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Update 2018-04-05 : See our new guide that covers this topic and gives all up-to-date scenario

With the latest version of SCCM 1511, many admins will be tempted to move to latest operating system and SQL versions. Considering Windows Server 2008 R2 and SQL 2008 R2 are already on extended support and the way SCCM 1511 is designed for future upgrades, it can be good time to do a SCCM 1511 migration with the latest OS and SQL.

As of now, all system roles of SCCM 1511 are supported on Windows Server 2008 R2, but if you are planning to use Windows 10 Servicing, you must use WSUS 4.0 from Windows Server 2012 and up.

If you’re planning this scenario, you have 2 choices :

  1. Install a new server with SQL and use backup/restore function before upgrading to 1511. In that case, we recommend doing it in the following steps :
    • Backup/restore on the new OS (The new machine must have the same host name)
    • Upgrade to 1511 on the new machine
    • In-place SQL Upgrade (if necessary)
  2. Install a new server and perform a side-by-side migration between the 2 SCCM hierarchy

This post will cover the second option, describing SCCM 1511 Migration pre-requisites and tasks. The advantage of this method over the other one (backup/restore) is that it provide minimum down-time. You can do your migration at your desired pace and switch your clients when you’re ready. The disadvantage is that it requires a bit more operational tasks and planning.

If you’re looking to do an in-place upgrade, please see our SCCM 1511 upgrade guide instead.

SCCM 1511 Migration Pre-requisites

  • Install your new server or virtual machine with desired SQL version as you would do for a new SCCM installation. You can refer to our  Part 1 and Part 2 of our SCCM 1511 complete installation guide for this
  • Perform a new SCCM 1511 Installation on this new server with a new site code
  • SCCM must be at least 2007 SP2 and above in order to create a migration task
  • Software Update Point must be configured on destination hierarchy (1511) prior to migrating any Software Update configurations
For more details about pre-requisite, consult the Technet article.

Setup Source Hierarchy

To transfer data between your SCCM 1511 and SCCM 2012 sites, you must first connect them together.

  • On your SCCM 1511, go to Administration/ Migration/ Source Hierarchy
  • Select Specify Source Hierarchy on the top ribbon

sccm 1511 migration

  • Enter the top-level site server FDQN of the source environment (SCCM 2012 server)
  • Select the account to use to connect to the top-level site server
    • We use and account that is SCCM Full Admin on both side. As specified in the wizard, no such rights are required
  • Depending on your environment, Enabling Distribution point sharing might be useful
    • This should be pretty important in large, distributed environment

sccm 1511 migration

  • Click OK, Data Gathering process starts

sccm 1511 migration

Your 2 sites are now connected!

For more details about source hierarchy, read the following Technet article.

Data Gathering

The Data Gathering process will verify items that can be migrated from the source.

No objects are migrated yet ! Data gathering is configured to 4 hours by default.

It can be modified in the properties of the source hierarchy.

9999 (5)(1)

Migration jobs

To migrate objects from our SCCM 2012 site, we need to create a migration job.

When migrating content from a 2012 hierarchy, all objects should be compatible.

Before migrating, we suggest that you read these details about what objects can or can’t be migrated.

  • In SCCM 1511, go to Administration/ Migration/ Migration Jobs
  • Select Create Migration Job

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the General tab, provide a name and select Object Migration in the Job Type dropbox, click Next
    • Object modified after migration can be useful to monitor object modified after the job as ran

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Select Objects tab, select objects that you want to migrate, click Next

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Content Ownership tab, all migrated objects will be owned by the new site, click Next
sccm 1511 migration
  • On the Site Code Replacement tab, replace site code for collections if needed, click Next

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Security Scope tab, specify the security scope to apply to the migrated objects, click Next
    • If you used it a lot in SCCM 2012, multiple migration might be a good idea to assign the security scope back
    • Assigning security scopes can also be done after the migration

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Settings tab, specify the Schedule, Conflict resolution action and Organizational folder structure, click Next 

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Summary tab, review your option, click Next

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Completion tab, click Close

sccm 1511 migration

  • You can see the migration job status in the console, go to Administration / Migration / Migration Jobs (Details can be found in the Summary tab in the bottom)

sccm 1511 migration

  • The Objects in the job tab will shows each object included in the job

sccm 1511 migration

Once you run the job, you will see objects appearing within the new SCCM.

