Labels

3300 (1) 3PAR (1) Active Directory (1) ADFS (1) Admin Share (1) Auto-Sync (2) Auto-Sync locked (1) AWS (3) AzCopy (1) Azure (3) Backups (2) Broadcom (1) Call Forwarding (1) CLI (2) cmd (1) Compatibility View (1) Dameware MRC (1) Databases (1) DFS (1) DNS (1) Domain Admin (1) domain controller (1) Enterprise Mode (1) ESXi 5.0 (1) ESXi 5.1 (5) ESXi 5.5 (3) Exchange (3) Exchange 2010 (5) Extreme (1) ExtremeXOS (1) Federation (1) File Share (1) FSMO (1) GPO (1) Group Policy (1) Group Policy Client (1) Hardware Acceleration (1) Helpdesk (1) HP-UX (1) Hyper-V (2) IAM (1) IE10 (1) IE11 (1) IP conflict (1) Kayako (3) LDAP (1) Licence (1) Links (9) local groups (1) LUN lock (1) LUN number (1) MAC address (1) Microsoft Teams (1) Mitel (1) Namespaces (1) Networking (6) Nexenta (6) NMC (1) Office 365 (4) OneDrive (1) Outlook 2003 (1) Outlook 2013 (1) PC (1) Physical (1) PowerCLI (10) Powershell (10) promoted links (2) Public Folders (1) RDP (1) RDS (1) Recovery Services (1) RedShift (1) Registry (3) Reports (1) Resolve (2) Restart (1) RSA (1) Run As (1) SAML (1) SAN (1) Scavenging (1) script (10) Server 2003 (3) Server 2008 R2 (1) Server 2012 R2 (2) Servers (2) sharepoint 2013 (3) SMTP (3) Snapshot (2) SRM (1) SSH (5) SSL Certificate (2) Temporary profile (1) Terminal Server (3) Troubleshooting (5) Ubuntu (1) Update Manager (1) Useful Apps (1) VAAI (1) vCenter Server Appliance (1) VDI (1) VDP (1) Veeam Backup and Replication (2) VM (1) VM Error (1) vmdk (1) VMFS (1) vMotion (2) VMware (20) VoiP (1) vSphere 5.5 (4) vSphere 6.0 (2) vSphere 6.5 (1) vUM (1) webpart (1) Windows (3) Windows 10 (1) Windows 7 (2)

Monday, 20 July 2015

Where are my FSMO roles?

The easy way to query which servers hold your FSMO roles is to open a command prompt and type;

NetDOM /query FSMO

This should return a list of each role and the server holding it.

No comments:

Post a Comment