I guess it's my time to say "Woahhhhh...."
 
Gil, my response was not in any way directed at you. It was directed at Brian and, if 
anything, it was an attempt at levity, not snottiness. So, where did the slam come 
from?
 
I'd think that if anything is snotty, it would be Brian's increduluos "Woahhhhh....", 
not mine. Don't you think?
 
As for "Site coverage" in Win2K being equal to GC-Less config in Win2K3, I firmly 
believe they are apple and orange. They are both fruits, but not the same.
 
 
Sincerely,

Dèjì Akómöláfé, MCSE MCSA MCP+I
www.akomolafe.com
www.iyaburo.com
Do you now realize that Today is the Tomorrow you were worried about Yesterday?  -anon

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Gil Kirkpatrick
Sent: Mon 7/14/2003 2:49 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :)


I may have missed something, but the snotty tone seems inappropriate...
 
In any case, to reduce the apparent confusion:
 
GC-less sites have always been possible with AD since W2K. The facility is called site 
coverage.
 
GC-less logon is new in WS2K3 and occurs because DCs can cache group memberships. This 
allows the DC to assemble a complete token even if a GC isn't available. This 
functionality has nothing to do with application partitions.
 
Application partitions are a mechanism where you can host replicas of specific 
subtrees in the domain on any set of DCs in the forest. The subtrees may not contain 
security principals such as users, groups, and computers, When you create a zone in 
WS2K3, you can elect to configure it as an application partition and replicate the 
data to specific DCs in the forest.
 
-gil
 
  -----Original Message-----
From: deji Agba [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, July 14, 2003 1:19 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :)



        Yes, you did indeed miss it. So, go find it. Yourself, this time with no help.
         
        Hint: 
        Application partition is the new partion in E2K3 which, in addtion to The 
Domain, Configuration and Schema Partitions now make up the AD database in E2K3.
         
        It is this change that makes it possible now to deploy GC-less Remote Sites. 
The Application Partition is SHARED(replicated) to ALL DCs in the Domain, including 
designated DCs in the Forest.
         
         
        Sincerely,
        
        Dèjì Akómöláfé, MCSE MCSA MCP+I
        www.akomolafe.com
        www.iyaburo.com
        Do you now realize that Today is the Tomorrow you were worried about 
Yesterday?  -anon

________________________________

        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Rogers, Brian
        Sent: Mon 7/14/2003 11:53 AM
        To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
        Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :)
        
        

        Woahhhhh....I musta missed that document.  AD integrated DNS can now be 
separated from regular replication?

         

        Gotta link? Book? Paper? Smokesignal? Morse?  :-)

         

        -----Original Message-----
        From: Rick Kingslan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        Sent: Monday, July 14, 2003 1:28 PM
        To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :)

         

        This would be correct.  But, remember that in the replication strategy for 
Win2k - data goes to every DC regardless if it's a DNS server or not - because once 
it's DNS-integrated, it's now a part of the AD data.  This trend is broken in Win2k3, 
where application partitions can handle DNS - and do.  The DomainDNS and ForestDNS are 
just that, for all intents and purposes.  They are AD Application parts handling DNS 
for just DNS servers - and no DNS data need be on the DCs, unless it too, is a DNS 
server once the full DNS app partition is configured.

        Rick Kingslan  MCSE, MCSA, MCT
        Microsoft MVP - Active Directory
        Associate Expert
        Expert Zone - www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/expertzone
          

         

        
________________________________


        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rogers, Brian
        Sent: Monday, July 14, 2003 10:10 AM
        To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
        Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :)

        I was looking more along the lines of replication traffic.  However since the 
zone is replicated within AD....there shouldn't be any additional (or if so very 
minimal) replication traffic between the DNS servers other than the normal AD 
replication traffic correct?

         

        -----Original Message-----
        From: Roger Seielstad [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        Sent: Monday, July 14, 2003 10:58 AM
        To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
        Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :)

         

        I always configure every DC as a DNS server. I consider that if a location 
requires a DC, it also requires local DNS.

         

         

        -------------------------------------------------------------- 
        Roger D. Seielstad - MTS MCSE MS-MVP 
        Sr. Systems Administrator 
        Inovis Inc. 

                -----Original Message-----
                From: Rogers, Brian [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
                Sent: Monday, July 14, 2003 10:39 AM
                To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
                Subject: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :)

                        1.      When configuring an AD Integrated DNS zone, at least 
one DC in each site should be running DNS?  Or all DCs should be running DNS?  Would 
it matter either way? 

                         

                         

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