You’ll get more out of a mixed Windows/Unix environment.
Mix it up with Windows 2000 and DNS
You’ll get more out of a mixed Windows/Unix environment.
- By David Millett
- 09/01/1999
Among the advantages of the Microsoft Windows 2000 operating
system is one that will appeal to MCPs who maintain large
enterprises with mixed Windows/Unix platforms. It’s the
Windows 2000 Domain Name System (DNS), which gives you
a superior alternative to standard Unix-based DNS. With
it, you gain a better way to manage your enterprise, and—by
moving DNS from Unix to Windows—free up more of your expensive
Unix real estate for better use.
Here’s a quick look at the key advantages of Windows
2000 DNS:
- Incremental zone transfers—In
a standard Unix DNS implementation, Zone File replication
is an all or nothing process that ties up network bandwidth
and degrades DNS performance. With Microsoft Windows
2000 DNS, only smaller, incremental zone data transfers
containing actual DNS changes are needed, freeing up
bandwidth and boosting performance.
- Name server redundancy—Standard
Unix DNS offers a single point of failure risk. For
example, if the primary DNS server goes down, no changes
can be made to the DNS zone. In contrast, Windows 2000
DNS reduces this risk with a multi-master replication
system. Changes can be made at any DNS server, and then
replicated to other servers when they come back online.
- Secure remote management—Unix
DNS systems are text-based, requiring you to have a
thorough mastery of their policies to implement security
management. In contrast, the Windows 2000 DNS management
user interface is graphically intuitive, and is based
on the familiar Microsoft Management Console (MMC)—so
it’s easy for newcomers, yet powerful for administrators
with more knowledge of DNS. It can remotely manage all
Windows 2000 DNS servers, with communication between
the DNS MMC and the remote DNS server running over the
highly secure Remote Procedure Call (RPC) protocols.
- Dynamic updates—Standard
Unix DNS requires you to enter all host information
manually or through a batch system—taking up valuable
time and opening the system to data-entry errors. Worse,
because DNS assumes that host TCP/IP information is
static, it doesn’t support Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol (DHCP). One of the biggest advantages of the
Windows 2000 DNS is its support for DHCP via Dynamic
DNS, which enables automatically updated DNS information—and
lower total cost of ownership, since you no longer need
to go to every network node to enter data.
- Unicode character support—Current
Unix DNS solutions are restricted to an ASCII subset,
making it impossible to support many non-English languages.
In contrast, Microsoft Windows 2000 DNS supports UTF-8
character encoding, a superset of ASCII and a translation
of the UCS-2 or Unicode character encoding. This supports
most of the world’s written languages and allows a far
greater range of possible names and characters.
The Windows 2000 DNS is just one key way in which Windows
2000 will enable you to improve the levels of service,
functionality, reliability, and management to users in
your organization and to your customers. For a closer
look, visit the Windows 2000 Beta software Web site at
www.microsoft.com/windows2000/server/default.asp.
About the Author
David Millett, MCSE, MCT, and Microsoft Solutions Framework Master Trainer, is a Principal Consultant with Microsoft Consulting Services in Northern California.