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DFS & Active Directory

DFS & Active Directory. Joshua Hedges |Brandon Maxfield | Robert Rivera | Will Zilch. Introduction. 3 different types of Distributed File Systems DFS (Microsoft) NFS (Network File System) AFS (Andrew File System) Active Directory. Distributed File System . Namespaces

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DFS & Active Directory

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  1. DFS & Active Directory Joshua Hedges |Brandon Maxfield | Robert Rivera | Will Zilch

  2. Introduction • 3 different types of Distributed File Systems • DFS (Microsoft) • NFS (Network File System) • AFS (Andrew File System) • Active Directory

  3. Distributed File System • Namespaces • “Technology that helps administrators group shared folders located on different servers and present them to users as a virtual tree of folders known as a namespace. DFS Namespaces was formerly known as Distributed File System in Windows 2000 Server and Windows Server 2003.”

  4. Distributed File System • Replication • “New state-based, multimaster replication engine that is optimized for WAN environments. DFS Replication supports replication scheduling, bandwidth throttling, and a new byte-level compression algorithm known as remote differential compression (RDC).”

  5. Distributed File Systems • Replication (continued) • Differences in Server 2003 vs. Server 2003 R2 • Server 2003 (Old Way) • Server 2003 R2 (New Way) – Uses RDC • Example: GB video file • RDC (Remote Differential Compression) • Saves Conflict and Deleted Files • Generates Reports, tells you bandwidth saved • Can set schedule and limit bandwidth

  6. Distributed File Systems • Replication & Namespaces

  7. Network File System • NFS Concept VS NFS Protocol • NFS Concept • Client/Server file sharing • NFS Protocol • Nuts and bolts of how this particular network file system works. • Security, locking, mounts, etc…

  8. Network File System • NFS Version 1 • Developed by Sun and IBM • Used for: • Primarily experimental • Not released to the public • NFS Version 2 • Operates over UDP • Stateless implementation (i.e. locking) • NFS Version 3 • Added the following supports: • 64-bit file sizes, asynchronous server writes, attributing,

  9. Network File System • NFS Version 4 “ Unlike earlier versions, the NFS version 4 protocol supports traditional file access while integrating support for file locking and the mount protocol. In addition, support for strong security (and its negotiation), compound operations, client caching, and internationalization have been added.” -RFC 3530 • Current Version • Configured using /etc/exports file as in the lab • Mount command as in the lab

  10. Andrew File System • Based on Version 4 of NFS • Volume • Cell • File Trees • Shared Folders • Files

  11. Andrew File System • Secure File System • Uses Kerbos for authentication • Implements access control lists • Scalable • Easily handles high numbers of clients (thousands) • Stable • Offers limited access even in the event of a server or network crash

  12. Andrew File System • Cons • No file locking • Files stored locally • If someone else is editing the same file you are notified

  13. Active Directory • What is Active Directory (AD)? • Microsoft’s Directory Service • Active Directory is a directory service used to store information about resources, services, and users across a domain. • Goals: • Open Standards • High Scalability • Simplified Administration • Compatibility to existing Windows NT systems and applications

  14. Active Directory • Some open standards are: • LDAP • Low-Level API to Active Directory • DNS • Resource Location • Extensions, e. G. „Dynamic DNS“ • Kerberos • Authentication

  15. Active Directory • What is a Domain? • AD Base Element (Building Block) • NT 4 Compatible • Physically Implemented on Domain Controllers (DC) • Border for • Replication Traffic • System Policies • Administration • Objects include • Resources (e.g. printers) • Services (e.g. email) • Users (e.g. user accounts and groups)

  16. Active Directory • What is a Tree? • Hierarchical Domain Structure inside a single Namespace • Transitive Trusts created automatically • Sub-Domain must be added to Root-Domain – otherwise there will be no tree!

  17. Active Directory • What is a Forest? • Combination of Trees • Transitive Trusts created automatically • There is one single tree-root! • Sub-Tree must be added to Root-Tree, otherwise no Forest will be created

  18. Active Directory • What is a Domain Controller? • Stores a physical Copy of the Active Directory Database • Currently a single Domain per DC supported! • ESE95 Database (MS Exchange) • Logon Services • Kerberos • LAN Manager Authentication • Recommendation: always have at least 2 Domain Controllers!

  19. Domain Domain Domain Domain Domain Active Directory • Hierarchical • Base objectDomain Tree Forest OU Domain OU OU Tree Objects

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