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Windows Server 2016 Cookbook

You're reading from   Windows Server 2016 Cookbook Sauté your way through more than 100 hands-on recipes designed to prepare any server administrator to work with Windows Server 2016

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785883835
Length 494 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Jordan Krause Jordan Krause
Author Profile Icon Jordan Krause
Jordan Krause
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Learning the Interface FREE CHAPTER 2. Core Infrastructure Tasks 3. Security and Networking 4. Working with Certificates 5. Internet Information Services 6. Remote Access 7. Remote Desktop Services 8. Monitoring and Backup 9. Group Policy 10. File Services and Data Control 11. Nano Server and Server Core 12. Working with Hyper-V

Creating an iSCSI target on your server

iSCSI is another way to share storage across a network. Well, the term iSCSI itself has more to do with the actual protocol level and the way that the data is transported across the LAN or WAN, but what it looks like as a consumer of iSCSI is that a machine has a drive letter for a disk, but that disk is not physically connected to the server. For example, you might log in to a server and see an M drive. This drive looks just like a local volume, but it is actually a network connection to storage that might be sitting on the other side of the datacenter. Sounds like a mapped network drive, right? Yes, but it works on a lower level. iSCSI virtual disks, as they are called, work with the server as if they are local disks. This gives servers the ability to interface with this data at a system level, and does not require a user context in order to work, like mapped network drives do. This is commonly referred to as block storage.

One good example...

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