In our second look at the Windows 2000 Server Resource Kit, James examines the kit’s coverage of TCP/IP, IIS, and IE.
Resource Kit Riches, Part 2
In our second look at the Windows 2000 Server Resource Kit, James examines the kit’s coverage of TCP/IP, IIS, and IE.
- By James Carrion
- 09/01/2000
Many MCPs were disappointed when Microsoft announced
that the Windows NT 4.0 TCP/IP and IIS 4.0 exams would
be retired at the end of this year. That’s because those
exams are two of the most popular electives in the NT
4.0 MCSE track. Many MCPs had hoped to use those same
exams to satisfy their elective requirements for the new
Windows 2000 track. That is, until Microsoft burst their
bubble. Well, not completely. You can still use TCP/IP
and IIS 4.0 to satisfy the Win2K electives requirement—as
long as you complete your Win2K certification before their
retirement date of December 31, 2000. However, even if
you choose this route, you’ll have to replace those electives
with Win2K equivalents before December 31, 2001 to maintain
your Win2K certification. So at best, you’re buying yourself
a little breathing room.
Product
Information |
Microsoft Windows
2000 Server Resource Kit
Microsoft Corp.
ISBN 1-57231-805-8
$299.99 |
|
|
“So what’s the big deal?” you ask. As it turns out, you’ll
encounter both TCP/IP and IIS questions throughout the
new Win2K exams. In other words, rather then taking a
Win2K TCP/IP or IIS-specific exam (there are no such beasts),
the old TCP/IP and IIS exam content has been integrated
into the existing Win2K exams. Microsoft’s reasoning?
Understanding TCP/IP and related concepts (DNS, DHCP)
is crucial to understanding how Win2K integrates on a
network. Thus, you should already be a TCP/IP expert before
you dare to deploy a Win2K network (or for that matter,
attempt a Win2K exam).
Which brings me to this month’s review, part 2 of my
look at the Microsoft Windows 2000 Server Resource
Kit. This month, I delve into the Windows 2000
Server TCP/IP Core Networking Guide, the Internet
Information Services 5.0 Resource Guide, and the Internet
Explorer 5 Resource Kit. [James reviewed the Distributed
Systems Guide, Internetworking Guide, and Server
Operations Guide in his August column.—Ed.]
Your TCP/IP Bible
When teaching the NT 4.0 TCP/IP curriculum, I found the
TCP/IP technical information in the NT 4.0 Resource
Kit’s more generic Networking Guide to be an
invaluable reference tool. Since Win2K uses TCP/IP and
its related protocols and services almost exclusively
for network integration, Microsoft has reworked TCP/IP
into the Windows 2000 Server Resource Kit by creating
a guide that’s specific to TCP/IP, the TCP/IP Core
Networking Guide. Not stingy on technical detail,
this is a must-read if you are trying to understand the
enhancements to TCP/IP in Win2K. It’s well-written and
easy-to-understand, but keep in mind that no part of the
Resource Kit was written specifically as an exam
preparation guide.
This guide starts off with a chapter on how the TCP/IP
protocol generically works, independent of any operating
system. Here you’ll find the traditional discussion of
IP addressing and subnetting, name resolution, routing,
and so forth. The next chapter describes Microsoft’s implementation
of TCP/IP in Win2K; that’s followed by a chapter on troubleshooting
the protocol using the latest Win2K diagnostic tools.
Subsequent chapters detail Win2K backend TCP/IP services
like DHCP, DNS, and WINS. As you would expect, the bulk
of this section is spent explaining the nuances of DNS
(two whole chapters), a crucial service for implementing
Active Directory in a Win2K network. The guide finishes
up with chapters on the IP Security (IPSEC) protocol,
Quality of Service (QOS), and the Simple Network Management
Protocol (SNMP).
There’s a wealth of detailed technical information in
this guide that you’d be hard-pressed to glean from other
technical resources. Since TCP/IP-related protocols and
services feature so prominently on the Win2K exam, I highly
recommend that you absorb the entire contents of this
book.
Inside Guide to IIS 5.0
OK, so maybe your company doesn’t run IIS as its Web
server, but instead uses a Netscape product. Unfortunately,
Netscape isn’t handing out MCSE certificates, so you’ll
have to learn how Microsoft plays the game. Fortunately,
most of the Web-based protocols are generic standards
(HTTP, FTP, SMTP, and so forth), so the expertise you
already have will help you to understand the conceptual
basics of IIS 5.0.
