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Tiêu đề Installing and Configuring Microsoft Windows 2000 File, Print, and Web Servers
Tác giả Rick Selby
Chuyên ngành Information Technology
Thể loại Delivery guide
Năm xuất bản 2000
Định dạng
Số trang 10
Dung lượng 176,68 KB

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Installing and Configuring Microsoft® Windows® 2000 File, Print, and Web Servers iii Contents Introduction Introduction...1 Course Materials ...2 Prerequisites...3 Course Outline ...4

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Part Number: X05-39379

Released: 1/2000

Delivery Guide

Installing and

Print, and Web Servers

Course Number: 1594B

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with all applicable copyright laws is the responsibility of the user No part of this document may

be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, for any purpose, without the express written permission of Microsoft Corporation If, however, your only means of access is electronic, permission to print one copy is hereby granted

Microsoft may have patents, patent applications, trademarks, copyrights, or other intellectual property rights covering subject matter in this document Except as expressly provided in any written license agreement from Microsoft, the furnishing of this document does not give you any license to these patents, trademarks, copyrights, or other intellectual property

 2000 Microsoft Corporation All rights reserved

Microsoft, Active Directory, BackOffice, MS-DOS, PowerPoint, Visual Studio, Windows, Windows Media, and Windows NT are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the U.S.A and/or other countries

The names of companies, products, people, characters, and/or data mentioned herein are fictitious and are in no way intended to represent any real individual, company, product, or event, unless otherwise noted

Other product and company names mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners

Project Lead and Instructional Designer: Rick Selby

Project Revision Leads: Red Johnston; Jaswinder Singh Lamba (NIIT [USA] Inc.)

Revision Development: NIIT (USA) Inc

Instructional Designers: Victoria Fodale (ComputerPREP, Inc); Barbara Pelletier (S&T OnSite) Program Manager: Rodney Miller

Testing Leads: Sid Benavente, Keith Cotton

Testing Developer: Greg Stemp (S&T OnSite)

Courseware Test Engineers: Jeff Clark; Jim Toland (ComputerPREP, Inc)

Graphic Artist: Julie Stone (Independent Contractor)

Editing Manager: Lynette Skinner

Editor: Kelly Baker (Write Stuff)

Copy Editor: Kathy Toney (S&T Consulting)

Online Program Manager: Debbi Conger

Online Publications Manager: Arlo Emerson (Aquent Partners)

Online Support: Eric Brandt (S&T OnSite)

Multimedia Development: Kelly Renner (Entex)

Compact Disc and Lab Testing: Data Dimensions, Inc

Production Support: Irene Barnett (S&T Consulting)

Manufacturing Manager: Rick Terek (S&T OnSite)

Manufacturing Support: Laura King (S&T OnSite)

Lead Product Manager, Development Services: Bo Galford

Lead Product Manager: Gerry Lang

Group Product Manager: Robert Stewart

Simulations and interactive exercises were built by using Macromedia Authorware

Course Number: 1594B

Part Number: X05-39379

Released: 1/2000

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Installing and Configuring Microsoft® Windows® 2000 File, Print, and Web Servers iii

Contents

Introduction

Introduction 1

Course Materials 2

Prerequisites 3

Course Outline 4

Microsoft Certified Professional Program 6

Facilities 8

Module 1: Introduction to Microsoft Windows 2000 File, Print, and Web Servers Overview 1

Introduction to Windows 2000 2

Benefits of Upgrading an Existing Server to Windows 2000 3

Benefits of a File Server Running Windows 2000 4

Benefits of a Print Server Running Windows 2000 5

Benefits of a Web Server Running Windows 2000 6

Benefits of Active Directory 7

Review 9

Module 2: Installing and Upgrading to Windows 2000 Advanced Server Overview 1

Preparing for Windows 2000 Advanced Server 2

Installing Windows 2000 Advanced Server 12

Lab A: Installing Windows 2000 Advanced Server 16

Upgrading to Windows 2000 Advanced Server 20

Review 25

Module 3: Configuring File and Print Servers Overview 1

Configuring a File Server 2

Configuring Disks 3

Configuring Shared Resources 11

Lab A: Configuring a File Server 23

Installing and Configuring a Print Server 31

Lab B: Configuring a Print Server 38

Review 42

Module 4: Configuring Web Services Overview 1

What is IIS? 2

Preparing for an IIS Installation 3

Installing IIS 4

Configuring a Web Site 6

Lab A: Configuring a Web Site 17

Review 20

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Module 5: Enhancing File and Print Servers with Active Directory

Overview 1

Multimedia: Concepts of Microsoft Windows 2000 Active Directory 2

Introduction to Active Directory 4

Enhancing File Servers with Active Directory 13

Enhancing Print Servers with Active Directory 20

Review 25

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Installing and Configuring Microsoft® Windows® 2000 File, Print, and Web Servers v

About This Course

This section provides you with a brief description of the course, audience, suggested prerequisites, and course objectives

Description

The goal of this course is to teach value-added providers, system builders, and

IT administrators, how to install and configure Microsoft® Windows® 2000 Server as a file, print, and Web server in a Microsoft Windows NT® version 4.0 network This class presents an overview of the installation and configuration process

This course is not intended to provide in-depth training on the installation and configuration of Microsoft Windows 2000 Students looking for in-depth training on this topic should attend one of the following courses:

 Course 1560, Updating Support Skills from Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 to Microsoft Windows 2000 (for existing Windows NT 4.0 Support

Professionals)

 Course 2152, Implementing Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional and Server (for support professionals new to Microsoft operating systems)

Audience

This course is intended for support professionals who will be responsible for performing the following Microsoft Windows 2000 tasks:

 Installing Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server in a Windows NT 4.0 network

 Configuring Windows 2000 file servers in a Windows NT 4.0 network

 Configuring Windows 2000 print servers in a Windows NT 4.0 network

 Configuring Windows 2000 Web servers in a Windows NT 4.0 network

Student Prerequisites

This course requires that students meet the following prerequisites:

 Experience supporting Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 in a network environment, including managing files and folders, setting permissions, configuring shared printers and creating user accounts and groups

 Proficiency using the Microsoft Windows NT 4.0, Microsoft Windows 95,

or Microsoft Windows 98 interface, including the ability to use Microsoft Internet Explorer version 4.0 (or later) to locate, create, and manipulate folders and files, to create shortcuts, and to configure the desktop environment

 Knowledge of basic computer hardware components, including computer memory, hard disks, central processing units, communication and printer ports, display adapters, and pointing devices

 Knowledge of basic networking concepts, including client, server, local area network, wide area network, network adapter cards, drivers, protocols, and network operating systems

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Course Objectives

At the end of this course, the student will be able to:

 Identify the Windows 2000 operating systems and explain the features that make all of the operating systems in the Windows 2000 server family ideal for use as a file server, a print server, or a Web server

 Install or upgrade computers operating on an existing Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 network to Windows 2000 Advanced Server

 Describe the process for configuring the Windows 2000 server family as a file or print server in a Windows NT 4.0 network, including creating and sharing directories, configuring Dfs, configuring disk quotas, and installing and configuring printers

 Configure Web servers running operating systems in the Windows 2000 server family

 Describe the Active Directory™ directory service and its benefits for Windows 2000 file and print servers

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Installing and Configuring Microsoft® Windows® 2000 File, Print, and Web Servers vii

Course Timing

The following schedule is an estimate of the course timing Your timing may vary

Day 1

Start End Module

9:00 9:30 Introduction 9:30 10:00 Module 1: Introduction to Microsoft Windows 2000 File, Print,

and Web Servers

10:15 11:00 Module 2: Installing and Upgrading To Windows 2000 Advanced

Server 11:00 11:30 Lab A: Installing Windows 2000 Advanced Server 11:30 12:00 Module 3: Configuring File and Print Servers

1:00 1:45 Module 3: Configuring File and Print Servers (continued)

1:45 2:30 Lab A: Configuring a File Server

2:45 3:00 Module 3: Configuring File and Print Servers (continued)

3:00 3:30 Lab B: Configuring a Print Server

4:00 4:30 Lab A: Configuring a Web Site 4:30 4:45 Module 4: Configuring Web Services (continued)

4:45 5:30 Module 5: Enhancing File and Print Servers with Active Directory

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Trainer Materials Compact Disc Contents

The Trainer Materials compact disc contains the following files and folders:

setup instructions in ASCII format (non-Microsoft Word document)

description of classroom requirements, classroom configuration, and classroom setup instructions

and corrections that you find in the course

PowerPoint® presentation and Web-based materials

 Mplayer This folder contains files that are required to install Microsoft

Windows Media™ Player

course

display the PowerPoint slides

links to resources pertaining to this course, including additional reading, review and lab answers, lab files, multimedia presentations, and course-related Web sites

slide show that explains the instructional strategy for the course and presentation tips and caveats To open the presentation, on the Trainer

Materials Web page click Trainer Preparation Presentation

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Installing and Configuring Microsoft® Windows® 2000 File, Print, and Web Servers ix

Student Materials Compact Disc Contents

The Student Materials compact disc contains the following files and folders:

students with resources pertaining to this course including additional reading, review and lab answers, lab files, multimedia presentations, and course-related Web sites

setup instructions in ASCII format (non-Microsoft Word document)

If there are no additional reading files, this folder does not appear

hands-on labs

 Appendix This folder contains appendix files for this course If there are no

appendix files, this folder does not appear

presentation and Web-based materials

 Labfiles This folder contains files that are used in the hands-on labs These

files may be used to prepare the student computers for the hands-on labs

for this course If this course does not include any multimedia presentations, this folder does not appear

 Mplayer This folder contains files that are required to install Microsoft

Windows Media Player

display the PowerPoint presentations that accompany the additional reading

If there are no PowerPoint presentations, this folder does not appear

 Webfiles This folder contains the files that are required to view the course

Web page To open the Web page, open Windows Explorer, and in the root

directory of the compact disc, double-click Default.htm

Word document (.doc) files that are included on the compact disc If no Word documents are included, this folder does not appear

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Document Conventions

The following conventions are used in course materials to distinguish elements

of the text

Convention Use

appears next to a slide title when additional information on the topic is covered on the page or pages that follow it

bold Represents commands, command options, and portions of

syntax that must be typed exactly as shown It also indicates commands on menus and buttons, icons, dialog box titles and options, and icon and menu names

italic In syntax statements, indicates placeholders for variable

information Italic is also used for introducing new terms, for book titles, and for emphasis in the text

Title Capitals Indicate domain names, user names, computer names,

directory names, folders, and file names, except when specifically referring to case-sensitive names Unless otherwise indicated, you can use lowercase letters when you type a directory name or file name in a dialog box or

at a command prompt

ALL CAPITALS Indicate the names of keys, key sequences, and key

combinations — for example, ALT+SPACEBAR

monospace Represents code samples, examples of screen text, or

entries that you type at a command prompt or in initialization files

[filename] in command syntax indicates that you can

choose to type a file name with the command Type only the information within the brackets, not the brackets themselves

the information within the braces, not the braces themselves

be repeated

Represents an omitted portion of a code sample

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