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Copies of NS records for all name servers authoritative for the zone.
Copies of A records for all name servers authoritative for the zone.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc759550(WS.10).aspx
4) Ports Required for Domain Controllers to communicate.
Ans:- http://yourcomputer.in/list-port-numbers-windows/
5) What is GPT and GPC?
Ans:- A GPO (Group Policy Object) is a collection of Group Policy settings, it consists of GPC
and GPT.
GPC (Group Policy Container) contains the information of property of GPO like Security
Filtering, GPO Status, GPO GUID etc.
GPT (Group Policy Template) contains the data of GPO in Sysvol folder that can be checked
after the configuration of the GPO that what settings have been configured to the client.
6) What is new in Microsoft Clustering 2008?
Ans:- http://yourcomputer.in/whats-new-windows-server-2008-cluster/
7) What is Majority Node Set?
Ans:- A majority node set is a single quorum resource, from a server cluster perspective;
however, the data is actually stored on multiple disks across the cluster. Each cluster node stores
the configuration on a local disk it can have access to when it starts up. By default, the location is
pointed to %systemroot%\cluster\ResourceGUID
Further Explained :- http://yourcomputer.in/windows-cluster-interview-questions-and-answers/
If the configuration of the cluster changes, that change is replicated across the different disks
8) What is NLB?
Ans:- NLB (Network Load Balance) is a Microsoft implementation of clustering and load
balancing that is intended to provide high availability and high reliability, as well as high
scalability.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc779570(v=ws.10).aspx
9) Difference Between Unicast and Multicast
Ans:-
Unicast
Unicast is a one-to one connection between the client and the server. Unicast uses IP delivery
methods such as Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and User Datagram Protocol (UDP),
which are session-based protocols. When a Windows Media Player client connects using unicast
to a Windows Media server, that client has a direct relationship to the server. Each unicast client
that connects to the server takes up additional bandwidth. For example, if you have 10 clients all
playing 100-kilobits per second (Kbps) streams, those clients as a group are taking up 1,000
Kbps. If you have only one client playing the 100 Kbps stream, only 100 Kbps is being used.
Multicast
Multicast is a true broadcast. The multicast source relies on multicast-enabled routers to forward
the packets to all client subnets that have clients listening. There is no direct relationship between
the clients and Windows Media server. The Windows Media server generates an .nsc (NetShow
channel) file when the multicast station is first created. Typically, the .nsc file is delivered to the
client from a Web server. This file contains information that the Windows Media Player needs to
listen for the multicast. This is similar to tuning into a station on a radio. Each client that listens
to the multicast adds no additional overhead on the server. In fact, the server sends out only one
stream per multicast station. The same load is experienced on the server whether only one client
or 1,000 clients are listening
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/291786
10) What is new in Windows 2008 AD?
Ans:Read-Only Domain Controllers
Fine-Grained Password Policies
Restartable Active Directory Service
Backup and Recovery
SYSVOL Replication with DFS-R
Auditing Improvements
UI Improvements
11) How to configure RODC to replicate password of users?
Ans:- You can add users in the PASSWORD REPLICATION POLICY tab of RODC computer
properties
12) What is the issue we face while recovering AD from VMware snapshot?
KEY
Name: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\NTDS\Para
meters
Type: REG_DWORD
Support DHCP clients on a single physical network segment (such as a single Ethernet
LAN segment) where multiple logical IP networks are used. When more than one logical
IP network is used on each physical subnet or network, such configurations are often
called multinets.
Support remote DHCP clients located on the far side of DHCP and BOOTP relay agents
(where the network on the far side of the relay agent uses multinets).
In multinet configurations, you can use DHCP superscopes to group and activate individual
scope ranges of IP addresses used on your network. In this way, the DHCP server can activate
and provide leases from more than one scope to clients on a single physical network.
Superscopes can resolve specific types of DHCP deployment issues for multinets, including
situations in which:
The available address pool for a currently active scope is nearly depleted, and more
computers need to be added to the network. The original scope includes the full
addressable range for a single IP network of a specified address class. You need to use
another range of IP addresses to extend the address space for the same physical network
segment.
Clients must be migrated over time to a new scope (such as to renumber the current IP
network from an address range used in an existing active scope to a new scope that
contains another range of IP addresses).
You want to use two DHCP servers on the same physical network segment to manage
separate logical IP networks.