Archive for January, 2010
Foundation Webinar Q&A
Posted by: | CommentsHere is the Q&A from today’s Foundation Server webinar. The recording will be available soon in our Store, http://www.thirdtier.net/store.
Question: Good to hear that Texas twang again. ![]()
Answer: you’re quite welcome, sir! ![]()
Question: Will it run on Hyper-V?
Answer: No, we’ll cover the limitations of the product in the presentation.
Question: Russell Clements – Systems Administrator at Institute for Creation Research (DFW-SBS President in my spare time…). I’ve used Third Tier twice and was VERY impressed with the OUTSTANDING service provided. It’s a GREAT resource – THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!!!
Answer: Thanks, Russell.
Question: He mentioned 15 users in AD. Does that count include all the “default” users (Administrator, Guest, IIS_WPG, IUSR_SVRNAME, IWAM_SVRNAME, etc.)? Or only the named users that we add for the customer’s employees?
Answer: No it does not includes those users. Only the named users. There is a licensing service then runs every few minutes and checks for users in the domain.
Question: I am not seeing slides changing
Answer: You should be on the slide What CAN Founcation Server do? Slide. If not, you may have lost connection and need to sign out and back in again.
Question: they are changing REALLY slowly
Answer: OK, well at least moving. Eriq hasn’t shown many slides yet.
Question: In Server 2003, there was a POP3 mail server. Is there one available for Foundation?
Answer: If there is in Server 2008 R2 then it’s available in Foundation Server.
Question: If a vendor says in there specis that they need server 2008 will a Foundation Server work?
Answer: Yes, unless it hits upon one of the feature limitations that eriq mentioned. But in almost all cases, yes it will.
Question: How are you handling email with this solution?
Answer: I am using hosted Exchange. POP mail through an ISP would also be an option.
Question: Do you have a link that compares windows home server with foundation server?
Answer: There is no direct comparison because they are housed in different divisions within Microsoft.
Question: Will there be evals or NFR’s that we can get maybe through the Action Pack to get familiar with the software?
Answer: Foundation Server came in the Action Pack with the last quarter delivery.
Question: For the small offices that have been limping along on Server 2000 or Server 2003 is there a migration path to Foundation? What about SBS03 users that have decided to move to hosted Exchange?
Answer: There is no direct migration from 32-bit to 64-bit.
Question: Can you add Exchange, Sharepoint ect. and is there any separate pricing for it.
Answer: Sharepoint services is a free download. Anything that you install onto Foundation Server will need to be purchased.
Question: Since this is sold in OEM only, if the server hardware dies then we cannot do bare metal restore because it violates OEM license EULA, correct? Or am I missing something.
Answer: Yes, regular OEM licensing limitations apply.
Question: What about a migration path similar to SBS03->08? If we want to preserve the existing AD …
Answer: Yep, you can join it to the existing domain as a domain controller, it will then have a copy of the AD. Don’t forget to move the FSMO roles after you remove the old SBS03 server.
Question: I’m not that familiar with the low-end Dell boxes. What is your recommendation for RAID? PERC S100/S300 (”software based”)? Or a hardware RAID card?
Answer: This is a matter of opinion. But in my mind, this is a low end box and therefore mirror is probably most appropriate. There are no limitations in the product itself regarding drives.
Question: Great job, but I joined late. Is this recorded?
Answer: YES! http://www.thirdtier.net/store
Question: So we need to be careful with additional users, like backup service, zenith remote admin, etc (which aren’t specifically “named Users” but it sounds like they will take up a foundations CAL?
Answer: Yes, any created user would count as one of the 15 users.
Question: 15 users – counting disabled? // What if foundation is not a DC role, can it be in a domain with trusts? // Can virtualization be used for validation of recovery processes OR as a temporary solution for recovery in case of critical hardware failure? // What are you doing to address Backup of foundation server?
Answer: answering live
Question: can Foundation Server software be purchased from Ingram or D&H?
Answer: No. Foundation Serveris OEM only and only to the major manufacturers at that.
Question: There was some debate in forums about whether you can attach in a larger domain as long as the user usage is 15 or lower. IE. 50 user shop. 10 users hitting FS with TS?
Answer: Nope. It can only be installed at the root of the domain, so it will count all of the users in the entire domain.
Question: You said Dell will ship this preinstalled. How do they configure RAID, disk partitions, etc.? Are there OK options or do you end up blowing it away and rebuilding?
