Windows 2000 Remote Network Connections

These days I take the availability of a VPN for granted, but in the early days of my Internet experience things were different. At the time Demon Internet ran actual Points of Presence (POPs) which were modems sat at the end of a leased line, usually run by some sort of early enthusiast. The leased line would normally connect to something like a PIPEX backbone, and the modems would allow early internet punters to call a regional number (between local and long distance) to get internet access.

Back then sharing a 64K backbone wasn’t a problem, especially when a fast modem was 14.4k, the norm being quite a bit less than that.

I’ve just covered the chapter in my Windows 2000 Server book on Routing and Remote Access, the thing you can manage dial-up access from. Delightful settings such as ring-back options, dial-in hours, and IP allocation to remote connecting users – the stuff of legends.

Even VPN stuff, though I think this has been a bit different with the advent of ISA server.

MCDBA Lots of progress today

After the damage I did to the Virtual PC that is my domain controller (still booting from a virtual floppy) I’ve made great progress today with another six chapters of my book.

I got organised recently with my employer to devote a day a month over the next couple of months to training, so this was my first today and it made a real difference concentrating on it mid week.

I covered topics from file and print serving, with associated settings and permissions. And thrown in was a bit of IIS, network protocols and finally Terminal Services in its two modes. The flexibility around the topic of printing was impressive, I take that stuff for granted but the driver management and multi-platform client support is great.

Only three chapters to go, then I will do my standard two pronged approach at this stage. I hit the Transcender simulation exams, and more or less at the same time I book the exam to give me a target to aim at.

Fragged my domain controller

I’m on to the chapter in my book about disk management, so for a bit of fun I went for the “convert basic disc to dynamic” option. That appeared to work fine, did the reboot and didn’t restart. Something about NTLDR missing.

And of course now I can’t see those shiny dynamic NTFS volumes what I’ve made. I’m working through KB 301680 in a hope I can get it back.

Windows 2000 Policies

After a brief sabattical for family stuff (and purchasing stuff at Hein Gericke in Glasgow and riding the bike!) I’ve run through another chapter of my book in pursuit of the 70-215 2000 Server Exam.

I’ve just covered off Local and System Policies, so now I know where those system admins set those annoying password policies that make you come up with something brand new (and less and less secure) by remembering the last 20 passwords and making them last only 30 days. Oh and apparently there are things called GPOs (Group Policy Objects) which aren’t used to buy stamps.

Password policy options such as “Enforce Password History” remembers a specified number of passwords, “Maximum Password Age” keeps the password for a number of days. Although annoying from a user perspective, and consequently making a bit of a mockery of strong password choice, I’m impressed at the number of policy items up for grabs in 2000, which is after all a few years old now. And again impressed at the tools available to help the guys trying to keep their servers up and running despite the best efforts of the users.

The Security Configuration and Analysis tool is an excellent tool for checking how well you’ve spread the multitude of policies in meeting a standard. All top stuff. On to Managing disks now, which looks like it will be fun.

Windows 2000 Server local and AD users and groups

I’m just past the chapter in my exam book about groups and users, both local and Active Directory. The whole idea of users and groups is an old one for me, so not much new material. What was nice was the reminder of the extra information that Active Directory offers against user accounts, there is a whole pile of tabs to collect extra information that local user accounts don’t even bother with. Led me to reminisce about the old days when I used to hit these things using the early versions of ADSI and that the earlier versions of Microsoft Exchange were the best place to store user information. Oh and that hopping around providers was a necessity to be able to get to certain directory object properties. Windows 2000 really changed that, I guess Windows 2003 is even better.

The coverage of Active Directory is quite limited for this exam, mainly because there is a dedicated exam under the MCSE track that covers it off as a seperate subject.

For myself I’ve populated the Microsoft My Learning, which sits off the newly redesigned Microsoft Learning home page, this is a handy way of listing the exams I’m planning to do, and to list out the free e-learning for sql 2005 that Microsoft are currently offering.

XP Home Edition Niggle, delayed application startup

I’ve had a niggling issue with my PC in the House, its a fairly decent spec Dell of just over a year old, 3GHz Intel P4 Hyperthreading thingie, with 1.5Gb RAM, SATA Drive, Nvidia 6600GT PCI Express etc. But for the last week and a bit it has had an annoying habit of being slow to fire things up.

The applications are quick enough once they arrive, but the delay after double click, while it seems to think at length about what I’ve just asked was getting annoying. Then after a wait of a minute or less, the application suddenly appears in a rush.

It had me a bit stumped, I wondered if my recent forays into the world of Virtual PC or other stuff had introduced something – after all, VPC isn’t “officially supported” on this OS.

I had a hunt around microsoft support this morning, and I think I have cracked it – KB 841571 talks about the Simple Service Discovery Protocol Service causing hassle on a PC. I’ve kicked the service off and disabled it, and so far so good.

Thinking back over stuff I think this came back in when I opened up the security on the machine to allow a folder to be shared, the XP Home Wizard that gets involved at that time spoke about the Internet Gateway – which announces itself via SSDP. I was gearing up to get the image of Windows 2000 Server copied over – that was it !!

Member Server Installation

It has just occurred to me that all of these short posts on my virtual network installation are the equivalent of wittering on a blog 🙂

I’m in the process of building a member server on my domain, with a slight hiccough at the moment. For some reason the member server isn’t joining the domain, but this could be because I’ve forgotten what I called it!

I’m running the two VPC’s together in a configuration suggested by Simon Guest, with two NICs per machine.