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Windows Server 2012 : DHCP,IPv6 and IPAM - Understanding the Components of an Enterprise Network

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7/15/2014 4:22:50 AM

The Importance of Network Addressing

Regardless of whether Microsoft, UNIX, Mac, or a different operating system provides the network backbone, network addressing is the key to intercomputer communication. Anything and everything about computer networking is based on locating and accessing resources stored on multiple systems so that users can collaborate and share information. This is possible with network addressing and, to make it simpler, name resolution.

With today’s infrastructure consisting of both local company-owned resources intertwining with cloud or Internet-based hosted applications, name resolution is key to successful functionality for computer systems and users on these networks.

IP address management has always been a task associated with managing an organization’s network. Until now, however, this task has mostly been performed by relying on WINS and DNS records and on text files, spreadsheets, custom applications or databases, and third-party products. Microsoft Windows Server 2012 includes the IPAM feature, which provides administrators with a centralized complete view of the IP landscape, to not just to keep track of IP addresses, but also to audit changes and implement changes through the one central console.

Name Resolution

Name resolution refers to the identification of a network-connected system by a friendly name as opposed to a network address. Connecting to a network resource by its actual network address is possible within certain constraints, but with today’s security and application features and functionality, connecting to a system by its name is not only ideal, it may be required. For example, in many common hosted implementations, a single network address may resolve to many different names and present different applications, websites, and services based each unique name.

Name resolution is the resolution of a network-connected resource by name and a matched IP address or a different name or alias name. This could be a short name such as WEBSERVER1 or a fully qualified domain name (FQDN) such as www.companyabc.com resolving to an IP address of 10.1.1.10.

Name Resolution and Directory Integration

With Microsoft Active Directory (AD) and many networking services, name resolution provides detailed information about how to connect to a particular service. For example, with Windows Server 2012 DNS servers and clients, a client system looking to find a Global Catalog server is presented not only with a list of names and IP addresses, it is also provided with the closest system to the network the system is connected to, and it also presents the port the client can connect to that service on. So, instead of just a name to IP address, advanced name-resolution services can make distinctions of the client location and provide a detailed response that improves network connectivity.

Network Services Changes in Windows Server 2012

With each new version of the Windows Server operating system, Microsoft improves on the previous release. With Windows Server 2012, Microsoft maintains this tradition and has made a substantial improvement in DHCP services. Windows Server 2012 DHCP services now include a new type of service redundancy named DHCP failover. In the previous DHCP release included with Windows Server 2008 R2, Microsoft introduced a Split-Scope Wizard and a response delay that allowed DHCP administrators to enable redundancy, but some features such as reservations and active leases were still managed separately. Another option was and still is to deploy DHCP services on a failover cluster, but that adds on the complications of managing a failover cluster system and leveraging a shared storage subsystem or an external data replication system.

With Windows Server 2012 DHCP failover, redundancy is achieved through the DHCP services on each system monitoring and updating one another on leases, reservations, scope settings, and service availability. This makes this new enhancement a great addition to the many new features and services already included in the DHCP server role.

Windows Server 2012 IPAM Overview

The IPAM feature included with Windows Server 2012 provides network administrators with a single centralized console from which they can view and manage the IP addresses of the entire enterprise. This feature supports the discovery of servers providing IP-related services and includes tasks to collect and organize data from these servers in single functional console. The IPAM feature collects data from DNS, DHCP, domain controller (DC) and Network Policy Server (NPS) servers that are registered to the particular IPAM server and presents the data in several default views that are searchable and easily manipulated and exportable. IP address audit tracking and even changes to existing service configurations and records are just a few of the tasks that this new feature enables.

Other -----------------
- Windows Server 2012 : Configuring IPv6/IPv4 interoperability (part 7) - ISATAP
- Windows Server 2012 : Configuring IPv6/IPv4 interoperability (part 6) - Configuring a DHCPv6 server, IPv6 transition technologies
- Windows Server 2012 : Configuring IPv6/IPv4 interoperability (part 5) - Stateless address autoconfiguration,Stateful address autoconfiguration
- Windows Server 2012 : Configuring IPv6/IPv4 interoperability (part 4) - IPv6 address assignment - Manual address assignment
- Windows Server 2012 : Configuring IPv6/IPv4 interoperability (part 3) - IPv6 address representation
- Windows Server 2012 : Configuring IPv6/IPv4 interoperability (part 2) - Default IPv6 functionality
- Windows Server 2012 : Configuring IPv6/IPv4 interoperability (part 1) - IPv6 concepts and terminology
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