Answer: The options availalbe from Dell have seemed OK to me. We have left it as installed and just setup our own data partitions.
Question: Foundation was recently sent to SBSCs for test setup
Answer: Yes, SBSC’s did get a copy of Foundation Server.
Question: Can you comment on why one would put in a foundation server vs a windows home server?
Answer: answering live
Question: Standard Microsoft Action Pack subscribers do not get Foundation server. I just checked on my online product downloads page. I am not SBSc.
Answer: It was shipped as a seperate DVD and not available for download. It may have been for SBSC Action Pack subscribers only.
Question: so the “administrator” counts as one user already, out of the 15?
Answer: We are not certain. We will get the answer and post it to the blog.
Question: Does the administrator user account count as one of the 15 users?
Answer: Look for the answer to this on our blog.
Question: Very good stuff guys. Thanks!
Answer: Welcome
Question: Excellent webinar.. thank you very much.
Answer: Welcome
Question: Thanks good info
Answer: Welcome
Question: Great info as usual.
Answer: Thanks Tom
Question: Foundation server only adds AD and TS?
Answer: Group Policy and all features of Windows 2008 R2
Question: is $299 the msrp?
Answer: Yes
Question: Thanks – Great Info
Answer: Welcome
Question: except direct access
Answer: It can be a DA client, just not the server side
URLs mentioned in the webinar:
Foundation Server Marketing Page: http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2008/en/us/foundation.aspx
Foundation Server Technical Page: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd744832(WS.10).aspx
Server 2008 R2 Feature Comparisons: http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2008/en/us/r2-compare-features.aspx
Server 2008 R2 Role Comparisons: http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2008/en/us/r2-compare-roles.aspx
Third Thursday Webinars
Posted by: | CommentsWhile you’re waiting for today’s Third Thursday Webinar on Windows Server 2008 Foundation Server at Noon EST (https://www.livemeeting.com/cc/harborcomputerservices/join?id=5ZTH8D&role=attend&pw=jj%7D%3E%3F%4093X), you can head over to the Store (http://www.thirdtier.net/store) and download last week’s Friends of Third Tier webinar on Virtualization with Dave Sobel!
PSSBS Monthly Meeting, January 21, 2010
Posted by: | Commentshttp://www.pssbs.org/meetings/january-21-2010-pssbs-monthly-meeting/
The focus of this month’s meeting is the running of your SMB consulting practice. To start off the conversation, join us for a presentation by PSSBS member, Brenda Luper, with the Washington Branch of Franklin Computer Services.
The Franklin Moves division of Franklin Computer Services was started in 2001 when several of their clients were looking for project help during their move process. Franklin’s services helped facilitate the needed communication and tasks between IT, General Contractors, Facilities, and Employees and enabled their clients to achieve a well executed move.
Franklin Moves For Small Business is a service that Franklin Moves can provide to your client with the tools and services necessary to execute a successful, organized, cost-effective move, resulting in minimal downtime, enabling your clients employees to return to their primary tasks as quickly as possible. Franklin’s process involves your input to the plan so you remain the clients trusted advisor before, during and after the move.
Following Brenda’s presentation, we will be continuing the conversation in a roundtable between all members of the group, so bring your business questions and we’ll do the best to answer them for each other.
Meeting will be at our normal location in Microsoft’s Lincoln Square offices in Bellevue, WA. Pizza and beverages will be sponsored by the Microsoft SBS team thanks to Jim H., so be sure to thank him when you see him at the meeting!
Our meetings are the third Thursday of the month and are held at Microsoft’s Lincoln Square offices in downtown Bellevue (700 Bellevue Way NE - Lincoln Square, Bellevue, WA 98004).
Park in the Lincoln Square garage and meet at the elevators on the first floor by 6 PM to head up to the meeting (take a ticket when you enter the garage, but parking will be free for the evening).
Meeting times are 6:00 PM – 8:30 PM.
For information about the group, email Steve Banks. Address is steve @ banksnw.com.
Automating the WSUS 3.0 Cleanup Process
Posted by: | CommentsWhile I’ve not been a huge fan of WSUS in the past, it’s been growing on me over the last year or so. Specifically, I’ve been really pleased with how WSUS 3.0 and SBS have been integrated (well, so long as you don’t hit a problem with the integration, which can then lead to a LOT of work to recover or repair or reinstall, but that’s a different post for a different day). But there are still challenges to keeping WSUS in check and keeping it from having unintended impacts on those same SBS servers.
