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Low Level 1. Features of windows2003 ACTIVE DIRECTORY Easier Deployment and Management ADMT version 2.

0migrates password from NT4 to 2000 to 20003 or from 2000 to 2003 Domain Rename--- supports changing Domain Name System and/or NetBios name Schema Redefine--- Allows deactivation of attributes and class definitions in the Active directory schema AD/AM--- Active directory in application mode is a new capability of AD that addresses certain deployment scenarios related to directory enabled applications Group Policy Improvements----introduced GPMC tool to manage group policy UIEnhanced User Interface Grater Security Cross-forest Authentication Cross-forest Authorization Cross-certification Enhancements IAS and Cross-forest authentication Credential Manager Software Restriction Policies Improved Performance and Dependability Easier logon for remote offices Group Membership replication enhancements Application Directory Partitions Install Replica from media

Dependability Improvements--- updated Inter-Site Topology Generator (ISTG) that scales better by supporting forests with a greater number of sites than Windows 2000. FILE AND PRINT SERVICES Volume shadow copy service NTFS journaling file system EFS Improved CHDSK Performance Enhanced DFS and FRS Shadow copy of shared folders Enhanced folder redirection Remote document sharing (WEBDAV) IIS Fault-tolerant process architecture----- The IIS 6.0 fault-tolerant process architecture isolates Web sites and applications into self-contained units called application pools Health Monitoring---- IIS 6.0 periodically checks the status of an application pool with automatic restart on failure of the Web sites and applications within that application pool, increasing application availability. IIS 6.0 protects the server, and other applications, by automatically disabling Web sites and applications that fail too often within a short amount of time Automatic Process Recycling--- IIS 6.0 automatically stops and restarts faulty Web sites and applications based on a flexible set of criteria, including CPU utilization and memory consumption, while queuing requests Rapid-fail Protection---- If an application fails too often within a short amount of time, IIS 6.0 will automatically disable it and return a "503 Service Unavailable" error message to any new or queued requests to the application Edit-While-Running

http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2003/evaluation/overview/technologies/defa ult.mspx 2. Difference between NT & 2000

NT SAM database is a flat database. Where as in windows 2000 active directory database is a hierarchical database. In windows NT only PDC is having writable copy of SAM database but the BDC is only read only database. In case of Windows 2000 both DC and ADC is having write copy of the database Windows NT will not support FAT32 file system. Windows 2000 supports FAT32 Default authentication protocol in NT is NTLM (NT LAN manager). In windows 2000 default authentication protocol is Kerberos V5. Windows 2000 depends and Integrated with DNS. NT user Netbios names Active Directory can be backed up easily with System state data 3. Difference between 2000 & 2003

Application Server mode is introduced in windows 2003 Possible to configure stub zones in windows 2003 DNS Volume shadow copy services is introduced Windows 2003 gives an option to replicate DNS data b/w all DNS servers in forest or All DNS servers in the domain. Refer Question 1 for all Enhancements 4. Difference between PDC & BDC

PDC contains a write copy of SAM database where as BDC contains read only copy of SAM database. It is not possible to reset a password or create objects with out PDC in Windows NT.

5. Difference between DC & ADC

There is no difference between in DC and ADC both contains write copy of AD. Both can also handles FSMO roles (If transfers from DC to ADC). It is just for identification. Functionality wise there is no difference.

6. What is DNS & WINS

DNS is a Domain Naming System, which resolves Host names to IP addresses. It uses fully qualified domain names. DNS is a Internet standard used to resolve host names WINS is a Windows Internet Name Service, which resolves Netbios names to IP Address. This is proprietary for Windows 7. Types of DNS Servers

Primary DNS Secondary DNS Active Directory Integrated DNS Forwarder Caching only DNS 8. If DHCP is not available what happens to the client

Client will not get IP and it cannot be participated in network . If client already got the IP and having lease duration it use the IP till the lease duration expires. 9. what are the different types of trust relationships

Implicit Trusts Explicit TrustsNT to Win2k or Forest to Forest 10. what is the process of DHCP for getting the IP address to the client

There is a four way negotiation process b/w client and server DHCP Discover (Initiated by client) DHCP Offer (Initiated by server) DHCP Select (Initiated by client)

DHCP Acknowledgement (Initiated by Server) DHCP Negative Acknowledgement (Initiated by server if any issues after DHCP offer) 11. Difference between FAT,NTFS & NTFSVersion5 NTFS Version 5 features Encryption is possible We can enable Disk Quotas File compression is possible Sparse files Indexing Service NTFS change journal In FAT file system we can apply only share level security. File level protection is not possible. In NTFS we can apply both share level as well as file level security NTFS supports large partition sizes than FAT file systems NTFS supports long file names than FAT file systems 12. What are the port numbers for FTP, Telnet, HTTP, DNS

FTP-21, Telnet 23, HTTP-80, DNS-53, Kerberos-88, LDAP-389 13. what are the different types of profiles in 2000

Local Profiles Roaming profiles Mandatory Profiles 14. what is the database files used for Active Directory

The key AD database filesedb.log, ntds.dit, res1.log, res2.log, and edb.chkall of which reside in \%systemroot%\ntds on a domain controller (DC) by default. During

AD installation, Dcpromo lets you specify alternative locations for these log files and database files NTDS.DIT 15. What is the location of AD Database

%System root%/NTDS/NTDS>DIT 16. What is the authentication protocol used in NT

NTLM (NT LAN Manager) 17. What is subnetting and supernetting

Subnetting is the process of borrowing bits from the host portion of an address to provide bits for identifying additional sub-networks Supernetting merges several smaller blocks of IP addresses (networks) that are continuous into one larger block of addresses. Borrowing network bits to combine several smaller networks into one larger network does supernetting 18. what is the use of terminal services

Terminal services can be used as Remote Administration mode to administer remotely as well as Application Server Mode to run the application in one server and users can login to that server to user that application. 19. what is the protocol used for terminal services

RDP 20. what is the port number for RDP

3389 Medium Level

1. what is the difference between Authorized DHCP and Non Authorized DHCP

To avoid problems in the network causing by mis-configured DHCP servers, server in windows 2000 must be validate by AD before starting service to clients. If an authorized DHCP finds any DHCP server in the network it stop serving the clients

2. Difference between inter-site and intra-site replication. Protocols using for replication.

Intra-site replication can be done between the domain controllers in the same site. Inter-site replication can be done between two different sites over WAN links BHS (Bridge Head Servers) is responsible for initiating replication between the sites. Inter-site replication can be done B/w BHS in one site and BHS in another site. We can use RPC over IP or SMTP as a replication protocols where as Domain partition is not possible to replicate using SMTP 3. How to monitor replication

We can user Replmon tool from support tools 4. Brief explanation of RAID Levels Microsoft Windows XP, Windows 2000 and Windows Server 2003 offer two types of disk storage: basic and dynamic. Basic Disk Storage Basic storage uses normal partition tables supported by MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows 95, Microsoft Windows 98, Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition (Me), Microsoft Windows NT, Microsoft Windows 2000, Windows Server 2003 and Windows XP. A disk initialized for basic storage is called a basic disk. A basic disk contains basic volumes, such as primary partitions, extended partitions, and logical drives. Additionally, basic volumes include multidisk volumes that are created by using Windows NT 4.0 or earlier, such as volume sets, stripe sets, mirror sets, and stripe sets with parity. Windows XP does not support these multidisk basic volumes. Any volume sets, stripe sets, mirror sets, or stripe sets with parity must be backed up and deleted or converted to dynamic disks before you install Windows XP Professional. Dynamic Disk Storage

Dynamic storage is supported in Windows XP Professional, Windows 2000 and Windows Server 2003. A disk initialized for dynamic storage is called a dynamic disk. A dynamic disk contains dynamic volumes, such as simple volumes, spanned volumes, striped volumes, mirrored volumes, and RAID-5 volumes. With dynamic storage, you can perform disk and volume management without the need to restart Windows. Note: Dynamic disks are not supported on portable computers or on Windows XP Home Edition-based computers. You cannot create mirrored volumes or RAID-5 volumes on Windows XP Home Edition, Windows XP Professional, or Windows XP 64-Bit Edition-based computers. However, you can use a Windows XP Professional-based computer to create a mirrored or RAID-5 volume on remote computers that are running Windows 2000 Server, Windows 2000 Advanced Server, or Windows 2000 Datacenter Server, or the Standard, Enterprise and Data Center versions of Windows Server 2003. Storage types are separate from the file system type. A basic or dynamic disk can contain any combination of FAT16, FAT32, or NTFS partitions or volumes. A disk system can contain any combination of storage types. However, all volumes on the same disk must use the same storage type. To convert a Basic Disk to a Dynamic Disk: Use the Disk Management snap-in in Windows XP/2000/2003 to convert a basic disk to a dynamic disk. To do this, follow these steps: 1. Log on as Administrator or as a member of the Administrators group. 2. Click Start, and then click Control Panel. 3. Click Performance and Maintenance, click Administrative Tools, and then doubleclick Computer Management. You can also right-click My Computer and choose Manage if you have My Computer displayed on your desktop. 4. In the left pane, click Disk Management. 5. In the lower-right pane, right-click the basic disk that you want to convert, and then click Convert to Dynamic Disk. You must right-click the gray area that contains the disk title on the left side of the Details pane.

