Simplified Administration Appendix

Applies to: Windows Server 2022, Windows Server 2019, Windows Server 2016, Windows Server 2012 R2, Windows Server 2012

Server Manager Add Servers Dialog (Active Directory)

The Add Servers dialog allows searching Active Directory for servers, by operating system, using wildcards, and by location. The dialog also allows using DNS queries by fully qualified domain name or prefix name. These searches use native DNS and LDAP protocols implemented through .NET, not AD Windows PowerShell against the AD Management Gateway through SOAP - meaning that the domain controllers contacted by Server Manager can even run Windows Server 2003. You can also import a file with server names for provisioning purposes.

The Active Directory search uses the following LDAP filters:

(&(ObjectCategory=computer)

(&(ObjectCategory=computer)(cn=dc*)(OperatingSystemVersion=6.2*))

(&(ObjectCategory=computer)(OperatingSystemVersion=6.1*))

(&(ObjectCategory=computer)(OperatingSystemVersion=6.0*))

(&(ObjectCategory=computer)(|(OperatingSystemVersion=5.2*)(OperatingSystemVersion=5.1*)))

The Active Directory search returns the following attributes:

( dnsHostName )( operatingSystem )( cn )

Server Manager Remote Server Status

Server Manager tests remote server accessibility using Address Routing Protocol. Any servers not responding to ARP requests aren't listed, even if they are in the pool.

If ARP responds, then DCOM and WMI connections are made to the server to return status information. If RPC, DCOM, and WMI are unreachable, server manager can't fully manage the server.

Windows PowerShell Module Loading

Windows PowerShell 3.0 implements dynamic module loading. Using the Import-Module cmdlet is typically no longer required; instead, simply invoking the cmdlet, alias, or function automatically loads the module.

To see loaded modules, use the Get-Module cmdlet.

Get-Module

Simplified Administration

To see all installed modules with their exported functions and cmdlets, use:

Get-Module -ListAvailable

The main case for using the import-module command is when you need access to the "AD:" Windows PowerShell virtual drive and nothing else has already loaded the module. For example, using the following commands:

import-module activedirectory
cd ad:
dir

RID Issuance Hotfixes for Previous Operating Systems

See An update is available to detect and prevent too much consumption of the global RID pool on a domain controller that is running Windows Server 2008 R2.

Ntdsutil.exe Install from Media Changes

Windows Server 2012 adds two additional options to the Ntdsutil.exe command-line tool for the IFM (IFM Media Creation) menu. These allow you to create IFM stores without first performing an offline defrag of the exported NTDS.DIT database file. When disk space isn't a premium, this saves time creating the IFM.

The following table describes the two new menu items:

Menu Item Explanation
Create Full NoDefrag %s Create IFM media without defragmenting for a full AD DC or an AD/LDS instance into folder %s
Create Sysvol Full NoDefrag %s Create IFM media with SYSVOL and without defragmenting for a full AD DC into folder %s

Screenshot of a terminal window that shows the the process for creating IFM media.

Screenshot of a terminal window that shows the IFM media was successfully created.