Migrate Remote Desktop Services to Windows Server 2012 R2
Applies To: Windows Server 2012 R2
Remote Desktop Services is a role in the Windows Server operating system that provides multi-user access to applications and desktops for non-administrative purposes. This guide describes how to migrate Remote Desktop Services, what Remote Desktop Services role services will be migrated, and tasks that apply to migrating the role services.
About this guide
This guide describes how to migrate the Remote Desktop Services role by providing preparation, migration and verification steps.
Migration documentation and tools ease the migration of server role settings and data from an existing server to a destination server that is running Windows Server 2012 R2. By using the process described in this guide, you can simplify the migration process, reduce migration time, increase the accuracy of the migration process, and help eliminate possible conflicts that might otherwise occur during the migration process.
Note
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Target audience
This guide is intended for the following audiences:
IT architects who are responsible for computer management and security throughout an organization
IT operations engineers who are responsible for the day-to-day management and troubleshooting of networks, servers, client computers, operating systems, or applications
IT operations managers who are accountable for network and server management
What this guide does not provide
This guide does not cover migration of the following:
Customizations made to any Remote Desktop Services role service. In particular, this may apply to the RD Session Host, RD Virtualization Host, RD Web Access, or RD Connection Broker role services.
Third-party application settings, programs, or plug-ins
More than one server role at the same time
More than one role service at a time
Group Policy settings
User profiles, including roaming profiles
Event history
Microsoft applications or application settings
RD Connection Broker servers that are configured in a clustered or load-balanced environment (except High-Availability mode)
This guide does not contain instructions for migration when the source server is running multiple roles. If your server is running multiple roles, it is recommended that you design a custom migration procedure that is specific to your server environment, based on the information provided in other role migration guides. Migration guides for additional server roles are available on the Windows Server Migration Portal.
Warning
If your source server is running multiple roles, some migration steps in this guide, such as those for computer name and IP configuration, can cause other roles that are running on the source server to fail.
Supported migration scenarios
This guide provides you with instructions for the following:
Migrating a server that is running Remote Desktop Services on Windows Server 2012 to a server that is running Remote Desktop Services on Windows Server 2012 R2
Migrating between two servers running Remote Desktop Services on Windows Server 2012 R2
For the migration scenarios that are described in this guide, each of the Remote Desktop Services role services is migrated separately. You can migrate one, some, or all role services by following the steps in this guide. For information about the order of migration, see Order of migration for multiple role serviceslater in this topic.
Supported operating systems
The Remote Desktop Services role services are available in Windows Server 2012 R2 as follows:
All Remote Desktop Services role services are available in Windows Server 2012 R2 Standard, Windows Server 2012 R2 Enterprise, and Windows Server 2012 R2 Datacenter.
RD Web Access is available in Windows Web Server 2012 R2.
RD Session Host, RD Licensing, RD Web Access, and RD Gateway are available in Windows Server 2012 R2 Foundation.
Physical to virtual machine migration
Migration between physical operating systems and virtual operating systems are supported for the RD Connection Broker, RD Session Host, RD Web Access, RD Licensing, and RD Gateway role services. However, the RD Virtualization Host role services and the Hyper-V role do not run on virtual machines.
Backward compatibility
You can migrate the Remote Desktop Services role services from computers running Windows Server 2012 or Windows Server 2012 R2 to a computer running Windows Server 2012 R2.
Policy and configuration settings
Some Remote Desktop Services settings can be configured by using Group Policy. Information about migrating Group Policy settings is not included in this migration guide.
Supported role services and features
This migration guide describes how to migrate the Remote Desktop Services role services from a source server running Windows Server 2012 or Windows Server 2012 R2 to a destination server running Windows Server 2012 R2.
