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Configuring Name Resolution and Additional Services Lesson 12 Name Resolution • Name resolution is an essential function on all Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) networks, regardless of the operating system that an individual computer is running. Host Name Resolution • Host name can be resolved by host file or the Domain Name System (DNS). • The Domain Name System (DNS) provides the default name resolution mechanism for Active Directory, the Internet, and the majority of modern TCP/IP networks. NetBIOS Name Resolution • NetBIOS/Computer Names can be resolved by lmhost file or Windows Internet Naming Service (WINS). Domain Name System (DNS) • Main components of DNS: – DNS namespace. – Name Server. – Resolver. DNS Namespace • In a specification for a tree-structured namespace, each branch of the tree identifies a domain. • Each domain contains an information set that consists of host names, IP addresses, and comments. • Query operations are attempts to retrieve specific information from a particular information set. DNS Namespace Name Servers • Applications running on server computers maintain information about the domain tree structure and contain authoritative information about specific areas of that structure. • The application is capable of responding to queries for information about the areas for which it is the authority, and it has pointers to other name servers that enable it to access information about any other area of the tree. Resolvers • Client programs generate requests for DNS information and send them to name servers for fulfillment. A resolver has direct access to at least one name server. Domain Name System (DNS) • The DNS Server service in Windows Server 2008 supports both standard and Active Directory– integrated DNS zones. • DNS root name servers are the highest-level DNS servers in the entire namespace. Domain Name System (DNS) • You can divide a DNS namespace into zones to store them on different servers and to delegate their administration to different people. • Windows Server 2008 supports primary zones, secondary zones, and stub zones. Primary and stub zones can be integrated into Active Directory. Resource Records • The resource record is the fundamental data storage unit in all DNS servers. – – – – – – – – Start of Authority (SOA) Name Server (NS) Host (A) Host (AAAA) Canonical Name (CNAME) Mail Exchanger (MX) Pointer (PTR) Service Record (SRV) Resource Records • The Start of Authority (SOA) resource record identifies which name server is the authoritative source of information for data within this domain. – The first record in the zone database file must be an SOA record. In the Windows Server 2008 DNS server, SOA records are created automatically with default values when you create a new zone. Resource Records Resource Records • Name Server (NS) resource record identifies the name server that is the authority for the particular zone or domain; that is, the server that can provide an authoritative name-to-IP address mapping for a zone or domain. Resource Records • The A resource record is the fundamental data unit of the DNS that is used to translate the host name to the IPv4 address. • The AAAA resource record is used to translate the host name to the IPv6 address. • The Pointer (PTR) resource record is the functional opposite of the A record, providing an IP addressto-name mapping, which is found in the reverse lookup zones. Resource Record • The Canonical Name (CNAME) resource record, sometimes called an Alias record, is used to specify an alternative name, for the system specified in the Name field. Resource Records • Mail Exchanger (MX) resource record identifies the email servers for a domain. • Service Record (SRV) resource record enables clients to locate servers that are providing a particular service. – Windows Server 2008 Active Directory clients rely on the SRV record to locate the domain controllers they need to validate logon requests. DNS Referrals and Queries. • The process by which one DNS server sends a name resolution request to another DNS server is called a referral. • DNS servers recognize two types of name resolution requests: – Recursive Query. – Iterative Query. Recursive Query • The DNS server receiving the name resolution request takes full responsibility for resolving the name. – If the server possesses information about the requested name, it replies immediately to the requester. – If the server has no information about the name, it sends referrals to other DNS servers until it obtains the information it needs. – TCP/IP client resolvers always send recursive queries to their designated DNS servers. Iterative Query • The server that receives the name resolution request immediately responds to the requester with the best information it possesses. – This information can be cached or authoritative, and it can be a resource record containing a fully resolved name or a reference to another DNS server. – DNS servers use iterative queries when communicating with each other. – It would be improper to configure one DNS server to send a recursive query to another DNS server. Reverse