You can run the job at any time by right-clicking the job and selecting Start.

sccm 1511 migration

For more details about Migration jobs, read the following Technet Article

Content Distribution

Once objects are migrated, you can now migrate Distribution Points. Activating Enable distribution-point sharing for this source site in the Source Site properties will allows previous version Distribution Point to show up in SCCM 1511 and to be used by client as content source when packages are migrated.

sccm 1511 migration

You can see the status of Shared Distribution Point in the console under Administration / Migration / Source Hierarchy and by selecting the Shared Distribution Point tab at the bottom.

sccm 1511 migration

Eligible for Reassignment

When looking at your Shared Distribution Point tab, you’ll notice an Eligible for reassignment column. Yes value means that the Distribution Point is ready to be reassign to your SCCM 1511 hierarchy.

For a System Center 2012 Configuration Manager distribution point to be eligible for reassignment, it must meet the following criteria:

  • A shared distribution point must be installed on a computer other than the site server
  • A shared distribution point cannot be co-located with any additional site system roles

sccm 1511 migration

If you look at a package that has been migrated, you will see that they are already distributed.

sccm 1511 migration

How to Reassign a Distribution Point

The Reassign wizard is pretty much like a new Distribution Point installation.

  • Under Administration / Migration / Source Hierarchy select the Shared distribution Points tab at the bottom
  • Select your  Distribution Point, Right click it and select Reassign Distribution point

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the General tab, select the new Site code, click Next

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Distribution Point tab, specify the desired options, click Next

For rights needed to reassign a Distribution point here, see the Technet Article

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Drive Settings tab, you cannot configured your drives, it will use what is already in place, click Next

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Pull Distribution Point tab, you can be enable you DP to be a Pull DP if needed, click Next

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the PXE Settings tab, you can’t configured anything, this is normal, click Next

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Content validation tab, you can’t configured anything, this is normal, click Next

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Boundary Groups tab, assign your Boundary groups to your Distribution Point, click Next

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Content Conversion tab, you’ll see a list of packages on the Distribution Point, click Next

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Summary tab, review your options and click Next

sccm 1511 migration

  • On the Completion tab, click Close

SCCM 1511 Migration

  • Confirm that your Distribution Point is now part of your SCCM 1511 site

SCCM 1511 Migration

  •  Confirm that the Distribution Point as been removed from the 2012 R2 SP1 site

SCCM 1511 Migration

For more details about Content Migration, read the following Technet article.

Clients

Once all objects are migrated, you need to reassign your client in the new SCCM 1511 site.

Many options can be used :

  • Reassign client site with a script to migrate to the new hierarchy
  • Use auto-upgrade when client are assigned to the new hierarchy
  • Use client push to reassign clients and upgrade at the same time
    • This will change the assigned site code automatically

In the end, upgrading the clients uses the same process as any previous Service Pack release.

Please refer to our SCCM R2 SP1 upgrade post for client upgrade using auto-upgrade or client push.

For more details about Client Migration, read the following Technet article

SCCM 1511 Post Migration Tasks

When all objects are migrated, the migration can be completed with these general steps :

  • Validate that all clients, data, Distribution Points are migrated and no longer require the source hierarchy
  • Stop gathering data from the source site
  • Clean up migration data
  • Decommission the source hierarchy

Stop gathering data

Before you stop gathering data, the following must be completed :

  • Distribute content to at least one DP in the new hierarchy
  • Reassign Distribution Point

To stop gathering data :

  • In the SCCM Console, go to Administration / Migration / Source Hierarchy

SCCM 1511 Migration

Clean Up Migration Data

This step is optional.

To clean up migration data :

  • In the SCCM Console, go to Administration / Migration / Source Hierarchy

SCCM 1511 Migration

  • Select the source hierarchy

SCCM 1511 Migration

  • Confirm by clicking Yes
SCCM 1511 Migration

For more details about post migration tasks, read the following Technet article

Logs

All migrations tasks refer to the same log : Migmctrl.log

It can be founded in your SCCM installation directory Microsoft Configuration Manager\Logs\

sccm 1511 migration

For more details about Monitoring migration, read the following Technet article

That’s it, you’ve completed your SCCM 2012 to SCCM 1511 Migration. Don’t forget to upgrade to 1602 after your migration (if needed). Feel free to ask your question or leave your comments using the comments section !

