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Hi Al, good rant J
I think I can elaborate a bit…We can’t use the separate forest idea that you mention as a best practice, because it’s not a 2000 or above domain (the one in the DMZ). In fact, my first question was why don’t we upgrade it first (as its own forest, of course).
The goal is that we have developers who manage the content and apps on these web servers, and we’re trying to eliminate the accounts in the domain in the DMZ. So we’re trying to see if there is a good way to allow the developers to use their internal AD accounts to authenticate to the DMZ domain via a one-way trust.
Anything more specific on what risks we’d face? (e.g. would it be possible with a one-way trust for a person who breaks in to an account in a DMZ domain to then cross over into the other domain on the other side of the firewall?)
Is there a “least wrong” way to do this?
<mc> -----Original Message-----
<shudder>
So, if I read this correctly, somebody wants to put lipstick on a pig? My first question is why? My second question is also why? Why would you ever want to have authentication handled inside your firewall for web servers? Why would you want to put in a single point of failure only relying on the PDCe? Why would you want to fly in the face of best practices (use separate forests internal and external?)
IPSec is something that would be nice to have if they had a 2000 forest out there, but then again, see above.
Overall, I'd say that this is a bad idea for many reasons including the single point of failure (what if your PDCe goes down?), the lowered security possibilities of NT4 etc. Hacking NT 4 is not going to provide much of a challenge to most script kiddies these days, IMHO. Opening ports from a DMZ to your internal network doesn't buy anything but convenience in this situation and since it flies in the face of good practices, I hate to see it running.
Fix your BAS DMZ domain permissions and upgrade it to 2003 AD for control purposes.
The PPTP that he's asking about is available in Win2K and above, but for Win2K it doesn't work at start up. That would only be shared secret vs. kerberos negotiation.
</rant>
From: Creamer, Mark
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] L & G, I'm sending this on behalf of one of our project engineers. Thanks for any assistance or advice.
1. We have a 12-server (mostly 2000 web servers) NT 4.0
domain in
Mark Creamer Systems Engineer Cintas Corporation Honesty and Integrity in Everything We Do
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- RE: [ActiveDir] DMZ to Internal LAN one-way trust via fire... Mulnick, Al
- RE: [ActiveDir] DMZ to Internal LAN one-way trust via... Creamer, Mark
- RE: [ActiveDir] DMZ to Internal LAN one-way trust via... Mulnick, Al
- RE: [ActiveDir] DMZ to Internal LAN one-way trust via... Roger Seielstad
- RE: [ActiveDir] DMZ to Internal LAN one-way trust via... Roger Seielstad
- RE: [ActiveDir] DMZ to Internal LAN one-way trust via... Mulnick, Al
- RE: [ActiveDir] DMZ to Internal LAN one-way trust via... Creamer, Mark