Fortunately, most of the commonly-encountered problems with WSUS 3.x can be dealt with by running the Server Cleanup Wizard from the Update Services console. [NOTE: If you have never run the Server Cleanup Wizard in WSUS on a server that's been in production for a while, I recommend running the wizard manually and only select one category at a time. The first run can clean a LOT of information out of the WSUS environment, and it can take a VERY long time to complete.] But in this day of automating tasks, I don’t want to manually run the Server Cleanup Wizard on a regular basis as it can still take some time to complete the supplemental runs even after the first (and potentially longest) pass has been completed.
Well, there are two mechanisms for automating the Server Cleanup Wizard process on an SBS 2008 server (and other servers running WSUS for that matter). The first method that I’ll discuss below is fairly easy to google, but the second doesn’t show up in searches related to SBS 2008 (that I’ve been able to find at the time that I put this post together), so I’m going to document it here.
Let me start by saying that a lot of people who have implemented one of these two methods seem to be in agreement that these processes (or a variation thereof) should be included within WSUS itself and not relegated to what amounts to an add-on for maintenance and management. I’m in the same category, and really would like the WSUS team to look at providing tools with WSUS to be able to schedule the maintenance out of the box.
The first solution I ran across last year was a tool uploaded to Codeplex: http://wsus.codeplex.com/Release/ProjectReleases.aspx?ReleaseId=17612. This is a complied tool that will perform operations on the WSUS implementation based on command-line parameters that are passed to the tool when executed. It can run each of the cleanup tasks in the Server Cleanup Wizard individually or in groups, and also includes an SQL script that the tool can call to perform maintenance on the WSUS database file itself. I’ve deployed this in testing on a few SBS 2003 installations where I have WSUS 3.x running, and it’s been able to keep the WSUS installation in check rather nicely. My only beef with the tool is that since its a compiled executable, it’s impossible to tweak its operation beyond what the developer has coded into the tool. Currently, I can’t think of any WSUS tasks that I’d like to do that this tool cannot, but if an update to WSUS changes the way some of these tasks can be called, it’s possible that the tool might cease to function or not be able to handle new functionality and need an update from the author. I’ve also not run this on SBS 2008 yet simply because I don’t have a test box that I could run this on to make sure it doesn’t misbehave on that platform. It might work just the same on SBS 2008 as SBS 2003, but I can’t confirm that first-hand, so I haven’t pushed in out.
The second solution I ran across (again, not in an SBS 2008 search) is a PowerShell script that calls the Server Cleanup Wizard functions from WSUS directly. Since PowerShell is enabled by default on SBS 2008 out of the box, and since I can get into the code directly, I went ahead and implemented this script on my own production server, because I honestly hadn’t run the Cleanup Wizard on it in I don’t know how long. The script came from the Microsoft Technet Script Center at http://gallery.technet.microsoft.com/ScriptCenter/en-us/fd39c7d4-05bb-4c2d-8a99-f92ca8d08218. I have a Tools folder on the root of the second partition of every server I deploy, and I added a Scripts folder in that to house this script. I named the script WSUS_Cleanup.ps1 and copied the contents from the Script Center page into the file. I then opened a Command Prompt as Adminstrator and ran “powershell.exe WSUS_Cleanup.ps1″ on the server. After a long wait (like I said, I hadn’t run the Server Cleanup Wizard in a looooooong time), I got output from the script that showed the results of each of the steps it ran within the script (as listed on the Script Center page, the option to remove old computer from WSUS has been commented out).
Being the kind of guy who likes to review the results of processes once they complete, I build a quick and dirty batch file wrapper for the PowerShell script. Yes, I probably could have done the whole thing in PowerShell, but I’m still a bit of a PS newbie, so I relied on my comfort with batch files to get this wrapper done. Here’s the contents of the WSUS_Cleanup.bat that I put on the server:
@echo off @echo Starting cleanup: %date% %time% >> d:\tools\scripts\WSUS_Cleanup.log powershell.exe d:\tools\scripts\WSUS_Cleanup.ps1 >> d:\tools\scripts\WSUS_Cleanup.log @echo Finished cleanup: %date% %time% >> d:\tools\scripts\WSUS_Cleanup.log
The batch file writes the current date and time to a log file that I created in the same Scripts folder where the other pieces are, then calls PowerShell to run the cleanup script and appends the output of that process to the log file as well. Once that finishes, the current date and time are again appended to the log. Now I can see when the script ran, what it did when it ran, and how long it took to complete.
