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Placement
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Windows
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Microsoft
Windows Server 2003 Directory and Security Systems
- What’s
the difference between local, global and universal groups?
Domain local groups assign access permissions to global
domain groups for local domain resources. Global groups
provide access to resources in other trusted domains.
Universal groups grant access to resources in all trusted
domains.
- I am
trying to create a new universal user group. Why can’t I?
Universal groups are allowed only in native-mode Windows
Server 2003 environments. Native mode requires that all
domain controllers be promoted to Windows Server 2003
Active Directory.
- What is
LSDOU? It’s group policy inheritance model, where the
policies are applied to Local machines, Sites,
Domains and Organizational Units.
- Why
doesn’t LSDOU work under Windows NT? If the
NTConfig.pol file exist, it has the highest priority
among the numerous policies.
- Where
are group policies stored? %SystemRoot%System32\GroupPolicy
- What is
GPT and GPC? Group policy template and group policy
container.
- Where is
GPT stored? %SystemRoot%\SYSVOL\sysvol\domainname\Policies\GUID
- You
change the group policies, and now the computer and user
settings are in conflict. Which one has the highest
priority? The computer settings take priority.
- You want
to set up remote installation procedure, but do not want
the user to gain access over it. What do you do?
gponame–> User Configuration–> Windows Settings–> Remote
Installation Services–> Choice Options is your friend.
- What’s
contained in administrative template conf.adm?
Microsoft NetMeeting policies
- How can
you restrict running certain applications on a machine?
Via group policy, security settings for the group, then
Software Restriction Policies.
- You need
to automatically install an app, but MSI file is not
available. What do you do? A .zap text file can
be used to add applications using the Software Installer,
rather than the Windows Installer.
- What’s
the difference between Software Installer and Windows
Installer? The former has fewer privileges and will
probably require user intervention. Plus, it uses .zap
files.
- What can
be restricted on Windows Server 2003 that wasn’t there in
previous products? Group Policy in Windows Server 2003
determines a users right to modify network and dial-up
TCP/IP properties. Users may be selectively restricted from
modifying their IP address and other network configuration
parameters.
- How
frequently is the client policy refreshed? 90 minutes
give or take.
- Where is
secedit? It’s now gpupdate.
- You want
to create a new group policy but do not wish to inherit.
Make sure you check Block inheritance among the
options when creating the policy.
- What is
"tattooing" the Registry? The user can view and modify
user preferences that are not stored in maintained portions
of the Registry. If the group policy is removed or changed,
the user preference will persist in the Registry.
- How do
you fight tattooing in NT/2000 installations? You
can’t.
- How do
you fight tattooing in 2003 installations? User
Configuration - Administrative Templates - System - Group
Policy - enable - Enforce Show Policies Only.
- What
does IntelliMirror do? It helps to reconcile desktop
settings, applications, and stored files for users,
particularly those who move between workstations or those
who must periodically work offline.
- What’s
the major difference between FAT and NTFS on a local
machine? FAT and FAT32 provide no security over locally
logged-on users. Only native NTFS provides extensive
permission control on both remote and local files.
- How do
FAT and NTFS differ in approach to user shares? They
don’t, both have support for sharing.
- Explan
the List Folder Contents permission on the folder in
NTFS. Same as Read & Execute, but not inherited by
files within a folder. However, newly created subfolders
will inherit this permission.
- I have a
file to which the user has access, but he has no folder
permission to read it. Can he access it? It is possible
for a user to navigate to a file for which he does not have
folder permission. This involves simply knowing the path of
the file object. Even if the user can’t drill down the
file/folder tree using My Computer, he can still gain
access to the file using the Universal Naming Convention (UNC).
The best way to start would be to type the full path of a
file into Run… window.
- For a
user in several groups, are Allow permissions restrictive
or permissive? Permissive, if at least one group has
Allow permission for the file/folder, user will have the
same permission.
- For a
user in several groups, are Deny permissions restrictive or
permissive? Restrictive, if at least one group has Deny
permission for the file/folder, user will be denied access,
regardless of other group permissions.
- What
hidden shares exist on Windows Server 2003 installation?
Admin$, Drive$, IPC$, NETLOGON, print$ and SYSVOL.
- What’s
the difference between standalone and fault-tolerant DFS
(Distributed File System) installations? The standalone
server stores the Dfs directory tree structure or topology
locally. Thus, if a shared folder is inaccessible or if the
Dfs root server is down, users are left with no link to the
shared resources. A fault-tolerant root node stores the Dfs
topology in the Active Directory, which is replicated to
other domain controllers. Thus, redundant root nodes may
include multiple connections to the same data residing in
different shared folders.
- We’re
using the DFS fault-tolerant installation, but cannot
access it from a Win98 box. Use the UNC path, not
client, only 2000 and 2003 clients can access Server 2003
fault-tolerant shares.
- Where
exactly do fault-tolerant DFS shares store information in
Active Directory? In Partition Knowledge Table, which
is then replicated to other domain controllers.
- Can you
use Start->Search with DFS shares? Yes.
- What
problems can you have with DFS installed? Two users
opening the redundant copies of the file at the same time,
with no file-locking involved in DFS, changing the contents
and then saving. Only one file will be propagated through
DFS.
- I run
Microsoft Cluster Server and cannot install fault-tolerant
DFS. Yeah, you can’t. Install a standalone one.
- Is
Kerberos encryption symmetric or asymmetric? Symmetric.
- How does
Windows 2003 Server try to prevent a middle-man attack on
encrypted line? Time stamp is attached to the initial
client request, encrypted with the shared key.
- What
hashing algorithms are used in Windows 2003 Server? RSA
Data Security’s Message Digest 5 (MD5), produces a 128-bit
hash, and the Secure Hash Algorithm 1 (SHA-1), produces a
160-bit hash.
- What
third-party certificate exchange protocols are used by
Windows 2003 Server? Windows Server 2003 uses the
industry standard PKCS-10 certificate request and PKCS-7
certificate response to exchange CA certificates with
third-party certificate authorities.
- What’s
the number of permitted unsuccessful logons on
Administrator account? Unlimited. Remember, though,
that it’s the Administrator account, not any account that’s
part of the Administrators group.
- If
hashing is one-way function and Windows Server uses hashing
for storing passwords, how is it possible to attack the
password lists, specifically the ones using NTLMv1? A
cracker would launch a dictionary attack by hashing every
imaginable term used for password and then compare the
hashes.
- What’s
the difference between guest accounts in Server 2003 and
other editions? More restrictive in Windows Server
2003.
- How many
passwords by default are remembered when you check "Enforce
Password History Remembered"? User’s last 6 passwords.
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