Comments (134)

Emil

08.25.2016 AT 05:02 AM
I am going to migrate from a old 1602 to a new 1511 server that I just created. Is that possible or do I need to upgrade the new 1511 to 1602 first? If so, can I upgrade it to 1606 before the migration also?

Jonathan Lefebvre

08.25.2016 AT 08:07 AM
Hi Emil, I'd go minimally to the same version as the previous architecture. So if you use 1602, be sure the new infra is at least 1602. You could also be up to date with 1606. Jonathan

TomK

07.27.2016 AT 10:38 AM
I'm migrating application deployments from 2012 R2 to a new server running CB 1602. I've checked the overwrite all objects option, because some apps have already been migrated but 2 objects continue to fail: Application - Provider exception: Can not import same app more than once. Application Deployment - This objection was skipped because an object it depends on failed to migrate. I was under the impression that overwrite meant it should migrate the application again. Is that not the case?

Thy Fere

07.19.2016 AT 05:05 AM
Hi, Do I need to install all SCCM roles as source?

Thy Fere

07.19.2016 AT 03:18 AM
Hi, Half of my objects are failed to migrate with the message, "This object was skipped because an object it depends on failed to migrate." What does it mean? How can I resolve it?

Jagadesh

06.30.2016 AT 07:33 AM
This is great article. I have an question. In a scenario where DP is hosting other site system roles (State migration point), as per MS, the DP cannot be reassigned to new hierarchy. So does that mean it cannot be shared as well. Can we share DP with other site system roles, and then add additional new DP server on new hierarchy in same subnet, pull content from source DP that is shared and then remove old DP. that way we can pull content from existing DP in a local LAN connection rather than pulling from remote primary. Any thoughts or suggestions?. Old DP's are running Win server 2003. That is one of the reason for considering a new local server with server 2012. Don't think doing an OS in-place upgrade from 2003 to 2012 on SCCM DP would be a good idea.

Jonathan Lefebvre

07.11.2016 AT 01:50 PM
Hi Jagadesh, I don't think it's gonna be eligible to be shared I presume that you would prefere to sync locally the content instead of on the WAN to a primary site. I think what I would suggest is the following : - Create a new DP with a newer OS - When ready, remove the State Migration from the old DP, which make it available without a doubt to be Shared with new infrastructure - Migrate the old Distribution Point to the new infra - Assign the new DP as a Pull DP and to get content from the old Distribution point - Sync content (local LAN) - Reassign the new DP as a regular Distribution Point - Add User state to the new DP - Decomission old DP Bit complicated, but sure shot. Hope this help Jonathan

Jagadesh

07.12.2016 AT 09:44 AM
Thanks Jonathan. after thinking trough, i came up with exact same approach as outlined here.

THy Fere

06.28.2016 AT 02:13 AM
Hi Jonathan, I am following your option 2 and bought the full documentation as well. I am preparing a server for SCCM 1511 and following your full guide. Do I need to configure SQL as you have mentioned or all the settings will be migrated from the source hierarchy? Please advise, as necessary. Currently, I am stuck at this point and looking forward your reply.

Jonathan Lefebvre

07.05.2016 AT 09:08 AM
Hi Thy, I'm not sure if I understand your question correctly. Are you wondering if you need to install an SQL on the new server for SCCM1511? If so, yes, SQL must be installed prior to install SCCM 1511 on a new server. The migration is only for SCCM stuff. SQL is independent of that process. Jonathan

Thy Fere

07.18.2016 AT 02:25 AM
Hi Jonathan, Thanks for the reply. Yes, I did install SQL on the new server. Now, how can I migrate SQL stuff because without SQL, there is no point to migrate SCCM alone?

Jonathan Lefebvre

07.18.2016 AT 01:37 PM
Hi Thy, I don't know what you could migrate for SQL stuff. All the migration task for SCCM actually happen in SCCM. Jonathan

Thy Fere

07.19.2016 AT 12:21 AM
Hi Jonathan, In fact, why did I ask because you said in your previous message, "The migration is only for SCCM stuff. SQL is independent of that process." So, when migration task happens, it populates the SQL DBs too?

