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Windows Server 2012 : Simplifying the Datacenter (part 2) - Active Directory Administrative Center

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7/26/2014 9:27:39 PM

Active Directory Administrative Center

Newly updated in Windows Server 2012 and built on PowerShell v3.0, the Active Directory Administrative Center is a customizable console that an organization can create for specific administrators in the organization. For example, an organization might have an administrator who only needs to reset passwords, or another administrator who only needs or manage print queues. Instead of giving the administrator access to the full Active Directory Users and Computers or Print Management consoles, an Active Directory Administrative console can be created with just a task or two specific to the administrator’s responsibilities.

The console is built on PowerShell, so underlying the GUI consists of simple PowerShell scripts. Anything that can be done in PowerShell on a Windows Server 2012 server can be front-ended by the administration console.

Image

Figure 2. Active Directory Administrative Center.

Windows Server 2012 provides several new benefits that help organizations better administer their networking environment. These new features provide better file and data management, better performance monitoring and reliability tracking tools to identify system problems and proactively address issues, a new image deployment tool, and a whole new set of Group Policy objects that help administrators better manage users, computers, and other Active Directory objects.

Storage Spaces

The Storage Spaces feature is new to Windows Server 2012 and is the first time the basic file server file system has had a major update in Windows in years. The Storage Spaces feature makes it possible for the file share to span multiple drive shares and multiple servers. Unlike in the past, when a file share was data and directories on a single drive volume, now with Storage Spaces, the share can span across two, three, or more volumes yet still appear to be a single directory of files.

Organizations are using the Storage Spaces feature to not only simply add on more storage as an existing drive volume runs out of space, but also to mirror and stripe storage spaces for higher redundancy and reliable of storage. By mirroring multiple volumes, the storage space can be made redundant at the file system level. Of course, organizations can also mirror hard drives inside a server, so why are storage spaces any better? The real answer is that storage spaces can be mirrored and striped across multiple servers.

By having multiple servers with mirrored copies of the file system, the basic file server now has redundancy spanning multiple servers. If one server with the storage space goes offline, the other copy of the storage space continues to operate. Some IT professionals familiar with Windows server technologies will wonder how this differs from Distributed File System (DFS), which also enables you to mirror storage and replicate information across multiple servers. The big difference is that storage spaces appear as physical drives to the local server (for example, D>, or local E>). Some applications do not like a DFS share because it is seen as a network share, and thus not available for local share functionality.

The Storage Spaces feature provides yet another way for organizations to achieve higher availability and redundancy of information without the need to purchase expensive SANs or complicated shared-storage solutions. The Storage Spaces feature is built in to Windows Server 2012 and provides organizations a simple alternative to achieve many basic file storage requirements.

Other -----------------
- Windows Server 2012 : Enabling Users to Work Anywhere (part 2) - RDS Web Access
- Windows Server 2012 : Enabling Users to Work Anywhere (part 1) - Windows Server 2012 DirectAccess
- Windows Server 2012 : Enhancements for Flexible Identity and Security (part 2) - Active Directory Unification for Various Directory Services
- Windows Server 2012 : Enhancements for Flexible Identity and Security (part 1) - Dynamic Access Control
- Windows Server 2012 : DHCP,IPv6 and IPAM - Exploring DHCP (part 3) - Creating IPv4 DHCP Scopes
- Windows Server 2012 : DHCP,IPv6 and IPAM - Exploring DHCP (part 2) - Installing DHCP Server and Server Tools
- Windows Server 2012 : DHCP,IPv6 and IPAM - Exploring DHCP (part 1)
- Windows Server 2012 : DHCP,IPv6 and IPAM - Understanding the Components of an Enterprise Network
- 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
 
 
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