Name Resolution • Used to convert an IP address into a DNS name. • Uses reverse lookup zones and Pointer (PTR) resource records. • The DNS developers created a special domain called in-addr.arpa that is specifically designed for reverse name resolution. Internal and External DNS Name Resolution • Use the same domain name internally and externally. • Create separate and unrelated internal and external domains. • Make the internal domain a subdomain of the external domain. DNS Server Types • Caching-Only Server. – Contains no zones and host. – Provide name resolution for your clients by caching values as it forwards the requests to other DNS servers. DNS Server Type • Forward. – Receives queries from other DNS servers that are explicitly configured to send them. • Conditional Forwarder. – Will forward queries selectively based on the domain specified in the name resolution request. DNS Zones • A zone is an administrative entity on a DNS server that represents a discrete portion of the DNS namespace. • Administrators typically divide the DNS namespace into zones to store them on different servers and to delegate their administration to different people. • Zones always consist of entire domains or subdomains. DNS Zones • Every zone consists of a zone database that contains the resource records for the domains in that zone. • The DNS server in Windows Server 2003 supports three zone types that specify where the server stores the zone database and the kind of information it contains: – Primary zone. – Secondary zone. – Stub zone. Primary Zone • A primary zone contains the master copy of the zone database, in which administrators make all changes to the zone’s resource records. – If the Store The Zone In Active Directory (Available Only If DNS Server Is A Domain Controller) checkbox is not selected, the server creates a primary master zone database file on the local drive, also called a standard zone (simple text file). – If the checkbox is selected, it is an AD–integrated zone, which the DNS data is stored within the Active Directory database itself. Secondary Zone • A secondary zone is a read-only copy of the data that is stored within a primary zone on another server. • The secondary zone contains a backup copy of the primary master zone database file, stored as an identical text file on the server’s local drive. • Because the secondary zone is read-only, you cannot modify the resource records in a secondary zone manually. You can only update them by replicating the primary master zone database file using the zone transfer process. • You should always create at least one secondary zone for each standard primary zone in your namespace to provide fault tolerance and to balance the DNS traffic load. Stub Zone • A stub zone is a copy of a primary zone that contains SOA and NS resource records, plus the Host (A) resource records that identify the authoritative servers for the zone. • The stub zone forwards or refers requests to the appropriate server that hosts a primary zone for the selected query. • When you create a stub zone, you configure it with the IP address of the server that hosts the primary zone from which the stub zone was created. • When the server hosting the stub zone receives a query for a name in that zone, it either forwards the request to the host of the zone or replies with a referral to that host, depending on whether the query is recursive or iterative. DNS and DHCP • You can use DHCP to streamline the process of assigning DNS servers to your clients to use for name resolution. Additional Services • Active Directory Rights Management Service (AD RMS) is a Windows Server 2008 service that you can use to protect sensitive data on a Windows network. • The Active Directory Federation Services (AD FS) role allows administrators to configure Single Sign-On (SSO) for Web-based applications across multiple organizations. Summary • The Domain Name System (DNS) provides the default name resolution mechanism for Active Directory, the Internet, and the majority of modern TCP/IP networks. • Windows operating systems prior to Windows 2000 used NetBIOS names to identify the computers on the network. • The resource record is the fundamental data storage unit in all DNS servers. Summary • The DNS Server service in Windows Server 2008 supports both standard and Active Directory– integrated DNS zones. • DNS root name servers are the highest-level DNS servers in the entire namespace. • You can divide a DNS namespace into zones to store them on different servers and to delegate their administration to different people. Summary • Windows Server 2008 supports primary zones, secondary zones, and stub zones. Primary and stub zones can be integrated into Active Directory. • You can use DHCP to streamline the process of assigning DNS servers to your clients to use for name resolution. Summary • Active Directory Rights Management Service (AD RMS) is a Windows Server 2008 service that you can use to protect sensitive data on a Windows network. • The Active Directory Federation Services (AD FS) role allows administrators to configure Single Sign-On (SSO) for Web-based applications across multiple organizations.