6. Select the check box that is next to the disk that you want to convert (if it is not already selected), and then click OK.

7. Click Details if you want to view the list of volumes in the disk. Click Convert.

8. Click Yes when you are prompted to convert the disk, and then click OK.

Warning: After you convert a basic disk to a dynamic disk, local access to the dynamic disk is limited to Windows XP Professional, Windows 2000 and Windows Server 2003. Additionally, after you convert a basic disk to a dynamic disk, the dynamic volumes cannot be changed back to partitions. You must first delete all dynamic volumes on the disk and then convert the dynamic disk back to a basic disk. If you want to keep your data, you must first back up the data or move it to another volume. Dynamic Storage Terms A volume is a storage unit made from free space on one or more disks. It can be formatted with a file system and assigned a drive letter. Volumes on dynamic disks can have any of the following layouts: simple, spanned, mirrored, striped, or RAID-5. A simple volume uses free space from a single disk. It can be a single region on a disk or consist of multiple, concatenated regions. A simple volume can be extended within the same disk or onto additional disks. If a simple volume is extended across multiple disks, it becomes a spanned volume. A spanned volume is created from free disk space that is linked together from multiple disks. You can extend a spanned volume onto a maximum of 32 disks. A spanned volume cannot be mirrored and is not fault-tolerant. A striped volume is a volume whose data is interleaved across two or more physical disks. The data on this type of volume is allocated alternately and evenly to each of the physical disks. A striped volume cannot be mirrored or extended and is not fault-tolerant. Striping is also known as RAID-0. A mirrored volume is a fault-tolerant volume whose data is duplicated on two physical disks. All of the data on one volume is copied to another disk to provide data redundancy. If one of the disks fails, the data can still be accessed from the remaining disk. A mirrored volume cannot be extended. Mirroring is also known as RAID-1. A RAID-5 volume is a fault-tolerant volume whose data is striped across an array of three or more disks. Parity (a calculated value that can be used to reconstruct data after a failure) is also striped across the disk array. If a physical disk fails, the portion of the RAID-5 volume that was on that failed disk can be re-created from the remaining data and the parity. A RAID5 volume cannot be mirrored or extended. The system volume contains the hardware-specific files that are needed to load Windows (for example, Ntldr, Boot.ini, and Ntdetect.com). The system volume can be, but does not have to be, the same as the boot volume. The boot volume contains the Windows operating system files that are located in the %Systemroot% and %Systemroot%\System32 folders. The boot volume can be, but does not have to be, the same as the system volume. RAID 0 Striping RAID 1- Mirroring (minimum 2 HDD required) RAID 5 Striping With Parity (Minimum 3 HDD required)

RAID levels 1 and 5 only gives redundancy 5. What are the different backup strategies are available

Normal Backup Incremental Backup Differential Backup Daily Backup Copy Backup 6. What is a global catalog

Global catalog is a role, which maintains Indexes about objects. It contains full information of the objects in its own domain and partial information of the objects in other domains. Universal Group membership information will be stored in global catalog servers and replicate to all GCs in the forest. 7. What is Active Directory and what is the use of it

Active directory is a directory service, which maintains the relation ship between resources and enabling them to work together. Because of AD hierarchal structure windows 2000 is more scalable, reliable. Active directory is derived from X.500 standards where information is stored is hierarchal tree like structure. Active directory depends on two Internet standards one is DNS and other is LDAP. Information in Active directory can be queried by using LDAP protocol 8. what is the physical and logical structure of AD

Active directory physical structure is a hierarchal structure which fallows Forests TreesDomainsChild DomainsGrand Childetc Active directory is logically divided into 3 partitions 1.Configuration partition 2. Schema Partition 3. Domain partition 4. Application Partition (only in windows 2003 not available in windows 2000) Out of these Configuration, Schema partitions can be replicated between the domain controllers in the in the entire forest. Where as Domain partition can be replicated between the domain controllers in the same domain

9. What is the process of user authentication (Kerberos V5) in windows 2000

After giving logon credentials an encryption key will be generated which is used to encrypt the time stamp of the client machine. User name and encrypted timestamp information will be provided to domain controller for authentication. Then Domain controller based on the password information stored in AD for that user it decrypts the encrypted time stamp information. If produces time stamp matches to its time stamp. It will provide logon session key and Ticket granting ticket to client in an encryption format. Again client decrypts and if produced time stamp information is matching then it will use logon session key to logon to the domain. Ticket granting ticket will be used to generate service granting ticket when accessing network resources 10. what are the port numbers for Kerberos, LDAP and Global catalog

Kerberos 88, LDAP 389, Global Catalog 3268 11. what is the use of LDAP (X.500 standard?)

LDAP is a directory access protocol, which is used to exchange directory information from server to clients or from server to servers 12. what are the problems that are generally come across DHCP

Scope is full with IP addresses no IPs available for new machines If scope options are not configured properly eg default gateway Incorrect creation of scopes etc 13. what is the role responsible for time synchronization

PDC Emulator is responsible for time synchronization. Time synchronization is important because Kerberos authentication depends on time stamp information 14. what is TTL & how to set TTL time in DNS

TTL is Time to Live setting used for the amount of time that the record should remain in cache when name resolution happened.

We can set TTL in SOA (start of authority record) of DNS 15. How to take DNS and WINS,DHCP backup

%System root%/system32/dns %System root%/system32/WINS %System root%/system32/DHCP 16. What is recovery console

Recovery console is a utility used to recover the system when it is not booting properly or not at all booting. We can perform fallowing operations from recovery console We can copy, rename, or replace operating system files and folders Enable or disable service or device startup the next time that start computer Repair the file system boot sector or the Master Boot Record Create and format partitions on drives 17. what is DFS & its usage

DFS is a distributed file system used to provide common environment for users to access files and folders even when they are shared in different servers physically. There are two types of DFS domain DFS and Stand alone DFS. We cannot provide redundancy for stand alone DFS in case of failure. Domain DFS is used in a domain environment which can be accessed by /domain name/root1 (root 1 is DFS root name). Stand alone DFS can be used in workgroup environment which can be accessed through /server name/root1 (root 1 is DFS root name). Both the cases we need to create DFS root ( Which appears like a shared folder for end users) and DFS links ( A logical link which is pointing to the server where the folder is physically shared) The maximum number of Dfs roots per server is 1. The maximum numbers of Dfs root replicas are 31. The maximum number of Dfs roots per domain is unlimited. The maximum number of Dfs links or shared folders in a Dfs root is 1,000

18. what is RIS and what are its requirements

RIS is a remote installation service, which is used to install operation system remotely. Client requirements PXE DHCP-based boot ROM version 1.00 or later NIC, or a network adapter that is supported by the RIS boot disk. Should meet minimum operating system requirements Software Requirements Below network services must be active on RIS server or any server in the network Domain Name System (DNS Service) Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) Active directory Directory service 19. How many root replicas can be created in DFS

31 20. What is the difference between Domain DFS and Standalone DFS

Refer question 17. High Level 1. Can we establish trust relationship between two forests

In Windows 2000 it is not possible. In Windows 2003 it is possible 2. What is FSMO Roles

Flexible single master operation (FSMO) roles are

Domain Naming Master Schema Master PDC Emulator Infrastructure Master RID Master 3. Brief all the FSMO Roles

Windows 2000/2003 Multi-Master Model A multi-master enabled database, such as the Active Directory, provides the flexibility of allowing changes to occur at any DC in the enterprise, but it also introduces the possibility of conflicts that can potentially lead to problems once the data is replicated to the rest of the enterprise. One way Windows 2000/2003 deals with conflicting updates is by having a conflict resolution algorithm handle discrepancies in values by resolving to the DC to which changes were written last (that is, "the last writer wins"), while discarding the changes in all other DCs. Although this resolution method may be acceptable in some cases, there are times when conflicts are just too difficult to resolve using the "last writer wins" approach. In such cases, it is best to prevent the conflict from occurring rather than to try to resolve it after the fact. For certain types of changes, Windows 2000/2003 incorporates methods to prevent conflicting Active Directory updates from occurring. Windows 2000/2003 Single-Master Model To prevent conflicting updates in Windows 2000/2003, the Active Directory performs updates to certain objects in a single-master fashion. In a single-master model, only one DC in the entire directory is allowed to process updates. This is similar to the role given to a primary domain controller (PDC) in earlier versions of Windows (such as Microsoft Windows NT 4.0), in which the PDC is responsible for processing all updates in a given domain. In a forest, there are five FSMO roles that are assigned to one or more domain controllers. The five FSMO roles are: Schema Master: The schema master domain controller controls all updates and modifications to the schema. Once the Schema update is complete, it is replicated from the schema master to all other DCs in the directory. To update the schema of a forest, you must have access to the schema master. There can be only one schema master in the whole forest.

