Windows Server 2012 Essentials: Connect Client PCs without Using a Domain

Windows Server 2012 Essentials is a rock-solid replacement for both Windows Home Server and Windows Small Business Server, but to take advantage of its best features, you have to join your client PCs to a domain. This is undesirable and unnecessarily complex in a home office or very small business. Fortunately, there’s a workaround.

Note: This workaround is not  required for Windows 7 Starter or Home Premium, or Windows 8 Core. Please refer to Windows Server 2012 Essentials: Connecting Windows 7 And 8 Home Versions for information about connecting those Windows versions to Essentials 2012.

The way we were

To understand what’s going on here, let’s review. Windows Server 2012 Essentials, like Windows Home Server (WHS) 2011 and Small Business Server Essentials 2011, provides a number of useful services in a multi-PC environment, including centralized, image-based backups of each PC. These backups can be used to restore individual files, folders, or even recover the entire PC, and they work much like Windows Backup did in Windows 7. In Essentials 2012, this capability will be particularly interesting to those with Windows 8, since that image-based backup, while not completely eradicated, has been deprecated in favor of more modern technologies like Push Button Reset (PC Reset and PC Restore) and File History.

Essentials 2012 provides other interesting benefits, such as automatic and centralized File History backup and the ability to run the Essentials 2012 management interface, called Dashboard, in a RemoteApp session alongside your other applications, rather than needing to remote desktop into the server. These and other benefits, however, require that you install the Connector software on each of your client PCs. Essentials 2012 supports both Windows 7 and Windows 8, but there’s a catch: You must sign into the Active Directory domain you set up when you configured the server.

If you’re familiar with WHS 2011, you know that that version of Server provided a very similar Connector experience that did not require a domain configuration. (In fact, WHS could not be configured as a domain controller at all.) But Essentials 2012, like SBS Essentials 2011 before it, includes a very simple domain setup sequence during Setup. That’s a nice feature, sure, but it can’t be skipped: You get an AD domain whether you want on or not. And if you want to take advantage of some of Essentials’ best features—centralized, image-based backups and File History backups, for starters—you need the Connector software. And that means you need to join the domain.

Using a domain … at home

I used the previous Essentials 2012 milestone, the Beta—the current version is a Release Candidate—in this fashion with several client PCs. When you install the Connector software (which you do by visiting the Essentials 2012 web server at "http://server-name/connect" as with the previous generation servers), your subtly alerted that you will be leaving your old (workgroup-type) account behind and joining a domain, which Setup refers to as “your company’s network.”

essentials-connector-nodoma

In real world terms, this means you must supply the user name and password for a valid domain user account (which must have been previously configured on the server), reboot, and then sit through a new client account creation routine. (In Windows 8, this humorously requires you to sit through that psychedelic color-switching animation at the end of the out of box experience again.)

Once that’s over, you run through a unique “Connect a Computer to the Server” wizard where you configure a computer description and whether to wake the computer to back it up. Automatic, image-based backup is configured (to the Client Computer Backups share on the server), as is automatic, File History-based backups (to the File History Backups share on the server).

connector-apps

Two client applications are installed, Launchpad, which provides quick links to a few commonly needed tasks, and the RemoteApp version of the server Dashboard, so you can manage the server without resorting to Remote Desktop (or, God forbid, actual hands-on usage). There’s also a handy pop-up window that explains how you can use Windows Easy Transfer to migrate the stuff from your old account into your new domain based account.

(And remember: You can still access Microsoft account syncing functionality while using a domain account. I explained how in Windows 8 Tip: Sign In to a Domain and Still Use Live Services.)

Or, you could simply not use a domain account.

Skipping the domain sign-in

Microsoft doesn’t support it, but the software giant has actually published instructions on its TechNet web site describing the very simple steps you can take to connect a PC to the server without joining a domain. Basically, before connecting to your Essentials 2012 web site, you run the following command in an elevated command prompt:

reg add "HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Server\ClientDeployment" /v SkipDomainJoin /t REG_DWORD /d 1

Then, just connect as you would if you were going to configure domain sign-in. The PC will be connected to the server, automatic image-based backups and File History backups will be configured, and you’ll get the same Launchpad and RemoteApp Dashboard applications. But you won’t have to migrate your account and everything else will work as before.

The obvious question arises: Should you do this?

Having already tried the domain route, I’ve installed the Connector software on two of my PCs using the RC version of Windows Server 2012 Essentials. I’ve let the backup processes run, and I’ve basically just used the PC normally. So far so good. Hopefully, by the time the final version of Essentials 2012 arrives, I’ll be able to provide a more concrete answer. But for now, know this: The workaround is out there, and for those that felt the domain requirement was a bridge too far, this may give you the best of both worlds, a chance to access the best features of Microsoft’s latest Essentials server without needing to worry about the domain.

Do you have other questions about using Windows Server 2012 in a home office or very small business? Please let me know.

Discuss this Article 8

outthere
on Nov 18, 2012

This was indeed my main roadblock to using Essentials. I don't' mind having a domain in the house, in fact it has some advantages (domain policy for kids, for instance). However, one of the primary reasons for home server with my house was backups, and specifically my work laptop, which is, of course, already on the work domain. This will, hopefully, let me connect the work laptop and continue with backups, otherwise I'll end up sticking with WHSv1

outthere
on Nov 18, 2012

This was indeed my main roadblock to using Essentials. I don't' mind having a domain in the house, in fact it has some advantages (domain policy for kids, for instance). However, one of the primary reasons for home server with my house was backups, and specifically my work laptop, which is, of course, already on the work domain. This will, hopefully, let me connect the work laptop and continue with backups, otherwise I'll end up sticking with WHSv1

bigwillsmall
on Nov 21, 2012

Hi, I am looking for a server to run a small database that will run on SQL Express. We have under 10 database users and under 20 file server users. Will this run SQL express for 2 databases, one being quickbooks 2012? I have gotten mixed answers.
Thank you.

Bob3
on Jan 19, 2013

Now that 2012 Ess is released, does this still hold true?

Does the registery change need to be made on the Win 8 PC? Just want to be sure.

Thanks for this artical.

Bob...

sddjd
on Feb 4, 2013

Question related to backup (from domain members and non members); we're experiencing slow backups of client computers. Actually, slow doesn't cover it- one laptop reached 47% of 280gb in 24 hours via gigabit ethernet. Another workstation too approx 15 hours for 500gb. I'm loving WSE12, but this is a problem, particularly with the laptops since they (obviously) must disconnect while in use! Any thoughts from anyone? Thus far Technet hasn't been able to help, though I've had several helpful contributions.

Charles
on Feb 4, 2013

I found that the initial backup of my PCs are quite slow, but the incremental backups thereafter are fast. I have more than 280GB or even 500GB though.

thosj
on Feb 5, 2013

Does anyone know if I can connect WS2012E to WHS2011? I mean on WS2012E, type servername/connect, install the WHS connector on WS2012E and get access to the WHS shares from 2012? Or is this so far out there in NOOB land it is outrageous!! And while we're at it, how about on a client, having WHS2011 and WS2012E both connected so I can copy stuff over without having to copy to a client first, then to the other server. Do I need to uninstall the WHS2011 connector on a client before I can connect to WS2012E?

ljthemad
on Feb 13, 2013

Anyone else having issues actually getting the connecter software to work? On both 7 pro and 8 pro machines that I've tried, I get all the way to putting in my username and password for the server and then it immediately comes back with the server is unavailable. I want to use the domain so I'm just going straight to the http://(servername)/connect. After a little poking around it seems to be a common issue but with no real resolution yet.

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