Either of these tools are easily adaptable to running as scheduled tasks or as scripts from your favorite RMM tool. THE WSUS_Cleanup from Codeplex has a couple of advantages over the PowerShell script. One, you can select which components of the Cleanup Wizard you wish to run by adjusting the command line call to the tool. With the PowerShell script as written, you have to modify the script and comment or uncomment each of the tasks. (Yes, a savvy PowerShell person should be able to modify that script to mimic the behavior of the Codeplex tool, and as I’ve mentioned, I’m not that guy. Yet.) Second, the Codeplex tool has the SQL maintenance script included which can be run within the scope of the Codeplex tool. The PowerShell script does not include anything for SQL maintenance on the actual database files. Again, someone with SQL skills could easily script up and automate a process to do the same thing, and again that’s not me.
Given that PowerShell is getting more and more visibility in the Server 2008 world, I’m going to be focusing (when possible) on dealing with automation tasks that make use of PowerShell or other native scripting tools rather than rely on someone else to build an executable file. Not to say that the WSUS_Cleanup tool on Codeplex is a bad thing. I’m probably going to keep that on my 2003-based systems until there’s a reason not to. But for my 2008 deployments, I’m going to stick with PowerShell for WSUS maintenance. If nothing else, I get an excuse to learn more about PowerShell and keep my WSUS installations in good working order.
Webinar: Third Thursday, Foundation Server with Eriq Neale
Posted by: | CommentsWhat? You haven’t heard of Foundation Server? Inexpensive, no cals, up to 15 users and worth its weight in gold to your client? Eriq will discuss the technical bits of Foundation Server and suggest where it use makes the most sense.
When: Thursday, Jan 21, 2010 12:00 PM (EST)
Scheduled to Occur: Once
Duration: 1:00
Third Tier has invited you to attend an online meeting using
Microsoft Office Live Meeting.
Meeting time: Jan 21, 2010 12:00 PM (EST)
Add to my Outlook Calendar:
https://www.livemeeting.com/cc/harborcomputerservices/meetingICS?id=5ZTH8D&role=attend&pw=jj%7D%3E%3F%4093X&i=i.ics
“Cannot Generate SSPI Context” errors
Posted by: | CommentsCorrected URL for Today’s SMB Virtualization Webinar
Posted by: | CommentsThe URL in the blog post for today’s webinar is incorrect. My apologies for not noticing that hosted Exchange had grabbed and mangled the URL. Below is the correct URL.
https://www.livemeeting.com/cc/harborcomputerservices/join?id=TJ3PKB&role=attend&pw=RzT%2F-5%3A%2Bz
Hyper-V 2008 R2 Partner Day Hosted by Microsoft – February 6th – Redmond
Posted by: | CommentsOn Saturday, February 6th, Microsoft & the Puget Sound Small Business Server User Group is holding its Hyper-V 2008 R2 Partner Day: Practical Knowledge for Successful Deployments at Microsoft’s Corporate Headquarters, register now, space is limited.
This is day of Live Builds; Instruction; Demonstration; and, Tips & Tricks on Hyper-V for fellow Microsoft partners who want to use Hyper-V within their practice. You will see deployment, optimization and management of Hyper-V, all with a focus for how to use Hyper-V within a Microsoft focused IT practice from a fellow practicing Microsoft partner. Watch & Learn as the Hyper-V Role is deployed on a Windows Server 2008 R2 and while Hyper-V Server 2008 R2 is installed.
This is not a Hyper-V versus VMware day.
This is not a hands-on day.
This is not a test preparation day.
This is an “I can do ‘that’” day.
This is a Partners sharing with Partners day.