Domain naming master: The domain naming master domain controller controls the addition or removal of domains in the forest. This DC is the only one that can add or remove a domain from the directory. It can also add or remove cross references to domains in external directories. There can be only one domain naming master in the whole forest. Infrastructure Master: When an object in one domain is referenced by another object in another domain, it represents the reference by the GUID, the SID (for references to security principals), and the DN of the object being referenced. The infrastructure FSMO role holder is the DC responsible for updating an object's SID and distinguished name in a cross-domain object reference. At any one time, there can be only one domain controller acting as the infrastructure master in each domain. Note: The Infrastructure Master (IM) role should be held by a domain controller that is not a Global Catalog server (GC). If the Infrastructure Master runs on a Global Catalog server it will stop updating object information because it does not contain any references to objects that it does not hold. This is because a Global Catalog server holds a partial replica of every object in the forest. As a result, cross-domain object references in that domain will not be updated and a warning to that effect will be logged on that DC's event log. If all the domain controllers in a domain also host the global catalog, all the domain controllers have the current data, and it is not important which domain controller holds the infrastructure master role. Relative ID (RID) Master: The RID master is responsible for processing RID pool requests from all domain controllers in a particular domain. When a DC creates a security principal object such as a user or group, it attaches a unique Security ID (SID) to the object. This SID consists of a domain SID (the same for all SIDs created in a domain), and a relative ID (RID) that is unique for each security principal SID created in a domain. Each DC in a domain is allocated a pool of RIDs that it is allowed to assign to the security principals it creates. When a DC's allocated RID pool falls below a threshold, that DC issues a request for additional RIDs to the domain's RID master. The domain RID master responds to the request by retrieving RIDs from the domain's unallocated RID pool and assigns them to the pool of the requesting DC. At any one time, there can be only one domain controller acting as the RID master in the domain. PDC Emulator: The PDC emulator is necessary to synchronize time in an enterprise. Windows 2000/2003 includes the W32Time (Windows Time) time service that is required by the Kerberos authentication protocol. All Windows 2000/2003-based computers within an enterprise use a common time. The purpose of the time service is to ensure that the Windows Time service uses a hierarchical relationship that controls authority and does not permit loops to ensure appropriate common time usage. The PDC emulator of a domain is authoritative for the domain. The PDC emulator at the root of the forest becomes authoritative for the enterprise, and should be

configured to gather the time from an external source. All PDC FSMO role holders follow the hierarchy of domains in the selection of their in-bound time partner. In a Windows 2000/2003 domain, the PDC emulator role holder retains the following functions: Password changes performed by other DCs in the domain are replicated preferentially to the PDC emulator. Authentication failures that occur at a given DC in a domain because of an incorrect password are forwarded to the PDC emulator before a bad password failure message is reported to the user. Account lockout is processed on the PDC emulator. Editing or creation of Group Policy Objects (GPO) is always done from the GPO copy found in the PDC Emulator's SYSVOL share, unless configured not to do so by the administrator. The PDC emulator performs all of the functionality that a Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 Server-based PDC or earlier PDC performs for Windows NT 4.0-based or earlier clients. This part of the PDC emulator role becomes unnecessary when all workstations, member servers, and domain controllers that are running Windows NT 4.0 or earlier are all upgraded to Windows 2000/2003. The PDC emulator still performs the other functions as described in a Windows 2000/2003 environment. At any one time, there can be only one domain controller acting as the PDC emulator master in each domain in the forest. 4. How to manually configure FSMO Roles to separate DCs

How can I determine who are the current FSMO Roles holders in my domain/forest? Windows 2000/2003 Active Directory domains utilize a Single Operation Master method called FSMO (Flexible Single Master Operation), as described in Understanding FSMO Roles in Active Directory. The five FSMO roles are:

Schema master - Forest-wide and one per forest. Domain naming master - Forest-wide and one per forest. RID master - Domain-specific and one for each domain. PDC - PDC Emulator is domain-specific and one for each domain. Infrastructure master - Domain-specific and one for each domain.

In most cases an administrator can keep the FSMO role holders (all 5 of them) in the same spot (or actually, on the same DC) as has been configured by the Active Directory installation

process. However, there are scenarios where an administrator would want to move one or more of the FSMO roles from the default holder DC to a different DC. The transferring method is described in the Transferring FSMO Roles article, while seizing the roles from a non-operational DC to a different DC is described in the Seizing FSMO Roles article. In order to better understand your AD infrastructure and to know the added value that each DC might possess, an AD administrator must have the exact knowledge of which one of the existing DCs is holding a FSMO role, and what role it holds. With that knowledge in hand, the administrator can make better arrangements in case of a scheduled shut-down of any given DC, and better prepare him or herself in case of a non-scheduled cease of operation from one of the DCs. How to find out which DC is holding which FSMO role? Well, one can accomplish this task by many means. This article will list a few of the available methods. Method #1: Know the default settings The FSMO roles were assigned to one or more DCs during the DCPROMO process. The following table summarizes the FSMO default locations: FSMO Role Schema Domain Naming RID PDC Emulator Infrastructure Number of DCs holding this role One per forest One per forest One per domain One per domain One per domain Original DC holding the FSMO role The first DC in the first domain in the forest (i.e. the Forest Root Domain) The first DC in a domain (any domain, including the Forest Root Domain, any Tree Root Domain, or any Child Domain)

Method #2: Use the GUI The FSMO role holders can be easily found by use of some of the AD snap-ins. Use this table to see which tool can be used for what FSMO role: FSMO Role Schema Domain Naming RID PDC Emulator Infrastructure Which snap-in should I use? Schema snap-in AD Domains and Trusts snap-in AD Users and Computers snap-in

Finding the RID Master, PDC Emulator, and Infrastructure Masters via GUI To find out who currently holds the Domain-Specific RID Master, PDC Emulator, and Infrastructure Master FSMO Roles: 1. Open the Active Directory Users and Computers snap-in from the Administrative Tools folder.

2. Right-click the Active Directory Users and Computers icon again and press Operation Masters.

3. Select the appropriate tab for the role you wish to view.

4. When you're done click Close. Finding the Domain Naming Master via GUI To find out who currently holds the Domain Naming Master Role: 1. Open the Active Directory Domains and Trusts snap-in from the Administrative Tools folder. 2. Right-click the Active Directory Domains and Trusts icon again and press Operation Masters.

3. When you're done click Close. Finding the Schema Master via GUI To find out who currently holds the Schema Master Role: 1. Register the Schmmgmt.dll library by pressing Start > RUN and typing:

2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.

Press OK. You should receive a success confirmation. From the Run command open an MMC Console by typing MMC. On the Console menu, press Add/Remove Snap-in. Press Add. Select Active Directory Schema. Press Add and press Close. Press OK. Click the Active Directory Schema icon. After it loads right-click it and press Operation Masters.

8. Press the Close button. Method #3: Use the Ntdsutil command The FSMO role holders can be easily found by use of the Ntdsutil command. Caution: Using the Ntdsutil utility incorrectly may result in partial or complete loss of Active Directory functionality.

1. On any domain controller, click Start, click Run, type Ntdsutil in the Open box, and then click OK.

2. Type roles, and then press ENTER.

Note: To see a list of available commands at any of the prompts in the Ntdsutil tool, type ?, and then press ENTER. 3. Type connections, and then press ENTER.

4. Type connect to server <servername>, where <servername> is the name of the server you want to use, and then press ENTER.

5. At the server connections: prompt, type q, and then press ENTER again.

6. At the FSMO maintenance: prompt, type Select operation target, and then press ENTER again.

At the select operation target: prompt, type List roles for connected server, and then press ENTER again. select operation target: List roles for connected server Server "server100" knows about 5 roles Schema - CN=NTDS Settings,CN=SERVER100,CN=Servers,CN=Default-First-SiteName,CN=Sites,CN=C onfiguration,DC=dpetri,DC=net Domain - CN=NTDS Settings,CN=SERVER100,CN=Servers,CN=Default-First-SiteName,CN=Sites,CN=C onfiguration,DC=dpetri,DC=net PDC - CN=NTDS Settings,CN=SERVER100,CN=Servers,CN=Default-First-SiteName,CN=Sites,CN=Conf iguration,DC=dpetri,DC=net

RID - CN=NTDS Settings,CN=SERVER100,CN=Servers,CN=Default-First-SiteName,CN=Sites,CN=Conf iguration,DC=dpetri,DC=net Infrastructure - CN=NTDS Settings,CN=SERVER100,CN=Servers,CN=Default-First-SiteName,CN=Si tes,CN=Configuration,DC=dpetri,DC=net select operation target: 8. Type q 3 times to exit the Ntdsutil prompt. Note: You can download THIS nice batch file that will do all this for you (1kb). Another Note: Microsoft has a nice tool called Dumpfsmos.cmd, found in the Windows 2000 Resource Kit (and can be downloaded here: Download Free Windows 2000 Resource Kit Tools). This tool is basically a one-click Ntdsutil script that performs the same operation described above. Method #4: Use the Netdom command The FSMO role holders can be easily found by use of the Netdom command. Netdom.exe is a part of the Windows 2000/XP/2003 Support Tools. You must either download it separately (from here Download Free Windows 2000 Resource Kit Tools) or by obtaining the correct Support Tools pack for your operating system. The Support Tools pack can be found in the \Support\Tools folder on your installation CD (or you can Download Windows 2000 SP4 Support Tools, Download Windows XP SP1 Deploy Tools). 1. On any domain controller, click Start, click Run, type CMD in the Open box, and then click OK. 2. In the Command Prompt window, type netdom query /domain:<domain> fsmo (where <domain> is the name of YOUR domain).

