Migrating the Enterprise Commander server to a Windows host is easy if you are using an SQL server to store your data.
Note
Currently there is no migration path to migrate the Enterprise Commander server to a Windows host if you are using the internal database to store your data.
Guide to migrating Enterprise Commander to a Windows Server host.
STEP 1: Hardware and Operating Systems Requirements
Set up a Windows Server (2008 or 2012 R2) at your current patching level with the following minimum requirements, (Note: Server Requirements depend on the size of the installation
CPU: 2
RAM: 2GB
HARD DISK: 40 GB
STEP 2: Software Pre-Requisites
The Windows server will first need Java, .NET Framework and Application Request Routing 3.0 to be installed as per the Pre-requisite Software Installation page.
STEP 3: SQL Server Details
At this stage make sure you have the SQL server connection details for the existing Enterprise Commander database on our SQL server. The windows Enterprise Commander Manager application will need the following details:
- Hostname
- Port
- Database Name
- Username
- Password
STEP 4: Enterprise Commander Installation
Once all the above pre-requisites have been set up you are ready to install Enterprise Commander on the Windows server.
All your access configuration will be migrated, you should be able to log in with the account you previously used to log into Enterprise Commander.
STEP 5: DNS Name Migration
To preserve previous connectivity please re-allocate the DNS name used by the old Linux host Enterprise Commander server to the new Windows host. This will ensure that the Connectors and all requests go to the new Windows hosted server.
STEP 6: Testing for Successful Migration
Turn off the old Linux hosted Enterprise Commander Server and check the following.
- Make sure the Connectors are syncing: You can do this by checking the last connected time stamp of the connector in Admin -> connectors page, they should not be more then a minute or two.
- Make sure you can navigate to the Enterprise Commander server DNS name from another computer.
STEP 7: Decommissioning the old Linux hosted Enterprise Commander server
Once the above tests are successful, you should be good to delete/decommission the old Enterprise Commander server.