Book Image

Mastering Windows Group Policy

By : Jordan Krause
5 (1)
Book Image

Mastering Windows Group Policy

5 (1)
By: Jordan Krause

Overview of this book

This book begins with a discussion of the core material any administrator needs to know in order to start working with Group Policy. Moving on, we will also walk through the process of building a lab environment to start testing Group Policy today. Next we will explore the Group Policy Management Console (GPMC) and start using the powerful features available for us within that interface. Once you are well versed with using GPMC, you will learn to perform and manage the traditional core tasks inside Group Policy. Included in the book are many examples and walk-throughs of the different filtering options available for the application of Group Policy settings, as this is the real power that Group Policy holds within your network. You will also learn how you can use Group Policy to secure your Active Directory environment, and also understand how Group Policy preferences are different than policies, with the help of real-world examples. Finally we will spend some time on maintenance and troubleshooting common Group Policy-related issues so that you, as a directory administrator, will understand the diagnosing process for policy settings. By the end of the book, you will be able to jump right in and use Group Policy to its full potential.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Everyday command-line tools

When working with Group Policy, it is very common to find yourself inside a Command Prompt or PowerShell window, throwing some simple commands at servers and workstations in order to test out settings, push settings into place, or verify that Group Policy settings have been applied successfully. We will save the PowerShell-specific cmdlets for later in the book, and here discuss a few commands that can be run from either command-line interface.

GPUpdate

One command-line tool that is baked into every version of Microsoft Windows is GPUpdate. Based on the name, you can probably guess that this command has something to do with updating Group Policy settings. Think of GPUpdate as a client-side tool...