Close the CMD window. Note: You can download THIS nice batch file that will do all this for you (1kb). Method #5: Use the Replmon tool The FSMO role holders can be easily found by use of the Netdom command. Just like Netdom, Replmon.exe is a part of the Windows 2000/XP/2003 Support Tools. Replmon can be used for a wide verity of tasks, mostly with those that are related with AD replication. But Replmon can also provide valuable information about the AD, about any DC, and also about other objects and settings, such as GPOs and FSMO roles. Install the package before attempting to use the tool.

1. On any domain controller, click Start, click Run, type REPLMON in the Open box, and then click OK. 2. Right-click Monitored servers and select Add Monitored Server.

3. In the Add Server to Monitor window, select the Search the Directory for the server to add. Make sure your AD domain name is listed in the drop-down list.

4. In the site list select your site, expand it, and click to select the server you want to query. Click Finish.

5. Right-click the server that is now listed in the left-pane, and select Properties.

6. Click on the FSMO Roles tab and read the results.

7. Click Ok when you're done.

How can I forcibly transfer (seize) some or all of the FSMO Roles from one DC to another? Windows 2000/2003 Active Directory domains utilize a Single Operation Master method called FSMO (Flexible Single Master Operation), as described in Understanding FSMO Roles in Active Directory. The five FSMO roles are:

Schema master - Forest-wide and one per forest. Domain naming master - Forest-wide and one per forest. RID master - Domain-specific and one for each domain. PDC - PDC Emulator is domain-specific and one for each domain. Infrastructure master - Domain-specific and one for each domain.

In most cases an administrator can keep the FSMO role holders (all 5 of them) in the same spot (or actually, on the same DC) as has been configured by the Active Directory installation process. However, there are scenarios where an administrator would want to move one or more of the FSMO roles from the default holder DC to a different DC. Moving the FSMO roles while both the original FSMO role holder and the future FSMO role holder are online and operational is called Transferring, and is described in the Transferring FSMO Roles article.

However, when the original FSMO role holder went offline or became non operational for a long period of time, the administrator might consider moving the FSMO role from the original, non-operational holder, to a different DC. The process of moving the FSMO role from a non-operational role holder to a different DC is called Seizing, and is described in this article. If a DC holding a FSMO role fails, the best thing to do is to try and get the server online again. Since none of the FSMO roles are immediately critical (well, almost none, the loss of the PDC Emulator FSMO role might become a problem unless you fix it in a reasonable amount of time), so it is not a problem to them to be unavailable for hours or even days. If a DC becomes unreliable, try to get it back on line, and transfer the FSMO roles to a reliable computer. Administrators should use extreme caution in seizing FSMO roles. This operation, in most cases, should be performed only if the original FSMO role owner will not be brought back into the environment. Only seize a FSMO role if absolutely necessary when the original role holder is not connected to the network. What will happen if you do not perform the seize in time? This table has the info: FSMO Role Schema Loss implications The schema cannot be extended. However, in the short term no one will notice a missing Schema Master unless you plan a schema upgrade during that time. Unless you are going to run DCPROMO, then you will not miss this FSMO role. Chances are good that the existing DCs will have enough unused RIDs to last some time, unless you're building hundreds of users or computer object per week. Will be missed soon. NT 4.0 BDCs will not be able to replicate, there will be no time synchronization in the domain, you will probably not be able to change or troubleshoot group policies and password changes will become a problem. Group memberships may be incomplete. If you only have one domain, then there will be no impact.

Domain Naming RID

PDC Emulator

Infrastructure

Important: If the RID, Schema, or Domain Naming FSMOs are seized, then the original domain controller must not be activated in the forest again. It is necessary to reinstall Windows if these servers are to be used again. The following table summarizes the FSMO seizing restrictions:

FSMO Role Restrictions Schema Original must be reinstalled Domain Naming RID PDC Emulator Can transfer back to original Infrastructure

Another consideration before performing the seize operation is the administrator's group membership, as this table lists: FSMO Role Schema Domain Naming RID PDC Emulator Infrastructure Administrator must be a member of Schema Admins Enterprise Admins Domain Admins

To seize the FSMO roles by using Ntdsutil, follow these steps: Caution: Using the Ntdsutil utility incorrectly may result in partial or complete loss of Active Directory functionality. 1. On any domain controller, click Start, click Run, type Ntdsutil in the Open box, and then click OK.

2. Type roles, and then press ENTER.

Note: To see a list of available commands at any of the prompts in the Ntdsutil tool, type ?, and then press ENTER. 3. Type connections, and then press ENTER.

4. Type connect to server <servername>, where <servername> is the name of the server you want to use, and then press ENTER.

5. At the server connections: prompt, type q, and then press ENTER again.

6. Type seize <role>, where <role> is the role you want to seize. For example, to seize the RID Master role, you would type seize rid master: Options are: 7. You will receive a warning window asking if you want to perform the seize. Click on Yes. fsmo maintenance: Seize infrastructure master Attempting safe transfer of infrastructure FSMO before seizure. ldap_modify_sW error 0x34(52 (Unavailable). Ldap extended error message is 000020AF: SvcErr: DSID-03210300, problem 5002 (UNAVAILABLE) , data 1722 Win32 error returned is 0x20af(The requested FSMO operation failed. The current FSMO holde r could not be contacted.) ) Depending on the error code this may indicate a connection, ldap, or role transfer error. Transfer of infrastructure FSMO failed, proceeding with seizure ... Server "server100" knows about 5 roles Schema - CN=NTDS Settings,CN=SERVER200,CN=Servers,CN=Default-First-SiteName,CN=Sites,CN=Configuration,DC=dpetri,DC=net Domain - CN=NTDS Settings,CN=SERVER100,CN=Servers,CN=Default-First-SiteName,CN=Sites,CN=Configuration,DC=dpetri,DC=net PDC - CN=NTDS Settings,CN=SERVER100,CN=Servers,CN=Default-First-SiteName,CN=Sites,CN=Configuration,DC=dpetri,DC=net RID - CN=NTDS Settings,CN=SERVER200,CN=Servers,CN=Default-First-SiteName,CN=Sites,CN=Configuration,DC=dpetri,DC=net Infrastructure - CN=NTDS Settings,CN=SERVER100,CN=Servers,CN=Default-First-SiteName,CN=Sites,CN=Configuration,DC=dpetri,DC=net fsmo maintenance:

Note: All five roles need to be in the forest. If the first domain controller is out of the forest then seize all roles. Determine which roles are to be on which remaining domain controllers so that all five roles are not on only one server. 8. Repeat steps 6 and 7 until you've seized all the required FSMO roles. 9. After you seize or transfer the roles, type q, and then press ENTER until you quit the Ntdsutil tool. Note: Do not put the Infrastructure Master (IM) role on the same domain controller as the Global Catalog server. If the Infrastructure Master runs on a GC server it will stop updating object information because it does not contain any references to objects that it does not hold. This is because a GC server holds a partial replica of every object in the forest. 5. What is the difference between authoritative and non-authoritative restore

In authoritative restore, Objects that are restored will be replicated to all domain controllers in the domain. This can be used specifically when the entire OU is disturbed in all domain controllers or specifically restore a single object, which is disturbed in all DCs In non-authoritative restore, Restored directory information will be updated by other domain controllers based on the latest modification time. 6. what is Active Directory De-fragmentation

De-fragmentation of AD means separating used space and empty space created by deleted objects and reduces directory size (only in offline De-fragmentation) 7. Difference between online and offline de-fragmentation

The size of NTDS.DIT will often be different sizes across the domain controllers in a domain. Remember that Active Directory is a multi-master independent model where updates are occurring in each of the domain controllers with the changes being replicated over time to the other domain controllers. The changed data is replicated between domain controllers, not the database, so there is no guarantee that the files are going to be the same size across all domain controllers. Windows 2000 and Windows Server 2003 servers running Directory Services (DS) perform a directory online defragmentation every 12 hours by default as part of the garbage-collection process. This defragmentation only moves data around the database file (NTDS.DIT) and doesnt reduce the files size - the database file cannot be compacted while Active Directory is mounted.

