|
- 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 mail example com@EXAMPLE COM) There are also User Principal Names which identify users, in form of user @ REALM (or user1 user2 @ REALM, which identifies a speaks
- windows - Resolve host name from IP address - Server Fault
I'm looking for a command line tool which gets an IP address and returns the host name, for Windows
- Find name of Active Directory domain controller - Server Fault
How can I find out the name IP address of the AD domain controller on my network?
- How to verify Azure Monitor Agent (AMA) is correctly installed on Azure . . .
Here is the process to install the Azure Monitor Windows Agent on a VM and retrieve the logs from it Install the AzureMonitorWindowsAgent extension on an Azure VM using PowerShell Set-AzVMExtension -Name AzureMonitorWindowsAgent -ExtensionType AzureMonitorWindowsAgent -Publisher Microsoft Azure Monitor -ResourceGroupName <RG-Name>-VMName <vmname> -Location "West Europe" -TypeHandlerVersion
- What do I need to be cautious of when changing a User Logon Name in . . .
This would be first name and first initial of last name Some users have first name underscore last name Needless to say, I'd like to make them conform to the standard Before making the change in Active Directory to adhere to the new standard, is there anything I need to be aware of that will help me as I make the change?
- How can I figure out my LDAP connection string? - Server Fault
The connection string is made up of the LDAP server's name, and the fully-qualified path of the container object where the user specified is located The connection string begins with the URI LDAP: For the server name, you can use the name of a domain controller in that domain-- let's say "dc1 corp domain com"
- domain name system - Whats the command-line utility in Windows to do a . . .
Should resolve the name from the IP address if the reverse lookup zone has been set up properly If the reverse lookup zone does not have an entry for the record, the -a will just ping without a name
- SMB connection to server fails with The Network path was not found . . .
This occurs if I'm testing with the FQDN, server name or IP The server responds to pings, and I'm able to open an SMB share on the client computer from the server Eventviewer In the SMBClient -> Connectivity Logs, it's filled with Event ID 30800 events, with the following content: The server name cannot be resolved
|
|
|