IT professionals get the technical drill-down they need to deploy and support TCP/IP protocols and services in the Windows 2000 environment. This authoritative Technical Reference explores TCP/IP protocols layer by layer in the OSI model -- offering timely and in-depth information specific to Windows 2000-based network administration. It offers practical coverage for handling daily connectivity issues, and spans the more arcane topics necessary to ensure solid performance and reliability on Windows 2000-based wide area networks, even for large organizations.
As Microsoft Windows becomes increasingly network-centric, its TCP/IP services become increasingly important.
Microsoft Windows 2000 TCP/IP Protocols and Services Technical Reference exists to document the protocols as they relate to Windows 2000. The odds are high that you will be able to find the networking solutions you need with the help of this book. Even though it's not designed as a test-prep assistant, the book provides a grounding in the TCP/IP protocols that's strong enough to help you pass the TCP/IP exam (70-059) en route to a Microsoft Certified Professional (MCP) certification.
The authors use the Open Systems Interconnect (OSI) reference model as their organisational guide. With each protocol in the TCP/IP stack, they document the relevant open standards with packet diagrams and clear explanatory prose. Lots of Network Monitor traces appear (with comments), too. Then, they tie the open standards to Microsoft-specific phenomena, including the company's implementation of Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP), Domain Name Service (DNS), Windows Internet Naming Service (WINS), and Internet Information Services 5.0 (IIS 5). Throughout, the authors place emphasis on what is communicated over the network in various situations, rather than on configuring Windows 2000 itself. The companion CD-ROM is underused, but it does contain some worthwhile network data captures that illustrate key transactions. They are designed for viewing in the Network Monitor application that ships with Windows 2000 Server or Systems Management Server 2.0. --David Wall, amazon.com
Topics covered: The Internet protocol stack as Microsoft Windows 2000 implements it, with emphasis on address resolution, routing, Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP), Internet Group Message Protocol (IGMP), IPv6, and TCP connections and data exchange (including errors and re-transmissions). More Windows-specific material deals with Microsoft's implementation of DHCP, DNS, WINS, and tunnelling protocols for virtual private networks (VPNs).