Active Directory routinely performs online database defragmentation, but this is limited to the disposal of tombstoned objects. The database file cannot be compacted while Active Directory is mounted (or online). An NTDS.DIT file that has been defragmented offline (compacted), can be much smaller than the NTDS.DIT file on its peers. However, defragmenting the NTDS.DIT file isnt something you should really need to do. Normally, the database self-tunes and automatically tombstoning the records then sweeping them away when the tombstone lifetime has passed to make that space available for additional records. Defragging the NTDS.DIT file probably wont help your AD queries go any faster in the long run. So why defrag it in the first place? One reason you might want to defrag your NTDS.DIT file is to save space, for example if you deleted a large number of records at one time. To create a new, smaller NTDS.DIT file and to enable offline defragmentation, perform the following steps: Back up Active Directory (AD). Reboot the server, select the OS option, and press F8 for advanced options. Select the Directory Services Restore Mode option, and press Enter. Press Enter again to start the OS. W2K will start in safe mode, with no DS running. Use the local SAMs administrator account and password to log on. Youll see a dialog box that says youre in safe mode. Click OK. From the Start menu, select Run and type cmd.exe In the command window, youll see the following text. (Enter the commands in bold.) C:\> ntdsutil ntdsutil: files file maintenance:info .... file maintenance:compact to c:\temp

Youll see the defragmentation process. If the process was successful, enter quit to return to the command prompt. Then, replace the old NTDS.DIT file with the new, compressed version. (Enter the commands in bold.) C:\> copy c:\temp\ntds.dit %systemroot%\ntds\ntds.dit Restart the computer, and boot as normal. 8. What is tombstone period Tombstones are nothing but objects marked for deletion. After deleting an object in AD the objects will not be deleted permanently. It will be remain 60 days by default (which can be configurable) it adds an entry as marked for deletion on the object and replicates to all DCs. After 60 days object will be deleted permanently from all Dcs. 9. what is white space and Garbage collection

refer question 7 10. what are the monitoring tools used for Server and Network Heath. How to define alert mechanism

Spot Light , SNMP Need to enable . 11. How to deploy the patches and what are the softwares used for this process

Using SUS (Software update services) server we can deploy patches to all clients in the network. We need to configure an option called Synchronize with Microsoft software update server option and schedule time to synchronize in server. We need to approve new update based on the requirement. Then approved update will be deployed to clients We can configure clients by changing the registry manually or through Group policy by adding WUAU administrative template in group policy 12. What is Clustering. Briefly define & explain it

Clustering is a technology, which is used to provide High Availability for mission critical applications. We can configure cluster by installing MCS (Microsoft cluster service) component from Add remove programs, which can only available in Enterprise Edition and Data center edition.

In Windows we can configure two types of clusters NLB (network load balancing) cluster for balancing load between servers. This cluster will not provide any high availability. Usually preferable at edge servers like web or proxy. Server Cluster: This provides High availability by configuring active-active or active-passive cluster. In 2 node active-passive cluster one node will be active and one node will be stand by. When active server fails the application will FAILOVER to stand by server automatically. When the original server backs we need to FAILBACK the application Quorum: A shared storage need to provide for all servers which keeps information about clustered application and session state and is useful in FAILOVER situation. This is very important if Quorum disk fails entire cluster will fails Heartbeat: Heartbeat is a private connectivity between the servers in the cluster, which is used to identify the status of other servers in cluster. 13. How to configure SNMP

SNMP can be configured by installing SNMP from Monitoring and Management tools from Add and Remove programs. For SNMP programs to communicate we need to configure common community name for those machines where SNMP programs (eg DELL OPEN MANAGER) running. This can be configured from services.msc--- SNMP service -- Security 14. Is it possible to rename the Domain name & how?

In Windows 2000 it is not possible. In windows 2003 it is possible. On Domain controller by going to MYCOMPUTER properties we can change. 15. What is SOA Record

SOA is a Start Of Authority record, which is a first record in DNS, which controls the startup behavior of DNS. We can configure TTL, refresh, and retry intervals in this record. 16. What is a Stub zone and what is the use of it.

Stub zones are a new feature of DNS in Windows Server 2003 that can be used to streamline name resolution, especially in a split namespace scenario. They also help

reduce the amount of DNS traffic on your network, making DNS more efficient especially over slow WAN links. 17. What are the different types of partitions present in AD

Active directory is divided into three partitions Configuration Partitionreplicates entire forest Schema Partitionreplicates entire forest Domain Partitionreplicate only in domain Application Partition (Only in Windows 2003) 18. What are the (two) services required for replication

File Replication Service (FRS) Knowledge Consistency Checker (KCC) 19. Can we use a Linux DNS Sever in 2000 Domain

We can use, But the BIND version should be 8 or greater 20. What is the difference between IIS Version 5 and IIS Version 6

Refer Question 1 21. What is ASR (Automated System Recovery) and how to implement it

ASR is a two-part system; it includes ASR backup and ASR restore. The ASR Wizard, located in Backup, does the backup portion. The wizard backs up the system state, system services, and all the disks that are associated with the operating system components. ASR also creates a file that contains information about the backup, the disk configurations (including basic and dynamic volumes), and how to perform a restore. You can access the restore portion by pressing F2 when prompted in the text-mode portion of setup. ASR reads the disk configurations from the file that it creates. It restores all the disk signatures, volumes, and partitions on (at a minimum) the disks

that you need to start the computer. ASR will try to restore all the disk configurations, but under some circumstances it might not be able to. ASR then installs a simple installation of Windows and automatically starts a restoration using the backup created by the ASR Wizard. 22. What are the different levels that we can apply Group Policy

We can apply group policy at SITE level---Domain Level---OU level 23. What is Domain Policy, Domain controller policy, Local policy and Group policy

Domain Policy will apply to all computers in the domain, because by default it will be associated with domain GPO, Where as Domain controller policy will be applied only on domain controller. By default domain controller security policy will be associated with domain controller GPO. Local policy will be applied to that particular machine only and effects to that computer only.

24. What is the use of SYSVOL folder

Policies and scripts saved in SYSVOL folder will be replicated to all domain controllers in the domain. FRS (File replication service) is responsible for replicating all policies and scripts 25. What is folder redirection?

Folder Redirection is a User group policy. Once you create the group policy and link it to the appropriate folder object, an administrator can designate which folders to redirect and where To do this, the administrator needs to navigate to the following location in the Group Policy Object: User Configuration\Windows Settings\Folder Redirection In the Properties of the folder, you can choose Basic or Advanced folder redirection, and you can designate the server file system path to which the folder should be redirected. The %USERNAME% variable may be used as part of the redirection path, thus allowing the system to dynamically create a newly redirected folder for each user to whom the policy object applies. 26. What different modes in windows 2003 (Mixed, native & intrim.etc)

What are the domain and forest function levels in a Windows Server 2003-basedActive Directory? Functional levels are an extension of the mixed/native mode concept introduced in Windows 2000 to activate new Active Directory features after all the domain controllers in the domain or forest are running the Windows Server 2003 operating system. When a computer that is running Windows Server 2003 is installed and promoted to a domain controller, new Active Directory features are activated by the Windows Server 2003 operating system over its Windows 2000 counterparts. Additional Active Directory features are available when all domain controllers in a domain or forest are running Windows Server 2003 and the administrator activates the corresponding functional level in the domain or forest. To activate the new domain features, all domain controllers in the domain must be running Windows Server 2003. After this requirement is met, the administrator can raise the domain functional level to Windows Server 2003 (read Raise Domain Function Level in Windows Server 2003 Domains for more info). To activate new forest-wide features, all domain controllers in the forest must be running Windows Server 2003, and the current forest functional level must be at Windows 2000 native or Windows Server 2003 domain level. After this requirement is met, the administrator can raise the domain functional level (read Raise Forest Function Level in Windows Server 2003 Active Directory for more info). Note: Network clients can authenticate or access resources in the domain or forest without being affected by the Windows Server 2003 domain or forest functional levels. These levels only affect the way that domain controllers interact with each other. Important Raising the domain and forest functional levels to Windows Server 2003 is a nonreversible task and prohibits the addition of Windows NT 4.0based or Windows 2000based domain controllers to the environment. Any existing Windows NT 4.0 or Windows 2000based domain controllers in the environment will no longer function. Before raising functional levels to take advantage of advanced Windows Server 2003 features, ensure that you will never need to install domain controllers running Windows NT 4.0 or Windows 2000 in your environment. When the first Windows Server 2003based domain controller is deployed in a domain or forest, a set of default Active Directory features becomes available. The following table summarizes the Active Directory features that are available by default on any domain controller running Windows Server 2003:

Feature Multiple selection of user objects

Functionality Allows you to modify common attributes of multiple user objects at one time. Drag and drop functionality Allows you to move Active Directory objects from container to container by dragging one or more objects to a location in the domain hierarchy. You can also add objects to group membership lists by dragging one or more objects (including other group objects) to the target group. Efficient search capabilities Search functionality is object-oriented and provides an efficient search that minimizes network traffic associated with browsing objects. Saved queries Allows you to save commonly used search parameters for reuse in Active Directory Users and Computers Active Directory command-line Allows you to run new directory service commands tools for administration scenarios. InetOrgPerson class The inetOrgPerson class has been added to the base schema as a security principal and can be used in the same manner as the user class. Application directory partitions Allows you to configure the replication scope for application-specific data among domain controllers. For example, you can control the replication scope of Domain Name System (DNS) zone data stored in Active Directory so that only specific domain controllers in the forest participate in DNS zone replication. Ability to add additional domain Reduces the time it takes to add an additional domain controllers by using backup media controller in an existing domain by using backup media. Universal group membership Prevents the need to locate a global catalog across a caching wide area network (WAN) when logging on by storing universal group membership information on an authenticating domain controller. Secure Lightweight Directory Active Directory administrative tools sign and Access Protocol (LDAP) traffic encrypt all LDAP traffic by default. Signing LDAP traffic guarantees that the packaged data comes from a known source and that it has not been tampered with. Partial synchronization of the Provides improved replication of the global catalog global catalog when schema changes add attributes to the global catalog partial attribute set. Only the new attributes are replicated, not the entire global catalog. Active Directory quotas Quotas can be specified in Active Directory to control the number of objects a user, group, or computer can own in a given directory partition. Members of the Domain Administrators and Enterprise Administrators groups are exempt from quotas. When the first Windows Server 2003based domain controller is deployed in a domain or forest, the domain or forest operates by default at the lowest functional level that is possible in

that environment. This allows you to take advantage of the default Active Directory features while running versions of Windows earlier than Windows Server 2003. When you raise the functional level of a domain or forest, a set of advanced features becomes available. For example, the Windows Server 2003 interim forest functional level supports more features than the Windows 2000 forest functional level, but fewer features than the Windows Server 2003 forest functional level supports. Windows Server 2003 is the highest functional level that is available for a domain or forest. The Windows Server 2003 functional level supports the most advanced Active Directory features; however, only Windows Server 2003 domain controllers can operate in that domain or forest. If you raise the domain functional level to Windows Server 2003, you cannot introduce any domain controllers that are running versions of Windows earlier than Windows Server 2003 into that domain. This applies to the forest functional level as well. Domain Functional Level Domain functionality activates features that affect the whole domain and that domain only. The four domain functional levels, their corresponding features, and supported domain controllers are as follows: Windows 2000 mixed (Default)