Schedule:
|
9:00 AM |
- |
9:30 AM |
Registration |
|
9:30 AM |
- |
11:30 AM |
Morning Session |
|
11:30 AM |
- |
12:20 PM |
Lunch Break |
|
12:20 PM |
- |
1:50 PM |
1st Afternoon Session |
|
1:50 PM |
- |
2:10 PM |
Break |
|
2:10 PM |
- |
3:30 PM |
2nd Afternoon Session |
|
3:30 PM |
- |
4:00 PM |
Wrap Up |
Here is a list of the topics we will be covering:
Deploying Hyper-V Role via:
· Windows Server 2008 R2 (Full Installation) with Hyper-V ß Live Build
· Windows Server 2008 R2 (Core Installation) with Hyper-V
· Hyper-V Server 2008 R2 ß Live Build
Managing Virtual Machines:
· Hyper-V Manager ß Live Demonstration
o Virtual Network Manager
o New Virtual Machine Wizard
o New Virtual Hard Disk Wizard
· System Center Virtual Machine Manager
Practical Tips & Tricks:
· Virtualizing Windows Small Business Server 2008 ß Live Demonstration
· Virtualizing Remote Desktop Services (Terminal Services)
· Performance Optimization ß Live Demonstration
· Backups
Overview of Advanced Topics:
· Power Shell Hyper-V
· Managing Virtual Machine Storage
· Quick Migration
· Live Migration, Failover Cluster & Cluster Shared Volumes
· System Center Essentials and how it integrates into the System Center Virtual Machine Manager
· Hyper-V and Virtual Desktop Infrastructure
The primary person in front for this event is Tim Carney. Tim a MCP and Small Business Specialist is President of EBT Solutions / SFBay-Link Network Services, Inc. Since 2002, Tim has been providing technology consulting services to emerging San Francisco Bay Area businesses and assisting other IT Professionals in designing Secure Infrastructure. During the 15 years prior to establishing his consulting business, he was the CFO and CTO for a 45 person Copier Sales and Services Business in Silicon Valley. Tim was the technical force in changing its sales focus from Telex to Facsimile, Fax to Copiers, Analog to Digital, and Stand-Alone to Connected. Tim’s areas of expertise include Small Business Server, Secure Infrastructure, Virtualization and Mobility Enablement. Tim is an Eagle Scout and has a B.S. degree in Business Management. As a leader in the local community, Tim has co-founded BASBiTS.org a San Francisco Bay Area users’ group for Small Business Information Technology Specialists. Follow Tim on his blog at SBS-Mobility.blogspot.com and on Twitter as TechmoTim.
When: Saturday, February 6th
Registration starts at 9:00 am
Main Event is from 9:30 am to 3:30 pm
Wrap-Up Event by 4:00 pm
Where: Microsoft Corporate Headquarters
3350 157th Ave N.E., Building 9, Room 1001 – Tahoma
Redmond, WA 98052
You Give: $20 per person
You Get: Relevant & Useful Information
Food & Drinks provided
RSVP: Register for the event by clicking:
http://msevents.microsoft.com/CUI/EventDetail.aspx?EventID=1032439175&Culture=en-US
See you all there!
Steve
Dave Shackelford Named Exchange MVP
Posted by: | CommentsThird Tier is proud to announce that Dave Shackelford has been honored by Microsoft with the MVP (Most Valuable Professional) award for 2010.
Microsoft Most Valuable Professionals (MVPs) are exceptional technical community leaders from around the world who are awarded for voluntarily sharing their high quality, real world expertise in offline and online technical communities. Microsoft MVPs are a highly select group of experts that represents the technical community’s best and brightest, and they share a deep commitment to community and a willingness to help others. For more information on the MVP program, visit http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/.
Dave was awarded for the Exchange Server category. His MVP profile can be found at https://mvp.support.microsoft.com/profile=B058C0A5-2970-4645-BEA1-A7EAECEA9C2A
Recovering “Hidden” Disk Space Used on SBS 2008 C: partitions
Posted by: | CommentsOne of the significant differences in the minimum specs for installing SBS 2008 versus SBS 2003 was the minimum size of the C: partition needed for installation and operation. SBS 2008 requires a minimum of 60GB in the install partition or it won’t go. Those of us who were used to fighting the 12GB C: partition implemented by OEM vendors in SBS 2003 initially looked at that and thought “yeah, that’s a good change.” Well, as it turns out, kinda like the 4GB RAM minimum spec, the 60GB C: partition may not be big enough after all.
If you ask around those who have been doing SBS 2008 deployments, one of the best practices adopted by most is to use the Move Data Wizards in the Server Storage tab of the SBS 2008 Console and get the key data components off the C: partition and onto another partition (Exchange, SharePoint, User’s folders, User’s redirected documents, and WSUS content). And if you take the step that some do of installing third-party software to a partition other than C:, we should be ending up with a fairly pristine C: partition with minimal dynamic data on it. In theory.
