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- Find name of Active Directory domain controller - Server Fault
For a computer that is a member of a domain the Environment Variable LOGONSERVER contains the name of the DC that authenticated the current user This is obviously not going to be all DC's in a multi-DC environment but if all you want is a quick way to find the name of a Domain Controller then from a command shell: set l <enter>
- Can someone please explain Windows Service Principle Names (SPNs . . .
A Service Principal Name is a concept from Kerberos It's an identifier for a particular service offered by a particular host within an authentication domain The common form for SPNs is service class fqdn@REALM (e g IMAP [email protected])
- windows - Resolve host name from IP address - Server Fault
This is the statement I wouldn't believe unless I see it myself ;) The explanation must be that nslookup uses only DNS protocol, but tracert uses the system name resolution library which uses DNS as a last resort, after WINS, NetBIOS, hosts file and so on were tried; however, in your example the name looks like DNS name
- windows - Current date in the file name - Server Fault
In the command prompt and batch files, you can use %date% and %time% to return the date and time respectively Date works fine, but the time value returned contains colons, which are illegal for use in filenames, but there is a way to remove th
- ssl certificate - What is the role of Subject Name (SN) Subject . . .
Both the Subject field and the Subject Alternative Name (SAN) extension are simply two ways of identifying the subject, or the holder Originally, in version 1 certificates, there was no concept of certificate extensions (such as Subject Alternative Names and Basic Constraints) and the only way to define the certificate's subject was with the
- domain name system - Whats the command-line utility in Windows to do a . . .
The trouble with "ping" is that it's not strictly a name server lookup tool (like nslookup) - for instance if you ping a hostname, it can be resolved to an IP address by a number of methods: DNS lookup, host file lookup, WINS (god forbid) or NetBIOS broadcast
- Local DNS not resolving host name but will resolve FQDN
At this point I noticed DNS was having problems From the client I am not able to resolve the servers host name but I am able to hit it by FQDN: C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator>nslookup Default Server: sh-server domain Address: 10 71 40 100 ^ sh-server *****unsuccessful when querying host name
- windows server 2008 - Find the GPO name with an GUID . . . - Server Fault
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