Supported domain controllers: Microsoft Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000, Windows Server 2003 Activated features: local and global groups, global catalog support

Windows 2000 native


Supported domain controllers: Windows 2000, Windows Server 2003 Activated features: group nesting, universal groups, SidHistory, converting groups between security groups and distribution groups, you can raise domain levels by increasing the forest level settings

Windows Server 2003 interim


Supported domain controllers: Windows NT 4.0, Windows Server 2003 Supported features: There are no domain-wide features activated at this level. All domains in a forest are automatically raised to this level when the forest level increases to interim. This mode is only used when you upgrade domain controllers in Windows NT 4.0 domains to Windows Server 2003 domain controllers.

Windows Server 2003


Supported domain controllers: Windows Server 2003 Supported features: domain controller rename, logon timestamp attribute updated and replicated. User password support on the InetOrgPerson objectClass. Constrained delegation, you can redirect the Users and Computers containers.

Domains that are upgraded from Windows NT 4.0 or created by the promotion of a Windows Server 2003-based computer operate at the Windows 2000 mixed functional level. Windows

2000 domains maintain their current domain functional level when Windows 2000 domain controllers are upgraded to the Windows Server 2003 operating system. You can raise the domain functional level to either Windows 2000 native or Windows Server 2003. After the domain functional level is raised, domain controllers that are running earlier operating systems cannot be introduced into the domain. For example, if you raise the domain functional level to Windows Server 2003, domain controllers that are running Windows 2000 Server cannot be added to that domain. The following describes the domain functional level and the domain-wide features that are activated for that level. Note that with each successive level increase, the feature set of the previous level is included. Forest Functional Level Forest functionality activates features across all the domains in your forest. Three forest functional levels, the corresponding features, and their supported domain controllers are listed below. Windows 2000 (default)

Supported domain controllers: Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000, Windows Server 2003 New features: Partial list includes universal group caching, application partitions, install from media, quotas, rapid global catalog demotion, Single Instance Store (SIS) for System Access Control Lists (SACL) in the Jet Database Engine, Improved topology generation event logging. No global catalog full sync when attributes are added to the PAS Windows Server 2003 domain controller assumes the Intersite Topology Generator (ISTG) role.

Windows Server 2003 interim


Supported domain controllers: Windows NT 4.0, Windows Server 2003. See the "Upgrade from a Windows NT 4.0 Domain" section of this article. Activated features: Windows 2000 features plus Efficient Group Member Replication using Linked Value Replication, Improved Replication Topology Generation. ISTG Aliveness no longer replicated. Attributes added to the global catalog. ms-DS-TrustForest-Trust-Info. Trust-Direction, Trust-Attributes, Trust-Type, Trust-Partner, Security-Identifier, ms-DS-Entry-Time-To-Die, Message Queuing-Secured-Source, Message Queuing-Multicast-Address, Print-Memory, Print-Rate, Print-Rate-Unit

Windows Server 2003


Supported domain controllers: Windows Server 2003 Activated features: all features in Interim Level, Defunct schema objects, Cross Forest Trust, Domain Rename, Dynamic auxiliary classes, InetOrgPerson objectClass change, Application Groups, 15-second intrasite replication frequency for Windows Server 2003 domain controllers upgraded from Windows 2000

After the forest functional level is raised, domain controllers that are running earlier operating systems cannot be introduced into the forest. For example, if you raise forest functional levels

to Windows Server 2003, domain controllers that are running Windows NT 4.0 or Windows 2000 Server cannot be added to the forest. Different Active Directory features are available at different functional levels. Raising domain and forest functional levels is required to enable certain new features as domain controllers are upgraded from Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 2000 to Windows Server 2003 Domain Functional Levels: Windows 2000 Mixed mode, Windows 2000 Native mode, Windows server 2003 and Windows server 2003 interim ( Only available when upgrades directly from Windows NT 4.0 to Windows 2003) Forest Functional Levels: Windows 2000 and Windows 2003 27. Ipsec usage and difference window 2000 & 2003.

Microsoft doesnt recommend Internet Protocol security (IPSec) network address translation (NAT) traversal (NAT-T) for Windows deployments that include VPN servers and that are located behind network address translators. When a server is behind a network address translator, and the server uses IPSec NAT-T, unintended side effects may occur because of the way that network address translators translate network traffic If you put a server behind a network address translator, you may experience connection problems because clients that connect to the server over the Internet require a public IP address. To reach servers that are located behind network address translators from the Internet, static mappings must be configured on the network address translator. For example, to reach a Windows Server 2003-based computer that is behind a network address translator from the Internet, configure the network address translator with the following static network address translator mappings: Public IP address/UDP port 500 to the server's private IP address/UDP port 500. Public IP address/UDP port 4500 to the server's private IP address/UDP port 4500. These mappings are required so that all Internet Key Exchange (IKE) and IPSec NATT traffic that is sent to the public address of the network address translator is automatically translated and forwarded to the Windows Server 2003-based computer 28. How to create application partition windows 2003 and its usage? An application directory partition is a directory partition that is replicated only to specific domain controllers. A domain controller that participates in the replication of a particular application directory partition hosts a replica of that partition. Only domain controllers running Windows Server 2003 can host a replica of an application directory partition. Applications and services can use application directory partitions to store applicationspecific data. Application directory partitions can contain any type of object, except

security principals. TAPI is an example of a service that stores its application-specific data in an application directory partition. Application directory partitions are usually created by the applications that will use them to store and replicate data. For testing and troubleshooting purposes, members of the Enterprise Admins group can manually create or manage application directory partitions using the Ntdsutil command-line tool. 29. Is it possible to do implicit transitive forest to forest trust relation ship in windows 2003?

Implicit Transitive trust will not be possible in windows 2003. Between forests we can create explicit trust Two-way trust One-way: incoming One-way: Outgoing 30. What is universal group membership cache in windows 2003.

Information is stored locally once this option is enabled and a user attempts to log on for the first time. The domain controller obtains the universal group membership for that user from a global catalog. Once the universal group membership information is obtained, it is cached on the domain controller for that site indefinitely and is periodically refreshed. The next time that user attempts to log on, the authenticating domain controller running Windows Server 2003 will obtain the universal group membership information from its local cache without the need to contact a global catalog. By default, the universal group membership information contained in the cache of each domain controller will be refreshed every 8 hours.

31. GPMC & RSOP in windows 2003?

GPMC is tool which will be used for managing group policies and will display information like how many policies applied, on which OUs the policies applied, What are the settings enabled in each policy, Who are the users effecting by these polices, who is managing these policies. GPMC will display all the above information.

RSoP provides details about all policy settings that are configured by an Administrator, including Administrative Templates, Folder Redirection, Internet Explorer Maintenance, Security Settings, Scripts, and Group Policy Software Installation. When policies are applied on multiple levels (for example, site, domain, domain controller, and organizational unit), the results can conflict. RSoP can help you determine a set of applied policies and their precedence (the order in which policies are applied). 32. Assign & Publish the applications in GP & how?

Through Group policy you can Assign and Publish the applications by creating .msi package for that application With Assign option you can apply policy for both user and computer. If it is applied to computer then the policy will apply to user who logs on to that computer. If it is applied on user it will apply where ever he logs on to the domain. It will be appear in Start menuPrograms. Once user click the shortcut or open any document having that extension then the application install into the local machine. If any application program files missing it will automatically repair. With Publish option you can apply only on users. It will not install automatically when any application program files are corrupted or deleted. 33. DFS in windows 2003?

Refer Question 17 on level 2 34. How to use recovery console?

The Windows 2000 Recovery Console is a command-line console that you can start from the Windows 2000 Setup program. Using the Recovery Console, you can start and stop services, format drives, read and write data on a local drive (including drives formatted to use NTFS), and perform many other administrative tasks. The Recovery Console is particularly useful if you need to repair your system by copying a file from a floppy disk or CD-ROM to your hard drive, or if you need to reconfigure a service that is preventing your computer from starting properly. Because the Recovery Console is quite powerful, it should only be used by advanced users who have a thorough knowledge of Windows 2000. In addition, you must be an administrator to use the Recovery Console. There are two ways to start the Recovery Console:

If you are unable to start your computer, you can run the Recovery Console from your Windows 2000 Setup disks or from the Windows 2000 Professional CD (if you can start your computer from your CD-ROM drive). As an alternative, you can install the Recovery Console on your computer to make it available in case you are unable to restart Windows 2000. You can then select the Recovery Console option from the list of available operating systems 35. PPTP protocol for VPN in windows 2003?

