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Mastering Active Directory

You're reading from   Mastering Active Directory Deploy and secure infrastructures with Active Directory, Windows Server 2016, and PowerShell

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789800203
Length 786 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Dishan Francis Dishan Francis
Author Profile Icon Dishan Francis
Dishan Francis
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Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Active Directory Planning, Design, and Installation FREE CHAPTER
2. Active Directory Fundamentals 3. Active Directory Domain Services 2016 4. Designing an Active Directory Infrastructure 5. Active Directory Domain Name System 6. Placing Operations Master Roles 7. Migrating to Active Directory 2016 8. Section 2: Active Directory Administration
9. Managing Active Directory Objects 10. Managing Users, Groups, and Devices 11. Designing the OU Structure 12. Managing Group Policies 13. Section 3: Active Directory Service Management
14. Active Directory Services 15. Active Directory Certificate Services 16. Active Directory Federation Services 17. Active Directory Rights Management Services 18. Section 4: Best Practices and Troubleshooting
19. Active Directory Security Best Practices 20. Advanced AD Management with PowerShell 21. Azure Active Directory Hybrid Setup 22. Active Directory Audit and Monitoring 23. Active Directory Troubleshooting 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

What is DNS?

In mobile phones, we have phone books. If we need to save someone's phone number, how we do that? Do we just enter the number and save it? No. We attach the number to a person's name or something we can remember, so the next time we open the contact list, we can easily find it. The same applies when you are dealing with IP addresses. I remember a few of the most commonly used IP addresses in my clients' infrastructure, but I do not remember most others. I remember lots of servers by their hostnames rather than their IP addresses. This is because hostnames are more user friendly and are easier to remember than IP addresses. This is exactly what DNS does: it maps IP addresses to domain names or common terms that are user friendly.

As I stated, there can be no functioning AD domain infrastructure without DNS. There are two main reasons why AD DS needs...

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