I’ve been deploying my SBS 2008 installs with a 100GB C: partition simply because I figured that over time, something would find a way to suck up all the space on C: and we’d eventually get to a point where we’d have to deal with resizing paritions or doing manual data cleanup. I didn’t expect that I’d hit that scenario just over a year after my first SBS 2008 production deployment.
In the last couple of weeks, my monitoring tools have started chirping about low disk space on C: on a couple of installs. Sure enough, one installation had 17GB remaining of a 100GB partition, another had 3.5GB remaining on an 80GB partition (my own production box, and yeah, it really needs an overhaul, but that’s another story). I started digging around and found the most common disk hog that’s been complained about across the net, the winsxs folder. Based on everything I’ve been able to read about winsxs, including a post from the Windows Server Core Team, that’s something that we’ll just have to live with, and really isn’t the point of this post anyway. Still, on my boxes, the winsxs folder still only amounted to about 12GB (bigger than what I’d like, but certainly not the primary culprit) which is only about 10% of my standard install C: space. Something else had been sucking away space and keeping it from me.
We use TreeSize from JAM Software as a standard utility on our server deployments to help monitor disk space usage, as this is something that comes up from time to time. [NOTE: this is not a specific endorsement of TreeSize, just a note that it's one of the many tools that we use in our operation.] So in the case of these low-free-space servers, I fired up TreeSize and went looking for the disk hog. Surprisingly, I couldn’t find it. I did clear up some areas that showed a larger-than-expected usage, but couldn’t find the smoking gun. A few weeks have gone by, and while I’ve been monitoring the state of these servers to ensure that free space didn’t get critically low, other tasks moved up on the priority list.
Then a discussion on one of my private lists cropped up regarding this exact topic, and I learned two valuable tidbits from that discussion.
The first is that in order for TreeSize to see the contents of ALL folders on the C: partition, it must be Run As Administrator. Upon reflection, this makes sense, but I know it’s catching a lot of experienced system admins off-guard. Some are advocating disabling UAC on the server to avoid this kind of issue, and I’m honestly not fully decided where I stand on that, so I won’t comment either way on that. But it does serve as a reminder that many system tools we may have been using for years on 2003 servers might not behave the same way under 2008 if you don’t use the almighty Run As Admin option.
The second is that the WSUS site in IIS has been logging an OBSCENE amount of data into the IIS logs folder. One of my servers had nearly 30GB (yes, that’s 30 gigabytes) of data in the WSUS log folder (C:\inetpub\logs\LogFiles\W3SVC1372222313). Another had just over 20GB. And in looking in the folder, I saw numerous DAILY log files that were well over 100MB each, with some well over 200MB each.
Once I cleared out the old log files (honestly, how far back am I going to need to look at WSUS logs anyway?) the free space on C: increased to a reasonable level, and my monitoring stopped yelling at me quite so often.
There are multiple lessons learned from this experience for me. The first is the whole reminder about Run As Administrator in the Server 2008 era. I’ve even taken to labeling some shortcuts with “Run As Administrator” in the icon name just to serve as a reminder. The second lesson is that 60GB is certainly NOT going to be sufficient as a minimum partition size on a production SBS 2008 server, even if all other data is moved off to different volumes (and I haven’t even covered the option of moving the WSUS SQL database files off of C: to another partition, which can’t be done through wizards but must be done by hand). With winsxs and the WSUS logs as two items that will definitely be grabbing disk space unexpectedly (well, it’s expected now anyway), we can be sure that over time there will be others. And as stated on the Core Team blog, you can only expect that winsxs will continue to grow over time. If it’s 12GB now, how large will it be in a couple of years? The third lesson is that some logging that happens automatically on the server probably should not just be left unchecked. If you enable SMTP logging (which I do and recommend for troubleshooting purposes), you should clean out old SMTP logs on a regular basis. Well, now you can add WSUS/IIS logs to that approach as well. There are numerous posts out there for ways to script this process, and I’m evaluating the approach we’re going to take within our operation to make this happen for our customer base.
If you’ve been struggling with low disk space issues on SBS 2008 C: partitions, hopefully this information will help you get a better handle on the immediate actions as well as the long term strategy that you’ll develop for your particular environment.

