Module 5: Resolving Host
Names by Using Domain
Name System (DNS)
Overview
Multimedia: The Role of DNS in the Network Infrastructure
Installing the DNS Server Service
Configuring the Properties for the DNS Server Service
Configuring DNS Zones
Configuring DNS Zone Transfers
Configuring DNS Dynamic Updates
Configuring a DNS Client
Delegating Authority for Zones
Multimedia: The Role of DNS in the Network Infrastructure
The objective of this presentation is to provide
a high-level overview of DNS in the network
infrastructure
At the end of this presentation, you will be
able to:
Explain the role and benefits of DNS in
the network infrastructure
Define the key components of DNS
Discuss the DNS domain namespace
Discuss DNS zones and zone transfer
Discuss DNS name servers
Explain how the hosts name resolution
process works
Explain forward lookup queries
Lesson: Installing the DNS Server Service
Overview of Domain Name System
What Is a Domain Namespace?
Standards for DNS Naming
How to Install the DNS Server Service
Overview of Domain Name System
Domain Name System (DNS) is a hierarchical, distributed database that
contains mappings of DNS domain names to various types of data, such
as IP addresses
DNS is the foundation of the Internet naming scheme and the
foundation of an organization’s naming scheme
DNS supports accessing resources by using alphanumeric names
InterNIC is responsible for delegating administrative responsibility for
portions of the domain namespace and for registering domain names
DNS was designed to solve issues that arose when there was an
increase in the:
Number of hosts on the Internet
Traffic generated by the update process
Size of the Hosts file
What Is a Domain Namespace?
Root Domain
Top-Level Domain net com org
Second-Level Domain nwtraders
Subdomains west south east
FQDN: sales Host: server1
server1.sales.south.nwtraders.com
Standards for DNS Naming
The following characters are valid for DNS names:
A-Z
a-z
0-9
Hyphen (-)
The underscore (_) is a reserved character
How to Install the DNS Server Service
Your instructor will demonstrate how to install the DNS
Server service
Practice: Installing the DNS Server Service
In this practice, you will install the DNS Server
service
Lesson: Configuring the Properties for the DNS Server
Service
What Are the Components of a DNS Solution?
What Is a DNS Query?
How Recursive Queries Work
How a Root Hint Works
How Iterative Queries Work
How Forwarders Work
How DNS Server Caching Works
How to Configure the Properties for the DNS Server Service
What Are the Components of a DNS Solution?
Root “.”
Resource
Record
.com
.edu
Resource
Record
DNS Clients DNS Servers DNS Servers on the Internet
What Is a DNS Query?
A query is a request for name resolution to a DNS server. There are two
types of queries: recursive and iterative
DNS clients and DNS servers both initiate queries for name resolution
An authoritative DNS server for the namespace of the query will either:
Check the cache, check the zone, and return the requested IP
address
Return an authoritative, “No”
A non-authoritative DNS server for the namespace of the query will
either:
Forward the unresolvable query to a specific query server called a
Forwarder
Use root hints to locate an answer for the query
How Recursive Queries Work
A recursive query is a query made to a DNS server, in which the DNS client
asks the DNS server to provide a complete answer to the query
DNS server checks the forward lookup zone
and cache for an answer to the query
Recursive query for
mail1.nwtraders.com
172.16.64.11 Database
Computer1 Local DNS Server
How Root Hint Works
Root hints are DNS resource records stored on a DNS server that list the
IP addresses for the DNS root servers
Cluster of Cluster of
DNS Servers Root (.) Servers
Root Hints
com
DNS Server
Computer1 microsoft
How Iterative Queries Work
An iterative query is a query made to a DNS server in which the DNS client
requests the best answer that the DNS server can provide without seeking further
help from other DNS servers. The result of an iterative query is often a referral to
another DNS server lower in the DNS tree
Iterative Query
Local Root Hint (.)
Ask .com 1
DNS Server
Iterative
Query
ders or
Ask nw
.com
traders .com
wtra query f
.com
2
Itera
1
mai ursive
64.1
tive
Auth Que
ry
l1.n
orita
.16.
tive R
Rec
espo
172
nse
3
Computer1 nwtraders.com
How Forwarders Work
A forwarder is a DNS server designated by other internal DNS servers to forward
queries for resolving external or offsite DNS domain names
Iterative Query
Forwarder Root Hint (.)
Ask .com
Iterative
Query
ry
Ask nw
ue
traders .com
eQ
.11
.com
siv
.64
cur
Itera
.16
tive
Re
Que
172
Auth ry
orita
172.1 tive R
6.64. espo
11 nse
Recu
r
mail1 sive query
.nwtr nwtraders.com
Local aders for
.com Computer1
DNS Server
How DNS Server Caching Works
Caching Table
Host Name IP Address TTL
clientA.contoso.msft. 192.168.8.44 28 seconds
Where’s
ClientA Client
is at
192.168.8.44
A?
ClientA
Client1
ClientA Client
Where’s is at
Client2 192.168.8.44
A?