Thy Fere

06.27.2016 AT 01:26 AM
Hi Jonathan, What if I have mapped SAN LUNs to SCCM server. For example, SQL Data, SQL Backup, WSUS, and Application Binaries. Should I do anything different while following option 2?

Jonathan Lefebvre

06.27.2016 AT 09:19 AM
Hi Thy Fere, I don't see anything different if you use LUNs on your previous installation. I presume that the sources for application/packages/etc. are hosted on a mapped LUNs. If so, you might have to reassign that LUN to the new server so your packages still have a working source. The other option is to move the content to a new LUN, that you would assign the same path as the previous server. That would prevent you from modifying all sources path. Best pratice is always to use UNC path for sources. That cleans out that kind of issue. Jonathan

Raju

06.03.2016 AT 02:29 AM
Hi, Very nice article, We wanted to migrate our environment with the current setup as below. SCCM 2012 R2 CU5 on Windows Server 2008 R2 to SCCM 1511 on Windows Server 2012 R2 SQL Server Standard 2008 to SQL Server 2014. We wanted to perform migration of current infra by side by side method. We have 1Primary and 26 DPs at different locations to be migrated. How to manage boundaries, Migrating Packages, Reports and Shared Distribution Points? Any detailed documentation available, Please share with me and Help me in this regard.

Guru

05.25.2016 AT 12:00 AM
Team, We are on SCCM 2012 R2 Sp1 CU2 (DB on SQL 2012 SP3) and looking to upgrade the infrastructure to 1602. Can we directly migrate to 1602 from 2012 R2 SP1 or do we need to upgrade to 1511 first and then to 1602? Thanks and regards Guru

Jonathan Lefebvre

05.25.2016 AT 06:25 AM
Hi Guru, Yes, you need to upgrade to 1511 before going to 1602. 1602 is only available from the Update and servicing feature in 1511. thanks Jonathan

NIMO

05.19.2016 AT 12:17 AM
Hello, I've a short question. In 2012R2 we've structured the Software Updates into folders. Is there any way to migrate them to 1511? Thanks

Guru

04.12.2016 AT 09:26 AM
Team , I have question on side by side migration from SQL DB perspective. We have our source hierarchy on SCCM 2012 R2 Sp1 CU2 with SQL 2012 SP3. Is side by side migration supported to SQL 2014 SP1? regards Guru

Jim Williams

04.12.2016 AT 09:39 AM
I migrated SCCM 2012 R2 SP1 running on SQL 2008 SP1 to SCCM 1511 running on SQL 2014 SP1. However, I didn't migrate everything. For example, I migrated drivers, driver packages, applications, task sequences but opted to re-create all my software update settings to take advantage of the new multiple deployment of ADRs on 1511. Everything else migrated fine. The advantage for me of migrating was that I could have both the old and new servers running at the same time and use the old one as a reference when re-creating stuff on the new one. Once I was happy, I used a startup script to update clients and point them to the new server.

Ssilva

03.30.2016 AT 04:29 PM
with this method, Can I retain user history information, like Hardware Inventory or anything else? Thanks.

Jonathan Lefebvre

03.31.2016 AT 10:24 AM
Hi Ssilva, All different inventory will NOT be migrated. It will be back after regular cycle when the client reports to the new server. If you had custom WMI class as part of your Hardware inventory, you will need to re-import them manually to the new server. The only "inventory" that follow is the history of deployment on a client, which is held locally on each client. This will prevent re-running past advertisement. Jonathan

Brad McKenna

03.30.2016 AT 11:48 AM
Great Article as always! I do have a question, and I apologize if this is because I am not understanding this correctly. In our environment we have two servers, both running 2008 R2, 1 SQL and 1 for MP/DP. We previously followed your upgrade procedures, migrating from SCCM 2012 R2 CU4 -> SCCM 2012 R2 SP1 -> 1511. These were fantastic and very easy to follow. We now are wanting to upgrade our Operating System on both of our servers to Windows 2012 R2. How would that be best accomplished? I thought this was going to be explained in the article, however I was incorrect as we had already upgraded our SCCM version. Any and all help is greatly appreciated. Thank you.

Colin Huckstep

03.29.2016 AT 01:07 PM
Anyone get an answer to the Intune Question?

POUS

03.22.2016 AT 08:35 AM
Thank you very much for this great guide. All my objects are migrated to new 1511-Site and all agents are nearly deployed. My last question is about my currently running Intune Subscription in the 2012 R2 SP1 source site. What is the easiest way to get that subscription up and running on my new 1511 Site ? Do i have to create a new one - or is there a way get the existing one moved/pointed to new Site ?

