were resolved. if nothing else, it's a basic checklist of things you can use.   DETECTION status messages take a look at your status messages. this has to be the easiest way to determine where these problems exist. unfortunately, it requires that a client is already experiencing problems. there are client logs you can examine as well such as cas, but I wasn't even sure I was going to have enough m