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September 17, 2001 12:00 AM

The Invaluable USMT

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #22242
Rating: (6)
Smoothly migrate users' legacy Windows desktop settings to Win2K Pro

Migrating users to a newer Windows OS version or platform is a pain. You must ensure that the new OS is compatible with existing applications as well as migrate users' user state (i.e., Microsoft terminology for users' desktop environment and their collection of configuration settings and application data files). Achieving a complete user-state migration is tantamount to users' satisfaction and productivity.

To ease the migration of users from Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 9x to Windows 2000 Professional, Microsoft provides the Microsoft Windows 2000 Resource Kit's User State Migration Tool (USMT). You can find this tool in the \usmt subfolder of the resource kit's main installation folder. (If you don't have the resource kit, or to be sure you have the most up-to-date USMT version, you can download this useful utility from Microsoft's Web site at http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/techinfo/reskit/tools/new/usmt-o.asp.)

USMT is a major boon for administrators and users who need to perform side-by-side migration (i.e., migration to a new OS and new hardware) or wipe-and-load migration (i.e., wipe clean the existing OS and install a new OS from scratch). Using USMT, a systems administrator can save a user's user-state information from a source machine running a legacy OS and restore the user state to a target Win2K Pro machine. (In some cases, the source system and target system will be the same machine.)

USMT migrates an impressive list of user settings and files by default. This list includes DUN/RAS, display (e.g., wallpaper, desktop colors, fonts), Microsoft Internet Explorer (IE), and accessibility (i.e., the settings users configure through the Control Panel Accessibility Options applet) settings; mapped drives; network printer configurations; folder options (e.g., folder-view options, hidden-file visibility); Microsoft Outlook 2000 or earlier connectivity settings; and common types of user files.

However, USMT has limitations. First, USMT can migrate user-state information to a Win2K Pro system only from NT 4.0 and Win9x systems. Second, although USMT migrates application settings, it doesn't migrate the actual applications. (To migrate applications, you must reinstall the applications under the new OS.) Finally, USMT doesn't migrate files such as drivers, synchronization files, DLLs, or executable files.

Migrating with ScanState and LoadState
USMT comprises a set of .inf files and two command-line tools: ScanState (scanstate.exe) and LoadState (loadstate.exe). Before you begin the migration to Win2K Pro, log on to the source system as the user whose user state you're migrating and use ScanState to save the user's state to an intermediate store, such as a network server, CD-R disc, CD-RW disc, or Zip drive. The ScanState command uses the following syntax:

scanstate <MigrationPath> [/i <InfFile>[/i <InfFile>[...]]] [/l
<LogFile>] [/v <number value>] [/f] [/u] [/x] [/c]

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Comments
  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Jul 14, 2005

    Ive been trying to get this thing working for a month now going from a Win2k machine to a new Win2k machine.. For some reason, it has NEVER applied my migrated users permissions on ANYTHING. I can migrate and load the users profile just fine to the new machine, but when I login, the users account folders get the same permissions as any old folder you just created on your desktop does.. Acrobat cant write its registry settings, our calendar app cant create its folder in Application Data, etc.. What gives? Does this tool actually work or what?

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Mar 15, 2005

    are you able to migrate application data from other apps besides the default ones

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Feb 08, 2005

    What kind of problems are you having, I am successfully migrating users of my dept

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Feb 07, 2005

    Its a good article read, although the loadstate code absolutly confused the crap out of me, I spent 2 hours and still couldn't get it workign. USMT promisses everything, but when it comes to being user friendly, delievers nothing. I have made an Image of all my files but cannot load them.
    If you have any sugestions I ll be more then happy to hear them.
    Thank you

  • Anonymous User
    8 years ago
    Dec 16, 2004

    To selctively migrate applications to your new PC use Alohabob PC Relocator. Check out http://www.eisenworld.com/PCRelocatorUltra.asp

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