We're looking at setting up a domain in our DMZ where some IIS servers (10-20 
at most) would reside and up until now, I've only ever managed one domain so 
one of the items I'm researching is how we'd manage resources in a separate 
domain with CM. One of the questions I had were about trusts. Would something 
like the simplest scenario #1 in this blog post below require a trust between 
the DMZ domain and our main domain where the CM primary site resides?

http://blogs.technet.com/b/neilp/archive/2012/08/20/cross-forest-support-in-system-center-2012-configuration-manager-part-1.aspx

Theres a statement where it says "In order to install and configure a child 
site (primary or secondary), the child site server must be located in the same 
forest as the parent site or reside in a forest that contains a two way trust 
with the forest of the parent (CAS or primary)". Am I reading that correctly 
where as long as the two domains are in the same forest, we wouldn't need a 
two-way trust? How about a one-way trust? I don't think we're going to put a 
child site in the DMZ domain unless we have to. I'd like to see those servers 
be managed directly from the primary site but I'm not at all familiar with 
cross-domain authentication. Understandably, certificate management is a factor 
but just from an SCCM communication standpoint, would something like this 
require a one-way, two-way, or no trust at all?

Another idea I had was just manage the servers like they are laptops on the 
internet. Is there any reason that wouldn't work? Then they could just 
communicate with CM through our external facing URL and no trust would be 
needed at all. That would just require a lot of manual work to manage the 
certificates and install the client so if it's easier to do the method 
described in the blog post, we'll do that.

Thanks in advance for your input.

Thanks,
James
________________________________

Confidentiality Notice: This e-mail is intended only for the addressee named 
above. It contains information that is privileged, confidential or otherwise 
protected from use and disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, you 
are hereby notified that any review, disclosure, copying, or dissemination of 
this transmission, or taking of any action in reliance on its contents, or 
other use is strictly prohibited. If you have received this transmission in 
error, please reply to the sender listed above immediately and permanently 
delete this message from your inbox. Thank you for your cooperation.



Reply via email to