Colin Huckstep

05.19.2016 AT 09:18 AM
I pulled the trigger on the Intune Migration. Here's what I had to do. A few notes. We are 100% iOS and we do not currently use Apple DEP or VPP. So your mileage may vary. 1. Remove the Intune Connection from the 2012 R2 SP1 Site 2. Add the Intune Connection to the 1511 (1602 in my case) Site. Configure Branding, etc. 3. Generate New APNs Certificate (iOS Only) 4. Install New APNs Certificate (iOS Only) 5. Migrate or Recreate Applications, Collections, and Policies from 2012 R2 SP1 Site to 1511 Site. 6. Have users remove the Management Profile from their Device. (Alternatively you could bulk remove all devices from the old site before performing Step 1) 7. Re-register their Device in the Company Portal. Devices appear in the new site. Fortunately we were still in our piloting phase so I didn't have a terribly large number of phones to re-register. I just delayed our Intune deployment by a couple of weeks in order to register the masses into the new system and avoid having to have users re-register their devices later this year.

POUS

03.17.2016 AT 04:15 AM
Do i have do deploy Agents before decommision of source hierarchy ? I have migrated all objects to new 1511 site, and before i deploy Agents i would like to upgrade this new site to 1602.

Jonathan Lefebvre

03.17.2016 AT 08:04 AM
Hi POUS, Yes you should deploy the agents before decommision your previous hierarchy. That way, you will not have "down time" to manage your clients with SCCM. Jonathan

Carl

02.24.2016 AT 12:01 AM
Hi guys, great guide. Have you had a chance to do you guide on the backup and restore option? I'm considering this at the moment as it seems like its the quicker way. We have SQL 2008 R2 on W2K8R2 for DB (separate server) and SCCM 2012 R2 on W2K8R2 - considering whether to upgrade to SQL 2012/2014 first, then run 1511 upgrade and then do the site restore onto a new SCCM 1511 VM (same name) and SQL 2012/2014 VM. Any advantage to doing the 1511 upgrade following the restore to the new hardware?

Benoit Lecours

03.03.2016 AT 10:00 AM
I normally perform the backup/restore (to new OS) first. In-place upgrade to CM1511 and after that upgrade SQL.

Andris Brigersa

02.20.2016 AT 07:58 AM
First of all thank you for the effort you guys put into this site, it is awesome! I have a few questions regarding what will happen to my existing production environment... 1. Can i migrate my production R2 SP1 envirnoment to a test environment VM with CB (1511) installed? 2. How will this affect my existing environment? 3. After Migration is complete, will my old SCCM 2012 R2 SP1 still work the same? 4. So when i am finally ready to perform New Server installation and configuration for my Production, would i be able to create another migration job (this time from old to new production)? Thanks!

Jonathan Lefebvre

02.20.2016 AT 10:02 AM
Hi Andris, thanks for your comment 🙂 1) yes 2) no effect on your current. watch for boundary overlapping, AD discovery and client push to keep environment side by side. 3) yes, work just as before 4) yes, migration jobs are created on the new server to pull the information from your current environment. Hope this help 🙂 Jonathan

Andris

02.20.2016 AT 03:01 PM
Thank you so much! Will help for sure!

James

02.18.2016 AT 10:02 AM
Hello, Thank you for the post, very helpful. Maybe you could point me in the right direction, after migration my deployed applications are not showing up in the catalog or software center. I tried redeploying to user and computer collections, modifying original collections, even deleting and recreating collections but deployments never show up. I've checked the colleval.log for anything but I see collections updating on schedule. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.