Caching is the process of temporarily storing recently accessed information in a
special memory subsystem for quicker access
How to Configure Properties for the DNS Server Service
Your instructor will demonstrate how to:
Update root hints on a DNS server
Configure a DNS server to use a forwarder
Clear the DNS server cache by using the DNS console
Clear the DNS server cache by using the DNSCmd
command
Practice: Configuring Properties for the DNS Server Service
In this practice, you will configure the properties
for the DNS Server service
Lesson: Configuring DNS Zones
How DNS Data Is Stored and Maintained
What Are Resource Records and Record Types?
What Is a DNS Zone?
What Are DNS Zone Types?
How to Change a DNS Zone Type
What Are Forward and Reverse Lookup Zones?
How to Configure Forward and Reverse Lookup Zones
How DNS Data Is Stored and Maintained
Namespace: training.nwtraders.msft
DNS Server Resource records for the zone
training.nwtraders.msft
Host name IP address
DNS ClientA 192.168.2.45
Zone File: DNS ClientB 192.168.2.46
Training.nwtraders.msft.dns DNS ClientC 192.168.2.47
DNS ClientC
DNS ClientA DNS ClientB
A resource record (RR) is a standard DNS database structure containing information used
to process DNS queries
A zone is a portion of the DNS database that contains the resource records with the owner
names that belong to the contiguous portion of the DNS namespace
What Are Resource Records and Record Types?
Record type Description
A Resolves a host name to an IP address
PTR Resolves an IP address to a host name
SOA The first record in any zone file
SRV Resolves names of servers providing services
NS Identifies the DNS server for each zone
MX The mail server
CNAME Resolves from a host name to a host name
What Is a DNS Zone?
Nwtraders
South West North
Sales Support Training
What Are DNS Zone Types?
Zones Description
Read/Write
Read/write copy of a DNS database
Primary
Read-Only
Read-only copy of a DNS database
Secondary
Copy of
limited
records
Copy of a zone containing limited records
Stub
How to Change a DNS Zone Type
Your instructor will demonstrate how to change a DNS
zone type
What Are Forward and Reverse Lookup Zones?
Namespace: training.nwtraders.msft.
DNS Client1 192.168.2.45
DNS Server Authorized Forward DNS Client2 192.168.2.46
for training Training
zone
DNS Client3 192.168.2.47
192.168.2.45 DNS Client1
Reverse 1.168.192.in- 192.168.2.46 DNS Client2
zone addr.arpa
192.168.2.47 DNS Client3
DNS Client2 = ?
192.168.2.46 = ?
DNS Client3
DNS Client1
DNS Client2
How to Configure Forward and Reverse Lookup Zones
Your instructor will demonstrate how to:
Configure a forward lookup zone on a primary zone type
Configure a forward lookup stub zone
Configure a forward lookup zone on a secondary zone type
Configure a reverse lookup zone on a primary zone type
Configure a reverse lookup zone on a secondary zone type
Practice: Configuring a DNS Zone
In this practice, you will the configure DNS
zones
Lesson: Configuring DNS Zone Transfers
How DNS Zone Transfers Work
How DNS Notify Works
How to Configure DNS Zone Transfers
How DNS Zone Transfers Work
A DNS zone transfer is the synchronization of authoritative DNS zone
data between DNS servers
1 SOA query for a zone
2 SOA query answered
3 IXFR or AXFR query for a zone
4 IXFR or AXFR query answered
(zone transfer)
Secondary Server Primary and
Master Server
How DNS Notify Works
A DNS notify is an update to the original DNS protocol specification that
permits notification to secondary servers when zone changes occur
Resource record is
Destination Server 1 updated Source Server
SOA serial number is
2 updated
3 DNS notify
4 Zone transfer
Secondary Server Primary and
Master Server
How to Configure DNS Zone Transfers
Your instructor will demonstrate how to configure a DNS
zone transfer and DNS notify
Practice: Configuring DNS Zone Transfers
In this practice, you will configure DNS zone
transfers
Lesson: Configuring DNS Dynamic Updates
Multimedia: Overview of DNS Dynamic Updates
What Are Dynamic Updates?
How DNS Clients Register and Update Their Own Resource
Records by Using Dynamic Updates
How a DHCP Server Registers and Updates Resource
Records by Using Dynamic Updates
How to Configure DNS Manual and Dynamic Updates
What Is an Active Directory-Integrated DNS Zone?
How Active Directory-Integrated DNS Zones Use Secure
Dynamic Updates
How to Configure Active Directory-Integrated DNS Zones to
Allow Secure Dynamic Updates
Multimedia: Overview of DNS Dynamic Updates
The objective of this presentation is provide a
high-level overview of DNS dynamic updates
At the end of this presentation, you will be able to:
Explain why DNS dynamic updates are
important
Explain the difference between manual and
dynamic updates
Explain that client computers can either
dynamically update resource records in DNS
themselves or have DHCP perform dynamic
updates in DNS on their behalf
Explain what secure dynamic updates
are
What Are Dynamic Updates?
