Book Image

Mastering Windows Server 2019 - Second Edition

By : Jordan Krause
Book Image

Mastering Windows Server 2019 - Second Edition

By: Jordan Krause

Overview of this book

Mastering Windows Server 2019 – Second Edition covers all of the essential information needed to implement and utilize this latest-and-greatest platform as the core of your data center computing needs. You will begin by installing and managing Windows Server 2019, and by clearing up common points of confusion surrounding the versions and licensing of this new product. Centralized management, monitoring, and configuration of servers is key to an efficient IT department, and you will discover multiple methods for quickly managing all of your servers from a single pane of glass. To this end, you will spend time inside Server Manager, PowerShell, and even the new Windows Admin Center, formerly known as Project Honolulu. Even though this book is focused on Windows Server 2019 LTSC, we will still discuss containers and Nano Server, which are more commonly related to the SAC channel of the server platform, for a well-rounded exposition of all aspects of using Windows Server in your environment. We also discuss the various remote access technologies available in this operating system, as well as guidelines for virtualizing your data center with Hyper-V. By the end of this book, you will have all the ammunition required to start planning for, implementing, and managing Windows.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Summary

Containers are going to revolutionize the way that we build and host modern applications. By containerizing apps, we are going to be able to run many more applications on each physical server, because they are capable of being fully isolated away from each other. Additionally, the container mentality allows the development of applications to happen in a much more fluid fashion. App developers can build their applications inside containers running on their own laptops, and once finished, simply hand them over to the infrastructure team to slide that container image onto a production container host server. That host server could be on-premise, or even in the cloud. Orchestration tools such as Kubernetes can then be leveraged in order to scale that application, increasing or decreasing resource capacity and the number of necessary containers based on load or other factors...