NikeGuy. Disaster Recovery Option is machine specific and is not specifically designed to bring back alternate servers. You can try to "trick" the DR with similar hardware but it is never a sure thing. These are the supported hardware changes for DR:
----------------------------------------------------
Supported Hardware Changes
Windows 2000 Specific
Network Adapters
Supported on all local
For remote DRs, only if supported by Windows or are Plug and Play capable
SCSI Adapters
If hard drive is not connected to the SCSI adapter
SCSI devices should be kept at the same SCSI ID
NT 4.0 Specific
Network Adapters
Supported on Local DR only
SCSI Adapters
SCSI devices should be kept at the same SCSI ID
-----------------------------------------------
The DRO has a dramatic name, making it seem like a server could fall through a crack in the earth and that the diskettes and last full backup could bring a similiar server back. But it must be understood that what is meant by "Disaster" is something like virus corruption or a hardware failure.
The DRO is just PART of a good Disaster Recovery protocol. Let's say the DRO is Plan A. What would Plan B be? Installing the server from scratch, installing your applications, restoring your application data from your last good backup. In active directory environments where there is more than one Domain Controller, how about doing a non authoritative restore and letting the healthy AD replicate to the newly built server?
There are extensive MS white papers on recovering from a disaster.
For Exchange DR to an alternate server you must know the site and organization EXACTLY the way it was on the original server or else the restore of your IS will fail.
Again, there are extensive DR articles for Exchange 5.5 and 2000
My suggestion in assessing your disaster recovery needs would be to take a step back and start with the Microsoft materials on best practices for DR. Also try CA's DR Outline:
Also try CA's Restoring Active Directory, but understand many of the "rules" are to be understood from an MS perspective
Best of luck NikeGuy! Let us know how you're doing