Following are the Remote Desktop Services role services that can be migrated to a computer running Windows Server 2012 R2:
RD Connection Broker
RD Virtualization Host
RD Session Host
RD Web Access
RD Licensing
RD Gateway
Migration scenarios that are not supported
The following scenarios are not supported:
Upgrading Windows Server 2008 Terminal Services or Windows Server 2012 R2 Remote Desktop Services server role or role services
Migrating or upgrading from Windows Server 2003 or Windows Server 2003 R2
Migrating from a source server to a destination server that is running an operating system with a different system UI language installed
Migrating the RD Virtualization Host or RD Session Host role services from physical computers to virtual machines
Migrating any applications or application settings from the RD Session Host server
Order of migration for multiple role services
The steps in this guide are based on migrating the role services in the following order when you are migrating more than one role service:
RD Connection Broker
RD Session Host
RD Virtualization Host
RD Web Access
The following role services can be migrated at any time during the migration:
RD Licensing
RD Gateway
In a Remote Desktop Services deployment, RD Connection Broker servers must be migrated first. All other services can be migrated independently. If you do not have RD Connection Broker servers, you can migrate other role services by following the steps provided in this document.
The Remote Desktop license server can be migrated at any time, but if the new license server does not have the same name as the source server, the Remote Desktop deployments and standalone RD Session Host servers that use that license server must be configured after migration to use the new license server.
The RD Gateway server migration is not dependent on the other role services for migration. It can be migrated at any time.
Impact of migration on Remote Desktop Services
A Remote Desktop Services role service will not be available during migration. This is also the case for any role services that are dependent on it. In addition, applications and add-ons on the affected servers will not be available.
Migration times will be affected by the dependencies between role services. For example, RD Session Host servers, RD Virtualization Host servers, and RD Web Access servers are dependent on RD Connection Broker servers. These dependencies should be considered when you are estimating downtime.
Plan your data migration to occur during off-peak hours to minimize downtime and reduce impact to users. Notify users that the resources will be unavailable during that time.
In some deployments, replication may extend the length of time that the services are unavailable.
If there is more than one role service on the source server, after you remove the source server from the domain, you will not have access to role services that you didn’t migrate.
The following table details the expected impacts during the migration process.
Role service |
Dependent role services |
Impact of migration |
Downtime estimates |
---|---|---|---|
RD Connection Broker |
RD Virtualization Host, RD Session Host, RD Web Access |
Users will not have access to any resources that are managed by the RD Connection Broker or TS Session Broker server that is being migrated. These resources include RemoteApp programs, virtual desktop pools, and personal virtual desktops. |
Three hours |
RD Session Host |
RD Web Access may be dependent on RD Session Host in your deployment. |
Session collections will not be available until migration of all destination servers in the virtual desktop collection is complete. RemoteApp programs will not be available until they are installed on the destination servers. |
One hour |
RD Virtualization Host |
RD Virtualization Host is dependent on RD Connection Broker. |
Virtual desktop collections will not be available until migration of all destination servers in the virtual desktop collection is complete. |
Three hours or more depending on the number of virtual machines being migrated |
RD Web Access |
RD Web Access cannot serve connections to session collections or virtual desktop collections while they are being migrated. |
Resources that are accessed by RD Web Access and managed by the associated RD Connection Broker server will not be available. These resources include session collections and virtual desktop collections. |
One hour |
RD Licensing |
Remote Desktop deployments and standalone RD Session Host servers must be configured with at least one Remote Desktop license server that is available to serve licenses. If not, users cannot connect to the RD Session Host servers while they are being migrated. |
Remote Desktop deployments and standalone RD Session Host servers that are configured to use the license server may not be able to receive licenses during the migration. |
One hour |
RD Gateway |
RD Gateway |
Users cannot access the network with the RD Gateway server that is being migrated. The Remote Desktop Gateway service may be slow or not available. |
One hour |
Additional references
You are here in this migration process document: Migrate Remote Desktop Services to Windows Server 2012
Remote Desktop Services: Migrate Remote Desktop Services Role Services