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MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration Chapter 5 Introduction to DNS in Windows Server 2008.

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Presentation on theme: "MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration Chapter 5 Introduction to DNS in Windows Server 2008."— Presentation transcript:

1 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration Chapter 5 Introduction to DNS in Windows Server 2008

2 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration 2 Objectives Discuss the basics of the Domain Name System (DNS) and its terminology Configure DNS clients Install a standard DNS server on Windows Server 2008 Create standard DNS zones

3 3 Domain Name System Primary function is to translate human-readable host names Assists the flow of e-mail –Provides mail exchanger records that tell a Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) server where to send an e-mail message Supported on the Internet by thousands of distributed servers, or DNS servers MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

4 Domain Name System (continued) Activity 5-1: Resetting Network Adapters and Disabling DHCP Time Required: 20 minutes Objective: Reset the network adapters on lab servers 4 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

5 DNS Terminology DNS namespace DNS domain Fully qualified domain name Hosts Host name DNS record DNS zone 5 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

6 DNS Terminology (continued) DNS namespace –Organized into the following domains: root domain (.), top-level domain (TLD), second-level domain, and subdomain DNS domain –The portion of the namespace to the right of the host name Fully qualified domain names –The entire name for a specific host that needs to have a DNS record created 6 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

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9 DNS Terminology (continued) Activity 5-2: Using Whois Time Required: 5 minutes Objective: Research domain names 9 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

10 DNS Terminology (continued) Hosts –A computer on the Internet that provides a specific resource Host name –Name given to a computer, or host, to make connecting to it easier DNS zone –Collection of connected nodes served by an authoritative DNS name server DNS records –DNS uses records to provide the information it stores in its database 10 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

11 11 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

12 DNS Terminology (continued) Activity 5-4: Resolving DNS Records with NSLookup Time Required: 10 minutes Objective: Query a DNS server with nslookup 12 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

13 DNS Queries in Windows Server 2008 Iterative query –A DNS client requests the best answer that its DNS server can provide Recursive queries –Queries where the client requires an answer from its DNS server 13 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

14 14 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

15 Configuring DNS Clients DNS clients –Often referred to as DNS resolvers Windows Server 2008 –Uses the DNS Client service to perform DNS queries on behalf of the client 15 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

16 DNS Client Settings DNS servers –For a client to resolve DNS queries, it needs to know which server to contact –First DNS server in the list is called the preferred DNS server DNS suffix –DNS domain appended to all unqualified name queries, or a query that contains only a host name 16 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

17 17 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

18 18 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

19 DNS Client Settings (continued) Activity 5-5: Adding an Alternate DNS server Time Required: 10 minutes Objective: Add an alternate DNS server 19 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

20 DNS Client Settings (continued) Activity 5-6: Adding a Domain Suffix to IP Properties Time Required: 10 minutes Objective: Configure a client with an additional DNS suffix 20 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

21 DNS Client Settings (continued) Activity 5-7: Creating a Full Computer Name Time Required: 10 minutes Objective: Change the computer name 21 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

22 Dynamic Updates Windows Server 2008 –Supports dynamic updates with both standard and Active Directory Domain Services–integrated domains Dynamic updates –Sometimes referred to as DDNS 22 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

23 Installing DNS in Windows Server 2008 DNS –A role that can be installed on Windows Server 2008 Full and Server Core versions –Often combined with other services such as DHCP 23 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

24 Installing Cache-Only DNS Servers Cache-only DNS server –Server that has the DNS role installed –Does not hold a DNS zone so it is not authoritative for any DNS zones –Does it maintain any DNS records 24 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

25 Installing Cache-only DNS Servers (continued) Activity 5-8: Installing DNS on MSN-SRV-0XX Time Required: 10 minutes Objective: Install the DNS Server role 25 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

26 Installing Cache-only DNS Servers (continued) Root hints –Provide IP address pointers to top-level DNS servers –When configured, a DNS server can perform queries when it receives domain name requests for zones in which it is not authoritative –Provide referral answers to queries in a DNS server’s quest to resolve an unknown domain name request Forwarders –Servers used to resolve names 26 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

27 DNS Zones Zones –Building blocks for creating your DNS infrastructure DNS zones –Classified in three ways The information they store Where they are stored Their read/write status –Fall into two categories Standard and Active Directory 27 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

28 Standard Zones zone.dns –Used to store DNS records –Found in the %systemroot%\system32\DNS folder Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND) –Industry standard of DNS servers on the Internet and networks running DNS on UNIX/Linux systems 28 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

29 Standard DNS Zone Types Primary DNS zone –The zone that is authoritative for a specific domain and its name records Secondary DNS zone –Read-only version of the DNS records for a zone Stub zone –Read-only copy of a zone that obtains its resource records from the name servers that are authoritative for a particular zone 29 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

30 Standard DNS Zone Types (continued) Activity 5-9: Installing a Primary DNS Zone for bentech.local Time Required: 10 minutes Objective: Create a primary DNS zone 30 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

31 Standard DNS Zone Types (continued) Activity 5-10: Installing a Secondary DNS Zone on MSN-SC-0XX Time Required: 15 minutes Objective: Install DNS on Server Core 31 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

32 Direction of DNS Zones Forward lookup DNS zones –Allow a DNS client to resolve an FQDN to an IP address Reverse lookup DNS zone –Maps IP addresses to host names 32 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

33 Direction of DNS Zones (continued) Activity 5-11: Creating a Reverse Lookup Zone Time Required: 15 minutes Objective: Create a reverse lookup zone 33 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

34 DNS Resource Records Information in a DNS record –Owner, Time-to-Live (TTL) –Class, Type –Resource Record Data (RDATA) Start of Authority (SOA) –Record is the starting point for information related to a zone Name server (NS) record –Identifies a DNS server that is authoritative for a zone 34 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

35 35 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

36 DNS Resource Records (continued) Host (A) record –Provides host name–to–IP address resolution for DNS clients Host (AAAA) Records for IPv6 –Records map a host name to an IPv6 address Mail exchanger (MX) record –Specifies the server that is responsible for handling e-mail Alias records –Used to create an alias for a specific host 36 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

37 37 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

38 38 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

39 DNS Resource Records (continued) Pointer records –Resolves IP address to host names for DNS clients Service locator records –Provides the following information Location of services it needs Network protocol needed to access the previously mentioned services Domain services it provides 39 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

40 DNS Resource Records (continued) Activity 5-12: Creating DNS Records in the DNS Console Time Required: 10 minutes Objective: Create DNS records 40 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

41 41 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

42 Standard DNS Zone Transfers Master server –Provides updated DNS record information to secondary servers Slave server –Gets its updates from the master zone transfer partner specified on the Zone Transfer tab in DNS Zone transfers from the master to the secondary server come in two varieties –Incremental zone transfers (IXFRs) –Full zone transfers (AXFRs) 42 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

43 43 MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

44 44 Summary DNS –Responsible for providing name resolution for clients on public and private networks Core functionality of DNS –To provide host name–to–IP address resolution, or forward lookups Standard zones classifications –Primary, secondary, and stub zones DNS –Uses many types of records to store information in its zones MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration

45 45 Summary (continued) Installing the DNS role can be done through the GUI using Server Manager DNS console –The main GUI tool responsible for managing DNS –Allows you to add, delete, and modify all aspects of DNS MCTS Guide to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure Configuration


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