Jonathan Lefebvre

02.19.2016 AT 10:22 AM

James

02.23.2016 AT 03:28 PM
Thanks for the reply but my issue is not really a problem with how to deploy apps and packages. I think that I have narrowed down my issue and found a resolution or at least a work around. But I do not have a root cause. Issue: Group objects imported from AD and added as members to a collection are not receiving deployments after migration. Solution: Created query rule to add all users that are members of the group to the collection. select SMS_R_USER.ResourceID,SMS_R_USER.ResourceType,SMS_R_USER.Name,SMS_R_USER.UniqueUserName,SMS_R_USER.WindowsNTDomain from SMS_R_User where SMS_R_User.UserGroupName = "DomainName\\GroupName"

Brian Moffet

02.03.2016 AT 05:39 PM
This is likely a dumb question but I have followed your steps and have my new 1511 server just about 100% ready to rock. I was able to migrate about 90% of my objects and then had to manually recreate my task sequences. The only issue is that the migration jobs did not actually transfer my source content to my new server. If I look at the properties/source of an application I can see the source is still set to my old dp. How can I migrate this data so I can take the old SCCM server off-line? Do I need to robocopy that data over and remap all of my objects to this new location?

Jonathan Lefebvre

02.04.2016 AT 10:15 AM
Hi Brian, the actual content of the package is NOT migrated by migration task. Best practice since 2012 is around is to always use network path for source content for any packages/apps/OS/driver/etc. Some of them are mandatory to use network path. Now, the choices you have to get the content working on v1511 : - Copy the content to the same local path on the new server, then update package so the content is distributed to DP. - Modify the source path of all packages. You can use this tool from Coretech : http://blog.coretech.dk/kea/updated-version-of-the-package-source-changer/ **WARNING** modifying the content path trigger an update to the package 😉 As for you Task sequence, not sure why you needed to recreate it. thanks Jonathan

Jim Williams

02.04.2016 AT 08:47 AM
I'm in the same situation as Brian. I followed your guide (paid version) for installing SQL 2014 and SCCM 1511 and have done the migration, but original SCCM installation is showing as not Eligible for Reassignment. It's currently hosting 49 migrated packages (according to Source Hierarchy -> Shared Distribution Points tab). Can you advise? Thanks.

Jonathan Lefebvre

02.04.2016 AT 10:20 AM
Hi Jim, When not Eligible for reassignment, it means one of the following : - A shared distribution point must be installed on a computer other than the site server - A shared distribution point cannot be co-located with any additional site system roles In other word, a primary server DP with SCCM 2012 is NOT eligible for reassignment. If you don't have any remote distribution point, you will need to distribute the content to the new Distribution point under your primary server of v1511. Hope this helps. Jonathan

Brian Moffet

02.05.2016 AT 04:39 PM
I manually copied my source content and then found this little beauty today which worked beautifully to update my source entries for applications. Just update the variables below for your new site server, site code, old content path, and new path. Run the script in verification mode first to make sure the new path is what you expect and then run it live. I was then able to run a test app deployment to a client on the new environment and all went well. Now if I can find something like this for my drivers I should be all set. $SiteServer = "clasccm01" $SiteCode = "law" $CurrentContentPath = "clasccm02" $UpdatedContentPath = "clasccm01" https://github.com/1RedOne/SCCM-Cmdlets/blob/master/MoveAllContent.ps1

Brian Moffet

02.08.2016 AT 01:39 PM
This script helped me update the source for my 1000 drivers btw. http://blog.coretech.dk/mip/small-useful-scriptschanging-driver-package-source-ps1/

Benoit Lecours

02.09.2016 AT 10:19 AM
Coretech is always providing useful tools !

Jim Williams

02.04.2016 AT 10:27 AM
Thanks Jonathan So I can just use the tool that you specified for Brian to transfer the packages to my new 1511 installation and update the location in each package, and not worry about the shared distribution? All my drivers and driver packages are still shown as being located on my old SCCM server; I've always used a URL path. Jim

Jonathan Lefebvre

02.04.2016 AT 11:16 AM
The tool specified for Brian is only to modify the source path in the packages. It doesn't copy the actual content. There's no "SCCM" way to move the content used for packages and else. You must do this by manually copy the files (robocopy, xcopy, etc.) If you want to prevent this scenario in the future, I suggest that you move the content sources to a neutral server(file server) instead of the local SCCM server with shares on it. If you had this, it would have work directly without intervention on the v1511 for your packages. Jonathan

Jim Williams

02.04.2016 AT 02:58 PM
Thanks Jonathan. That's a really good point about storing the packages on a neutral file server; I don't know why that didn't occur to me. I guess I could also take it one stage further and use a DFS Namespace, unless true UNC paths have to be used? Anyway, thanks so much for taking the time to reply to my questions; much appreciated.