Point-to-Point-Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) is a networking technology that supports multiprotocol virtual private networks (VPN), enableing remote users to access corporate networks securely across the Microsoft Windows NT Workstation, Windows 95, and Windows 98 operating systems and other point-to-point protocol (PPP)-enabled systems to dial into a local Internet service provider to connect securely to their corporate network through the Internet Netdom.exe is domain management tool to rename domain controller SID history

What is Bridge Head Server?

Crisis Management?

Mail flow in Exchange Server.

DMZ concept in Firewalls.

Is NAT uses Port Number if so what is the Port number?

Difference between Schema Master and Global Catlog?

Difference Between Incremental and Differential Backup? Which is best backup Microsoft has recommended? (depends on the volume of data)

How DNS and DHCP are integrated?

If RID master fails what happens? tool used for FSMO?

Difference between Assigning and Publishing through Group Policy?

Netdom.exe is domain management tool to rename domain controller

Second level

What are the services installed when RIS is installed. Read about RIS.

How to trouble shoot if a DHCP client wont get IP from DHCP Server?

What is online and offline fragmentations?

Garbage collections and white spaces?

Tell me one example when Infracture master and Global catalog will be on one DC, what is the issue if both resides on same system?

When you require a Infrastructure Master.

What are Windows 2003 modes?

What are FSMO roles and explain then? Stress on PDC emulator? 2003 advantages?

About migration?(W2k to W2k3 and NT to W2k3).

How to Set Up ADMT for a Windows NT 4.0-to-Windows Server 2003 Migration: Before you upgrade a Windows NT 4.0 domain to a Windows Server 2003-based domain, the following domain and security configurations are required. Note: This article assumes that the source domain is running Windows NT 4.0 Service Pack 4 (SP4) or later with 128-Bit encryption, and that the target domain is a Windows Server 2003-based domain in native mode. Also, the Windows Server 2003 must have 128-Bit encryption (which comes as a default setting in Windows 2003). Trusts Configure the source domain to trust the target domain. Configure the target domain to trust the source domain. Groups Add the Domain Admins global group from the source domain to the Administrators local group in the target domain. Add the Domain Admins global group from the target domain to the Administrators local group in the source domain. Create a new local group in the source domain called Source Domain$$$. Note: There must be no members in this group. Auditing Enable auditing for the success and failure of user and group management on the source domain. Enable auditing for the success and failure of Audit account management on the target domain in the Default Domain Controllers policy. Registry

On the PDC in the source domain, add the TcpipClientSupport:REG_DWORD:0x1 value to the following registry key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\ Control\LSA Administrative Shares Administrative shares must exist on the domain controller in the target domain on which you run ADMT, and on any computers on which an agent must be dispatched. User Rights You must log on to the computer on which you run ADMT with an account that has the following permissions: Domain Administrator rights in the target domain. A member of the Administrators group in the source domain. Administrator rights on each computer that you migrate. Administrator rights on each computer on which you translate security. You will have the appropriate rights when you log on to the PDC that is the FSMO role holder in the target domain with the Source Domain\Administrator account, assuming that the Source Domain\Domain Administrators group is a member of the Administrators group on each computer. How to set up ADMT for a Windows 2000 to Windows Server 2003 migration How to Set Up ADMT for a Windows 2000 to Windows Server 2003 Migration You can install the Active Directory Migration Tool version 2 (ADMTv2) on any computer that is running Windows 2000 or later, including: Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional Microsoft Windows 2000 Server Microsoft Windows XP Professional Microsoft Windows Server 2003 The computer on which you install ADMTv2 must be a member of either the source or the target domain. Intraforest Migration

Intraforest migration does not require any special domain configuration. The account you use to run ADMT must have enough permissions to perform the actions that are requested by ADMT. For example, the account must have the right to delete accounts in the source domain, and to create accounts in the target domain. Intraforest migration is a move operation instead of a copy operation. These migrations are said to be destructive because after the move, the migrated objects no longer exist in the source domain. Because the object is moved instead of copied, some actions that are optional in interforest migrations occur automatically. Specifically, the sIDHistory and password are automatically migrated during all intraforest migrations. Interforest Migration ADMT requires the following permissions to run properly: Administrator rights in the source domain. Administrator rights on each computer that you migrate. Administrator rights on each computer on which you translate security. Before you migrate a Windows 2000-based domain to a Windows Server 2003-based domain, you must make some domain and security configurations. Computer migration and security translation do not require any special domain configuration. However, each computer you want to migrate must have the administrative shares, C$ and ADMIN$. The account you use to run ADMT must have enough permissions to complete the required tasks. The account must have permission to create computer accounts in the target domain and organizational unit, and must be a member of the local Administrators group on each computer to be migrated. User and Group Migration You must configure the source domain to trust the target domain. Optionally, the target may be configured to trust the source domain. While this may ease configuration, it is not required to finish the ADMT migration. Requirements for Optional Migration Tasks You can complete the following tasks automatically by running the User Migration Wizard in Test mode and selecting the migrate sIDHistory option. The user account you use to run ADMT must be an Administrator in both the source and the target domains for the automatic configuration to succeed. Create a new local group in the source domain that is named %sourcedomain%$$$. There must be no members in this group. Turn on auditing for the success and failure of Audit account management on both domains in the Default Domain Controllers policy.

Configure the source domain to allow RPC access to the SAM by configuring the following registry entry on the PDC Emulator in the source domain with a DWORD value of 1: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\ Control\LSA\TcpipClientSupport You must restart the PDC Emulator after you make this change. Note: For Windows 2000 domains, the account you use to run ADMTv2 must have domain administrator permissions in both the source and target domains. For Windows Server 2003 target domains, the 'Migrate sIDHistory' may be delegated. For more information, see Windows Server 2003 Help & Support. You can turn on interforest password migration by installing a DLL that runs in the context of LSA. By running in this protected context, passwords are shielded from being viewed in cleartext, even by the operating system. The installation of the DLL is protected by a secret key that is created by ADMTv2, and must be installed by an administrator. To install the password migration DLL: Log on as an administrator or equivalent to the computer on which ADMTv2 is installed. At a command prompt, run the ADMT KEY sourcedomainpath [* | password] command to create the password export key file (.pes). In this example, sourcedomain is the NetBIOS name of the source domain and path is the file path where the key will be created. The path must be local, but can point to removable media such as a floppy disk drive, ZIP drive, or writable CD media. If you type the optional password at the end of the command, ADMT protects the .pes file with the password. If you type the asterisk (*), ADMT prompts for a password, and the system will not echo it as it is typed. Move the .pes file you created in step 2 to the designated Password Export Server in the source domain. This can be any domain controller, but make sure it has a fast, reliable link to the computer that is running ADMT. Install the Password Migration DLL on the Password Export Server by running the Pwmig.exe tool. Pwmig.exe is located in the I386\ADMT folder on the Windows Server 2003 installation media, or the folder to which you downloaded ADMTv2 from the Internet. When you are prompted to do so, specify the path to the .pes file that you created in step 2. This must be a local file path. After the installation completes, you must restart the server. If you are ready to migrate passwords, modify the following registry key to have a DWORD value of 1. For maximum security, do not complete this step until you are ready to migrate. HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\ Control\LSA\AllowPasswordExport

The Active Directory Migration Tool v2 is included in the I386\Admt folder on the Windows Server 2003 CD. The Active Directory Migration Tool provides an easy, secure, and fast way to migrate to Windows 2000 Active Directory service. As a system administrator, you can use this tool to diagnose any possible problems before starting migration operations to Windows 2000 Server Active Directory. You can then use the task-based wizard to migrate users, groups, and computers; set correct file permissions; and migrate Microsoft Exchange Server mailboxes. The tool's reporting feature allows you to assess the impact of the migration, both before and after move operations. In many cases, if there is a problem, you can use the rollback features to automatically restore previous structures. The tool also provides support for parallel domains, so you can maintain your existing Windows NT 4.0 domains while you deploy Windows 2000. Note: To successfully run the AD Migration Tool the source domain must be running Windows NT 4.0 Service Pack 4 or later, and the target domain will be a Windows 2000based domain in Native mode. Version 2.0 of ADMT is from Windows Server 2003 and has many new features: Scripting and Command line interface Password Migration Sid Mapping Files for Security Translation Windows 2000 Attribute Exclusion Agent Credentials Migration Log Skip Membership Restoration

Question on System State data Backup?

Diff types of DNS roles and Zones?

What are the steps you follow when you are promoting a server as ADC in windows 2003? What are the two parameters you run before upgrading the server to an ADC(/forestprep, /domainprep).

What is the authentication process?

What is the role of GC in authentication process?

What happens if DNS server fails. Can a user is able to login if the DNS server fails(if you have only one DNS Server).

How do you promote a server to a domain controller(in windows 2003) over a slow wan links.

A. Take the backup of systemstate from the DC and restore it in the server where you are promoting using dcpromo /adv and select restore from backup.

