Book Image

Windows Server 2003 Active Directory Design and Implementation: Creating, Migrating, and Merging Networks

By : John Savill
Book Image

Windows Server 2003 Active Directory Design and Implementation: Creating, Migrating, and Merging Networks

By: John Savill

Overview of this book

A well thought-out Active Directory provides a solid foundation for other services which will lower support costs and allow companies to centrally manage their environment. You should look at the Active Directory as your first step in moving to a centrally managed, highly integrated IT environment that supports efficient and effective delivery of business capabilities. Once the appropriate technical infrastructure is in place, it is vital to leverage that infrastructure to create an enterprise-class application infrastructure. If you are creating a new Active Directory network, or are migrating or merging existing installations, this is the book for you. While the basics of the Active Directory are straightforward, to get the most from it requires careful planning and a thorough understanding of what can be accomplished. For any environment there are a number of core stages in the Active Directory implementation; the 3 Ds: discovery, design, and deployment. In this unique book, we take a broad range of environment types and work through these stages; suggesting an Active Directory design specific to that environment, and how to implement it; at each stage providing clear instructions so the decisions are clearly understood and the best-practice principles will be maintained throughout your system lifetime. There are many books on using, administering, or even deploying Active Directory, but this is the only book that exists to relate the crucial design aspects to your target environment, and show you to implement this design. This book covers discovery, design and deployment stages of Active Directory implementation in the following scenarios: A small, single location company with fairly basic needs and a basic Windows NT 4.0 domain A larger company with multiple regional areas which are currently facilitated by multiple NT 4.0 domains A retail-type business with very different drivers and requirements from that of a standard business, based on Windows 2000 Active Directory Merging and restructuring the Active Directory infrastructure of two financial institutions
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

Summary


We have covered the concepts and overview involved in the migration from Windows NT 4 domains to a Windows 2003 Active Directory environment. In the next chapter, we will go over an example upgrade including all the steps required to move from our NT 4 infrastructure to a Windows 2003-based infrastructure and while each environment may have to tweak the steps slightly, the fundamentals will remain unchanged.

We will take our NT 4 accountancy company and go through the entire process of implementing our Windows 2003 solution.