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New Features in the Windows Server 2003 Family

In the Windows Server 2003 family of operating systems, Microsoft has improved the function of the Account Lockout feature on both servers and client computers.

Computers Running Windows Server 2003 That Act As Network Servers

To improve the experience for users and to decrease the overall total cost of ownership, Microsoft made the following changes to the behavior of domain controllers in the Windows Server 2003 family:
Password history check (N-2): Before a Windows Server 2003 operating system increments badPwdCount, it checks the invalid password against the password history. If the password is the same as one of the last two entries that are in the password history, badPwdCount is not incremented for both NTLM and the Kerberos protocol. This change to domain controllers should reduce the number of lockouts that occur because of user error.
Single user object on demand replication: See the "Urgent Replication" section in this document for more information.
Optimized replication frequency: The default frequency for replication between sites is to replicate every 15 minutes with a 3-second offset to stagger the replication interval. This optimization improves the replication of a password change in a site because it decreases the chances that the domain controller would have to contact the PDC operations master.

Computers Running Windows Server 2003 Family Acting As Network Clients

Microsoft has added the following features in the Windows Server 2003 family to gather the process ID that is using the credentials that fail authentication:
Auditing logon changes: There are entries for all logon and logoff events (528 and 540, as well as 529 through 539).
Auditing of processes encountering authentication failures: New information is added to the Security event log when authentication failures occur:
Caller User Name
Caller Domain
Caller Logon ID
Caller Process ID
 
Note:
  To use the process ID, turn on success auditing for Audit process tracking events so that you can obtain the process identifier (PID) for the associated Event 592. If you do not do this, the PID is not useful after the process stops. To view audit process tracking, in the Group Policy Microsoft Management Console (MMC), in the console tree, double-click Computer Configuration, double-click Windows Settings, double-click Security Settings, double-click Local Policies, and then double-click Audit Policy.

Microsoft has added the following administrative enhancements to provide more account lockout information than the information that is available in the default configuration of the Windows Server 2003 family:

AcctInfo.dll: The AcctInfo.dll file is a property page extension for user objects in the Active Directory Users and Computers MMC that provides detailed information about user password attributes. An administrator can use the AcctInfo.dll file to reset user account passwords on a domain controller that is in the user's Active Directory site.
LockoutStatus.exe: The LockoutStatus.exe tool displays bad password count and time information from all of the domain controllers that are in a domain. You can run this tool as either a stand-alone tool or as an extension to the AcctInfo.dll file when you place it in the Systemroot\System32 folder on your computer.

 

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MCSE : Security Specialist

Identify the procedures for installing and launching typical Windows and non-Windows applications.

Windows 9x simplifies installing Win32-based applications by providing an Add/Remove Programs option in Control Panel. When you install an application using this option, Windows 98 does the following:
 

  • Searches specified drives for files named Install or Setup.
  • If an application setup file uses a name other than Install or Setup, you can start setup by double-clicking the application setup file’s icon in My Computer.
  • Adds to the registry such information about the application as which parameters to use to run the application and which files to delete when removing the application from the computer.

To install an MS-DOS-based application by running its Setup.exe file. When you install the application, Windows 9x copies information about the application from Apps.inf to the application’s program information file (PIF). If the application was installed under an earlier version of Windows, Setup automatically moves its settings to the new Apps.inf. If there is no information about the application in Apps.inf, Windows 9x uses default settings instead, or you can manually set the properties.

 

 


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