© n. ganesan, ph.d., all rights reserved. active directory nanda ganesan, ph.d

93
© N. Ganesan, Ph.D. , All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D.

Upload: jared-foster

Post on 23-Dec-2015

227 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

© N. Ganesan, Ph.D. , All rights reserved.

Active Directory

Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D.

Page 2: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

References

• Technical overview of Windows 2003 Active Directory

• Introduction to Windows 2003 Active Directory in application mode

• Windows 2003 Reviewer’s Guide

Page 3: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Agenda

• What is Active Directory• Building an Active Directory• Using Active Directory Features• Active Directory Objects• Auditing Active Directory

Page 4: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Group Names

• Contributions made by– Charles Guzman– Daniel Gebretensai– Ervand Akopyan– Hovik Gharadaghi

Page 5: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Introduction to Active Directory

Page 6: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Overview of Active Directory

• Directory services of the Windows server system

• Stores information about network object and makes the information available to administrators, users, and applications

• Provides a single point of network management allowing people to add, remove, and relocate users and resources easily

• Integrated with Internet’s hierarchical domain naming system

Page 7: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Active Directory Properties

• Integration with DNS• Flexible querying• Information security• Simplified administration• Scalability

Page 8: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Object and Schema

• Objects are the basic entities that constitute the Active Directory– Each object will have it own globally

unique identifier (GUID)

• Schema– Describes the object classes– Defines the attributes for the object

classes

Page 9: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Structural Components

• Objects based hierarchical structure with constructs– Domains– Trees– Forests– Trust relationships– Organizational Units– Sites

Page 10: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

A Simple Active Directory Structure

Page 11: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Active Directory and DNS Integration

Page 12: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Parent and child domains in a domain tree. Double-headed arrows indicate two-way transitive trust relationships

Tree

Page 13: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

One forest with three domain trees. The three root domains are not contiguous with each

other, but EuropeRoot.com and AsiaRoot.com are child domains of HQ-Root.com.

Forests

Page 14: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Shortcut trusts between Domains B and D, and between Domains D and 2

Internal Trusts in a Forest

Page 15: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Trust Relationships

• Transitive • Two-way• Shortcut trusts • External trusts

Page 16: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Trust Relationships

Page 17: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Intra-site replication with just one domain .

Organizational Units

Page 18: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Intra-site replication with two domains and two global catalogs

Trust Relationships

Page 19: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Directory Protocols

• Based on standard directory protocols• Interoperate with other protocols• Example: LDAP

– LDAP it is used to add, modify, delete and query information stored in AD

– LDAP to AD is like SQL to Oracle– LDAP determines how a client can access

the directory, operations within the directory and share directory data

Page 20: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Active Directory Security

• Based on Kerberos• Supports multiple security

configurations for cross platform interoperability – Clients: A domain controller will

authenticate clients running RFC-1510 Kerberos. This will include other clients running other operating systems.

– Unix clients and services: A Kerberos principal is mapped to a Windows 2000 user or computer account

Page 21: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Installation Of Active Directory

Page 22: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Requirements

• The computer must be Windows 2k, 2k3 Server, Advanced Server or Datacenter Server.

• At least one volume on the computer must be formatted with NTFS.

• DNS must be active on the network prior to AD installation or be installed during AD installation.

• DNS must support SRV records and be dynamic. • The computer must have IP protocol installed

and have a static IP address. • The Kerberos v5 authentication protocol must

be installed. • Time and zone information must be correct.

Page 23: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 24: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

DCPROMO

Page 25: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 26: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 27: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 28: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 29: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 30: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 31: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 32: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 33: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 34: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Role of DNS

•Clients use DNS to locate Active Directory controllers.

•Servers and client computers register their names and IP addresses with the DNS server

Page 35: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 36: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 37: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 38: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 39: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 40: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 41: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 42: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 43: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 44: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 45: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 46: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 47: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 48: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 49: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 50: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 51: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Managing Active Directory

Page 52: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 53: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 54: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 55: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Creating a Child Domain

Page 56: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Requirements

• Existing Domain• Member Server

Page 57: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 58: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 59: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 60: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 61: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 62: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 63: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Managing Objects in Active Directory

Page 64: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Frequently Managed Objects

• Users• Computers• Groups

Page 65: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Managing Users

Page 66: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 67: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 68: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 69: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 70: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 71: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 72: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Managing Computers

Page 73: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 74: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 75: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

A Client Joining a Domain

Page 76: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 77: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 78: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 79: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 80: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 81: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Managing Groups

Page 82: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Group Policy Feature

• Defines the various components of the users desktop environment that an administrator must manage

• Applies not only to user and client computers but also to member servers, domain controllers, and other 2003 server in scope of management

Page 83: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Group Policy cont’d

• Manage registry-based policy with Administrative Templates

• Assign scripts. This includes scripts such as computer startup, shutdown, logon, and logoff

• redirect folders, such as My Documents and My Pictures, from the Documents and Settings folder on the local computer to network locations

Page 84: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Configuring a Custom Console

Page 85: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Adding a Group Policy Object

Page 86: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Auditing

Page 87: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Auditing

• Audit related functional activities

Page 88: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Some Auditable Activities

• Account logon and logon events• Object access• Account management• Directory service access• Policy change• System events• Process tracking

• Privilege

Page 89: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

Some Auditing Function

• Logon/Logout• User access to resources

– File, folder, registry key, printer etc.• Account management

– Create users and groups, modify membership, change password etc.

• Systems events– Service start/stop

• Directory service access– User’ access to Active Directory objects

Page 90: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D
Page 91: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

The list of auditing options

Page 92: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

References

• www.microsoft.com• www.windowsitpro.com• www.visualwin.com• http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol

/windowsserver2003/library/DepKit/d2ff1315-1712-48e4-acdc-8cae1b593eb1.mspx

• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active%5FDirectory

• http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/windowsserver2003/technologies/directory/activedirectory/stepbystep/domcntrl.mspx#EFAA

Page 93: © N. Ganesan, Ph.D., All rights reserved. Active Directory Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D

The End