Book Image

Windows Server 2016 Cookbook

By : Jordan Krause
Book Image

Windows Server 2016 Cookbook

By: Jordan Krause

Overview of this book

This hands-on Cookbook is stuffed full of practical recipes that will help you handle the essential administrative tasks in Windows Server 2016. You’ll start by familiarizing yourself with the look and feel of Windows Server 2016, and will then learn how to navigate through some daily tasks using the graphical interface. You will see how to compose optimal Group Policies and facilitate task automation with PowerShell 5.0 scripting. We will also take a look at the functions available to provide remote network access to your traveling users, and explore the much anticipated Nano Server and Hyper-V built-in integration support that is brand new in Windows Server 2016. By the end of this book, you will know how to take your Windows Server 2016-powered server and turn it into any common infrastructure role that might be required in your company.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Windows Server 2016 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Replacing your expiring IP-HTTPS certificate


DirectAccess has the ability to utilize certificates in a couple of different ways. Depending on how you configure DA, there are different places that certificates may or may not be used, but one common variable in all DirectAccess implementations is IP-HTTPS. This is a transition technology that is always enabled on a DA server, and it requires an SSL certificate to work properly. IP-HTTPS traffic comes in from the Internet, and so I always recommend that the SSL certificate used for the IP-HTTPS listener should be one purchased from a public CA entity.

As with any SSL certificate, they are only valid for a certain time period. Typically, these certificates are purchased on a one-, two-, or three-year basis. This means that eventually, you will have to renew that certificate and figure out how to make DirectAccess recognize and utilize the new one. IP-HTTPS makes use of a web listener inside IIS, and so it is a natural assumption that, when you...