Book Image

Active Directory Administration Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Sander Berkouwer
Book Image

Active Directory Administration Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Sander Berkouwer

Overview of this book

Updated to the Windows Server 2022, this second edition covers effective recipes for Active Directory administration that will help you leverage AD's capabilities for automating network, security, and access management tasks in the Windows infrastructure. Starting with a detailed focus on forests, domains, trusts, schemas, and partitions, this book will help you manage domain controllers, organizational units, and default containers. You'll then explore Active Directory sites management as well as identify and solve replication problems. As you progress, you'll work through recipes that show you how to manage your AD domains as well as user and group objects and computer accounts, expiring group memberships, and Group Managed Service Accounts (gMSAs) with PowerShell. Once you've covered DNS and certificates, you'll work with Group Policy and then focus on federation and security before advancing to Azure Active Directory and how to integrate on-premise Active Directory with Azure AD. Finally, you'll discover how Microsoft Azure AD Connect synchronization works and how to harden Azure AD. By the end of this AD book, you’ll be able to make the most of Active Directory and Azure AD Connect.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)

Implementing Defender for Identity

Microsoft Defender for Identity offers additional alerts, reports, and hunting capabilities for Active Directory forests. This recipe shows how to deploy the Defender for Identity sensor on your domain controllers.

Getting ready

To complete this recipe, sign in to the Microsoft 365 Defender portal with an account that has the Global administrator or Security administrator role assigned to it. If the organization uses the Azure AD PIM feature, activate the Global administrator or Security administrator role in advance.

Microsoft Defender for Identity requires at least one EMS E5 or Microsoft 365 license.

To install the Defender for Identity sensor on your domain controllers, sign in with an account that has local administrator privileges on the domain controllers. By default, members of the Administrators, Domain Admins, and Enterprise Admins security groups in Active Directory have these privileges.

How to do it…

Implementing...