Working with Group Policy


This article deals with the mechanism of deploying and verifying GPO deployment. It will not deal in the GPO itself and the settings inside it (these settings and configurations will be discussed in different articles). Group Policy is a one of the most useful tools found in the Windows 2000/2003 Active Directory infrastructure. Group Policy can help you do the following:

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

Configure user's desktops Configure local security on computers Install applications Run start-up/shut-down or logon/logoff scripts Configure Internet Explorer settings Redirect special folders

In fact, you can configure any aspect of the computer behavior with it. Although it is a cool toy; working with it without proper attention can cause unexpected behavior. Here are some basic terms you need to be familiar with before drilling down into Group Policy: Local policy - Refers to the policy that configures the local computer or server, and is not inherited from the domain. You can set local policy by running gpedit.msc from the Run command, or you can add "Group Policy Object Editor" snap-in to MMC. Local Policies also exist in the Active Directory environment, but have many fewer configuration options that the full-fledged Group Policy in AD.

GPO - Group Policy Object - Refers to the policy that is configured at the Active Directory level and is inherited by the domain member computers. You can configure a GPO Group Policy Object - at the site level, domain level or OU level. GPC Group Policy Container - The GPC is the store of the GPOs; The GPC is where the GPO stores all the AD-related configuration. Any GPO that is created is not effective until it is linked to an OU, Domain or a Site. The GPOs are replicated among the Domain Controllers of the Domain through replication of the Active Directory. GPT - Group Policy Templates - The GPT is where the GPO stores the actual settings. The GPT is located within the Netlogon share on the DCs. Netlogon share - A share located only on Domain Controllers and contains GPOs, scripts and .POL files for policy of Windows NT/98. The Netlogon share replicates among all DCs in the Domain, and is accessible for read only for the Everyone group, and Full Control for the Domain Admins group. The Netlogon's real location is: C:\WINDOWS\SYSVOL\sysvol\domain.com\SCRIPTS When a domain member computer boots up, it finds the DC and looks for the Netlogon share in it. To see what DC the computer used when it booted, you can go to the Run command and type %logonserver%\Netlogon. The content of the Netlogon share should be the same on all DCs in the domain.

GPO behavior
Group Policy is processed in the following order: Local Policy > Site GPO > Domain GPO > OU GPO > Child OU GPO and so on. GPOs inherited from the Active Directory are always stronger than local policy. When you configure a Site policy it is being overridden by Domain policy, and Domain policy is being overridden by OU policy. If there is an OU under the previous OU, its GPO is stronger the previous one. The rule is simple, as more you get closer to the object that is being configured, the GPO is stronger. What does it mean "stronger"? If you configure a GPO and linke it to "Organization" OU, and in it you configure Printer installation allowed and then at the "Dallas" OU you configured other GPO but do not allow printer installation, then the Dallas GPO is more powerful and the computers in it will not allow installation of printers. The example above is true when you have different GPOs that have similar configuration, configured with opposite settings. When you apply couple of GPOs at different levels and every GPO has its own settings, all settings from all GPOs are merged and inherited by the computers or users.

Group Policy sections


Each GPO is built from 2 sections:

Computer configuration contains the settings that configure the computer prior to the user logon combo-box. User configuration contains the settings that configure the user after the logon. You cannot choose to apply the setting on a single user, all users, including administrator, are affected by the settings.

Within these two section you can find more sub-folders: Software settings and Windows settings both of computer and user are settings that configure local DLL files on the machine. Administrative templates are settings that configure the local registry of the machine. You can add more options to administrative templates by right clicking it and choose .ADM files. Many programs that are installed on the computer add their .ADM files to %systemroot%\inf folder so you can add them to the Administrative Templates.

You can download .ADM files for the Microsoft operating systems

Tools used to configure GPO


You can configure GPOs with these set of tools from Microsoft (other 3rd-party tools exist but we will discuss these in a different article):

1. Group Policy Object Editor snap-in in MMC - or - use gpedit.msc from the Run 2. 3. 4.

command. Active Directory Users and Computers snap in - or dsa.msc to invoke the Group Policy tab on every OU or on the Domain. Active Directory Sites and Services - or dssite.msc to invoke the Group Policy tab on a site. Group Policy Management Console - or gpmc.msc - this utility is NOT included in Windows 2003 server and needs to be separately installed. You can download it from HERE

Note that if you'd like to use the GPMC tool on Windows XP, you need to install it on computers running Windows XP SP2. Installing it on computers without SP2 will generate errors due to unsupported and newer .ADM files.

GPMC utility - Creating a GPO


When you create a GPO it is stored in the GPO container. After creation you should link the GPO to an OU that you choose.

Linking a GPO
To link a GPO simply right click an OU and choose Link an existing GPO or you can create and link a GPO in the same time. You can also drag and drop a GPO from the Group Policy Objects folder to the appropriate Site, Domain or OU. When you right-click a link you can: Edit a GPO - This will open the GPO window so you can configure settings. Link/Unlink a GPO - This setting allows you to temporarily disable a link if you need to add settings to it or if you will activate it later.

Enabling/disabling computer or user settings


GPO has computer and user settings but if you create a GPO that contains only computer settings, you might want to disable the user settings in that GPO, this will reduce the amount of settings replicated and can also be used for testing. To disable one of the configurations simply choose the GPO link and go to Details tab:

How do I know what are the settings in a GPO?


Prior to the use of GPMC, an administrator who wanted to find out which one of the hundreds of settings of a GPO were actually configured - had to open each GPO and manually comb through each and every node of the GPO sections. Now, with GPMC, you can simply see what the configurations of any GPO are if you point on that GPO and go to the Settings tab. There you can use the drop-down menus to see computer or user settings.

Block/Enforce inheritance
You can block policy inheritance to an OU if you dont want the settings from upper GPOs to configure your OU. To block GPO inheritance, simply right click your OU and choose "Block Inheritance". Blocking inheritance will block all upper GPOs. In case you need one of the upper GPOs to configure all downstream OUs and overcome Block inheritance, use the Enforce option of a link. Enforcing a GPO is a powerful option and rarely should be used. You can see in this example that when you look at Computers OU, three different GPOs are inherited to it. In this example you can see that choosing "Block inheritance" will reject all upper GPOs. Now, if we configure the "Default domain policy" with the Enforce option, it will overcome the inheritance blocking.

Link order
When linking more than one GPO to an OU, there could be a problem when two or more GPOs have the same settings but with opposite configuration, like, GPO1 have Allow printer installation among other settings but GPO2 is configured to prevent printer installation among other settings. Because the two GPOs are at the same level, there is a link order which can be changed. The GPO with the lowest link order is processed last, and therefore has the highest precedence.

Security Filtering
Filtering let you choose the user, group or computer that the GPO will apply onto. If you configured "Computers" OU with a GPO but you only want to configure Win XP stations with that GPO and exclude Win 2000 stations, you can easily create a group of Win XP computers and apply the GPO only to that group.

This option save you from creating complicated OU tree with each type of computer in it. A user or a group that you configure in the filtering field have by default the "Read" and "Apply" permission. By default when you create a GPO link, you can see that "Authenticated users" are listed. In the above example, Office 2K3 will be installed on all computers that are part of the two listed groups. If we still were using Authenticated users, the installation of the Office suite could have followed the user to any computer that he logs onto, like servers or other machines. Using filtering narrows the installation options. If you want to configure these permissions with higher resolution, you can go to Delegation tab and see the permissions. Going to the Advanced Tab will let you configure the ACL permission with the highest resolution.

How the GPO is updated on the computers


GPO inherited from AD is refreshed on the computers by several ways:

1. 2. 3. 4.

Logon to computer (If the settings are of "user settings" in GPO) Restart of the computer (If the settings are of "computer settings" in GPO) Every 60 to 90 minutes, the computers query their DC for updates. Manually by using gpupdate command. You can add the /force switch to force all settings and not only the delta.

Note: Windows 2000 doesn't support the Gpupdate command so you need run a different command instead: for computer settings. for user settings. In both commands you can use the /enforce that is similar to the /force in gpupdate. If any configuration change requires a logoff or a restart message will appear: You can force logoff or reboot using gpupdate switches.

How to check that the GPO was deployed


To be sure that GPO was deployed correctly, you can use several ways. The term for the results is called RSoP Resultant Sets of Policies.

1. Use gpresult command in the command prompt.


The default result is for the logged on user on that machine. You can also choose to check what is the results for other users on to that machine. If you use /v or /z switches you will get very detailed information. You can see what GPOs were applied and what GPOs were filtered out and the reason for not being deployed.

2. Resultant Set of Policy snap-in in MMC.


The snap-in has two modes: Logging mode which tells you what are the real settings that were deployed on the machine Planning mode which tells you what will be the results if you choose some options. This option is not so compatible because you need to browse in the RSoP data to find the settings.

1. Group Policy Results in GPMC.


This is the most comfortable option that let you check the RSoP data on every computer or user from a central location. This option also displays the summary of the RSoP and Detailed RSoP data in HTML format. In the example above example you can see the summary of applied or non applied GPOs both of computer and user settings. When looking at the Settings tab we can see what settings did applied on the computer and see which is the "Winning GPO" that actually configured the computer with the particular setting.

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