A dynamic update is the process of a DNS client dynamically creating, registering, or
updating its records in zones that are maintained by DNS servers that can accept and
process messages for dynamic updates
A manual update is the process of an administrator manually creating, registering, or
updating the resource record
Dynamic update enables DNS client computers to interact automatically
with the DNS server to register and update their own resource records
Organizations that have dynamic changes can benefit from the dynamic
method of updating DNS resource records
Organizations may benefit from manual update if they:
Are in a smaller environment that has few changes to their resource
records
Have isolated instances, such as when a larger organization chooses to
control every address on every host.
How DNS Clients Register and Update Their Own Resource
Records by Using Dynamic Updates
DNS Server Resource
Records 1 Client sends SOA query
DNS server sends zone
2 name and server IP address
1 2 3 4 5 Client verifies existing
3 registration
DNS server responds by
4 stating that registration does
not exist
Client sends dynamic update
5 to DNS server
Windows Windows Windows
Server 2003 XP 2000
How a DHCP Server Registers and Updates
Resource Records by Using Dynamic Updates
DNS Server DHCP client makes an IP
1 lease request
Resource
Records 2 DHCP server grants IP lease
DHCP server automatically
3 generates client’s FQDN
Using dynamic update, the
3 4 4 DHCP server updates the
DNS forward and reverse
records for the client
1
2
Window Server 2003 IP Address Lease DHCP Down-
Running DHCP level Client
How to Configure DNS Manual and Dynamic Updates
Your instructor will demonstrate how to:
Configure a DNS server running Windows Server 2003 to
accept dynamic updates of DNS resource records
Configure a Windows XP Professional client to
dynamically update its DNS resource records in DNS
Configure a DHCP server running Windows Server 2003
to dynamically update DNS resource records in DNS on
behalf of DHCP clients
Manually create a DNS resource record
What Is an Active Directory-Integrated DNS Zone?
DNS zone type Benefit
Non Active
Directory-integrated Does not require Active Directory
zone
Active Directory- Stores DNS zone data in Active Directory
integrated zone and is thus more secure
Uses Active Directory replication instead of
zone transfers
Allows only secure dynamic updates
Uses multi-master instead of single master
structure
An Active Directory-integrated DNS zone is a DNS zone stored in Active
Directory
How Active Directory-Integrated DNS Zones Use
Secure Dynamic Updates
A secure dynamic update is a process in which a client submits a dynamic update request
to a DNS server, and the server attempts the update only if the client can prove its identity
and has the proper credentials to make the update
Find authoritative server
DNS Client
running Local
Windows XP Result DNS Server
Find autho
ritative ser
ver
Result
Attempt n
on-secure
Refused update
Secure u
pdate ne
gotiation
Accepted
Domain Controller with
Active Directory-
Integrated DNS Zone
How to Configure Active Directory-Integrated DNS Zones to
Allow Secure Dynamic Updates Only
Your instructor will demonstrate how to:
Configure Active Directory-integrated DNS zones to allow
secure dynamic updates
Configure security on an Active Directory-integrated DNS
zone
Practice: Configuring DNS Dynamic Updates
In this practice, you will configure DNS dynamic
updates
Lesson: Configuring a DNS Client
How Preferred and Alternate DNS Servers Work
How Suffixes Are Applied
How to Configure a DNS Client
How Preferred and Alternate DNS Servers Work
3. Optionally, you can enter a whole list
of alternate DNS servers
1. The preferred
DNS server is
the one that the
client tries first
4. The preferred and alternate
DNS servers specified on the
Properties page automatically
appear at the top of this list, and
preferred and alternate servers
2. If the preferred server are queried in the order they are
fails, the client tries the listed
alternate DNS server
How Suffixes Are Applied
Suffix Selection
option Domain suffix Name query = server1
search list
server1.sales.south.nwtraders.com
server1.south.nwtraders.com
server1.nwtraders.com
Connection
Specific Suffix
How to Configure a DNS Client
Your instructor will demonstrate how to:
Manually configure a DNS client to use preferred and
alternate DNS servers
Configure the DNS server option and the DNS suffix option
in DHCP
Practice: Configuring a DNS Client
In this practice, you will configure a DNS client
Lesson: Delegating Authority for Zones
What Is Delegation of a DNS Zone?
How to Delegate a Subdomain to a DNS Zone
What Is Delegation of a DNS Zone?
Namespace: training.nwtraders.msft
DNS server
The administrator, at the
nwtraders.com level of the
namespace, delegates authority
for training.nwtraders.com and
offloads administration of DNS for
that part of the namespace training.nwtraders.msft
Training.nwtraders.com now has DNS server
its own administrator and DNS
server to resolve queries in that
part of the
namespace/organization
training.nwtraders.msft
Delegation is the process of assigning authority over child domains in your DNS
namespace to another entity by adding records in the DNS database
How to Delegate a Sub-domain to a DNS Zone
Your instructor will demonstrate how to delegate a sub-
domain to a DNS zone
Lab A: Resolving Host Names by Using Domain
Name System
In this lab, you will resolve host names by using
DNS