On the Win2K exams, you’ll be tested on how to get an
IIS 5.0 server up and running. To do this, you’ll need
to master the Microsoft Management Console (MMC) IIS snap-in,
then be able to configure IIS through a myriad of dialog
boxes and options. If your goal is to set up simple static
Web content, you can have your Web site up and running
in no time. If, however, you need to support dynamic Web
content with server-based applications, then you’d better
prepare for some long hours of reading. The only problem
is that the Internet Information Services 5.0 Resource
Guide is positioned as a companion guide to the IIS
5.0 online setup guide, so you won’t find any implementation
basics here—like how to install and configure IIS 5.0
from the GUI.
If it’s not a basic setup guide, then you’d expect it
to jump right in to technical concepts. Instead, the first
few chapters are all about planning. Planning for what?
Migration, of course. We’re talking migration of Web content
from third-party Web servers onto a Microsoft IIS 5.0
server. Most of this section is high-level planning, such
as determining project scope, assessing risk, assembling
the right personnel team, figuring out budget, and more.
In addition, you’ll find technical references to the various
tools that Win2K provides to perform an effective migration.
There are even specific technical sections on how to migrate
from an Apache or Netscape server.
Now that you’ve chosen Microsoft’s Web solution over
a third-party product, you can move on to Chapter 4. Here,
you learn all about capacity planning for your retrofitted
Web server. You’ll tackle the issues of optimizing performance,
load-balancing your servers and the underlying network,
providing for reliability, planning for future growth,
and on and on. Once your server is functional and can
deliver reliable and efficient content, you can learn
how to monitor the thousands of hits you begin to receive,
and fine-tune IIS 5.0 hardware and software to maintain
functional levels of service.
Subsequent chapters tackle developing Web server-based
applications using Active Server Pages (ASP), and setting
up IIS as a front-end for data access (ODBC, COM, Transaction
Processing). There’s even a chapter specifically written
for Internet Service Providers (ISPs) on how IIS 5.0 can
neatly fit into their network infrastructures. The guide
wouldn’t be complete without a chapter addressing IIS
security, of course. It comes right before the final chapter,
which discusses how to get to that legacy data onto an
IBM mainframe through an Internet browser.
Good Prep for the IEAK Exam
Your pure Windows-based network wouldn’t be complete
without a Microsoft browser; you can count on IE 5.0 to
keep your users at 100 percent productivity (yeah, right).
The Internet Explorer 5.0 Resource Kit will help you learn
how to deploy, customize, and secure the browser on the
desktop. Worried about users surfing inappropriate content?
Lock ‘em down. Tired of roaming from desktop to desktop
with a CD in hand? Centrally deploy and update IE 5.0
to the desktop.
If the Win2K exam electives have you running scared,
you may opt for taking some of the NT 4.0 electives that
haven’t yet been retired. This includes exam 70-80, Implementing
and Supporting Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.0 Using the
Microsoft Internet Explorer Administration Kit. If you
pursue this alternative, then the IE 5.0 Resource Kit
would be an excellent tool, along with the online help
from the Internet Explorer Administration Kit itself,
for preparing for the IEAK 5.0 exam. Appendix I of the
IE 5.0 Resource Kit lists a number of other technical
resources that will help you prepare for IEAK.
The Bottom Line
In summary, don’t give your credit card number to VUE
or Sylvan until you’ve read the TCP/IP Resource Guide
cover to cover. On the other hand, you’re better served
reading the IIS 5.0 online manual rather than the IIS
5.0 Resource Guide, since you need to know IIS configuration
basics only.
Finally—and we’re talking exam prep purposes only here—don’t
worry about reading the IE 5.0 Resource Kit, since its
content isn’t covered on the Win2K exams (except as I
noted for preparing for the IEAK exam). As my trusty Dilbert
coffee mug states: “Technology [is] no place for wimps.”
If you had any doubts, Win2K will make a believer out
of you-guaranteed.
Stay tuned for next month’s look at Win2K Resource
Kit utilities.
About the Author
James Carrion, MCM R2 Directory, MCITP, MCSE, MCT, CCNA, CISSP has worked as a computer consultant and technical instructor for the past 16 years. He’s the owner of and principal instructor for MountainView Systems, LLC, which specializes in accelerated Microsoft Certification training.