Book Image

Windows Server 2019 Automation with PowerShell Cookbook - Third Edition

By : Thomas Lee
Book Image

Windows Server 2019 Automation with PowerShell Cookbook - Third Edition

By: Thomas Lee

Overview of this book

Windows Server 2019 is the latest version of Microsoft’s flagship server operating system. It also comes with PowerShell Version 5.1 and offers a number of additional features that IT professionals will find useful. This book is designed to help you learn how to use PowerShell and manage the core roles, features, and services of Windows Server 2019. You will begin by creating a PowerShell Administrative Environment that features updated versions of PowerShell, the Windows Management Framework, .NET Framework, and third-party modules. Next, you will learn to use PowerShell to set up and configure Windows Server 2019 networking and understand how to manage objects in the Active Directory (AD) environment. The book will also guide you in setting up a host to utilize containers and deploying containers. Further along, you will be able to implement different mechanisms to achieve Desired State Configuration. The book will then get you up to speed with Azure infrastructure, in addition to helping you get to grips with setting up virtual machines (VMs), websites, and file share on Azure. In the concluding chapters, you will be able to deploy some powerful tools to diagnose and resolve issues with Windows Server 2019. By the end of this book, you will be equipped with a number of useful tips and tricks to automate your Windows environment with PowerShell.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Windows Server 2019 Automation with PowerShell Cookbook Third Edition
Foreword
Contributors
Preface
Index

Configuring IIS for SSL


Traffic between a web browser and a web server on the internet, or even within a corporate intranet, is open, and can be intercepted. To avoid the data being compromised, you can make use of protocols built into your web browser, along with IIS, to provide encryption, as well as authentication.

In the 1990s, Netscape Communications developed a protocol that provided some necessary security, in the form of the Secure Socket Layer (SSL) protocol. SSL 1.0 was never commercially released, while SSL 2.0 and SSL 3.0 were developed and released, but are now deprecated as unsafe.

Transport Layer Security (TLS) was developed openly as the next version of SSL. TLS 1.0 is essentially SSL 3.1. In 2014, Google identified a serious vulnerability in both SSL 3.0 and TLS 1.0. That leaves TLS 2.0 as the best protocol to deploy, and it is the only one installed by default with IIS in Windows Server 2019.

These days, SSL, as a protocol, is being deprecated in favor of TLS. Most major...