Verifying Active Directory Installation
Verifying Active Directory installation involves verifying the
Verifying Domain Configuration
After the domain controller is installed, various Active Directory administrative tools are added to the administrative tools menu. You can verify that Active Directory is functioning properly and that your domain controller is placed properly by opening the Active Directory Users And Computers console and checking for the presence of the domain and domain controller.
To verify domain configuration, complete the following steps:
1.Click Start, point to Administrative Tools, and then click Active Directory Users And Computers.
2.On the Active Directory Users And Computers console, verify that your domain is correctly named by finding it in the console tree.
3.Double-click the domain. Click the Domain Controllers container. Verify that your domain controller appears and is correctly named by finding it in the details pane.Double-click the
Directory Verifying the DNS Configuration
If you allow the Active Directory Installation Wizard to configure DNS for you, and your DNS solution supports dynamic update, the Netlogon service registers a set of default SRV resource records on the DNS server, as shown in Figure 2-16. SRV records are required for clients to find hosts that provide required services.
To verify the DNS configuration, complete the following steps:
1.Click Start, point to Programs, point to Administrative Tools, and then click DNS.
2.In the DNS console tree, double-click the DNS server, double-click Forward
Lookup Zones, double-click the zone. Expand the _msdcs, _sites, _tcp, and _udp
folders to view the default resource records.
Notice that the set of default SRV resource records is registered in multiple layers. The structure shown in Figure 2-16 is for two domain controllers; more complex environ?ments will appear as such, with multiple records in the multiple layers. Records are provided for the global catalog, Kerberos, Kpasswd (Kerberos password change), and Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) services.
The Netlogon service creates a log file that contains all the SRV resource records and places the log file in %Sj?fewroo/%\System32\Config\Netlogon.clns. An example Net-logon.dns file is shown in