Originally posted by: npoe1
This question is for a homework, but somehow I?m not so sure about the knowledge of my teacher or at least how much interest have in the class, I know there are few types of servers, like in my initial question, the problem is that there is a student who brag too much an start to mention a bunch of servers, most of them application oriented, Azerus, Kconnect or something like that I don?t remember right the spelling, but I guess that you get the idea, to me all they are P2P or something like that, so Lotus Notes server is a mail server, not a Server type: Lotus Notes server, I?m confused and that?s the reason because I ask you about a book or something like that. This is important to me and I really will appreciate any help.
Originally posted by: nweaver
You need to seperate the physical machine (the server) from "Services" i.e. a network task that it handles, such as file storage, DHCP, DNS, Exchange, etc. I have run almost every service available on a single 2k3 server (DNS, DHCP, DC (Global Catalog), Exchange, File server, Print server, SQL for another machine, IIS, ISA for Proxy).
btw, that last box, running all those services is BAD!! (and I know now that, but I didn't at the time. )
Originally posted by: Brazen
Originally posted by: nweaver
You need to seperate the physical machine (the server) from "Services" i.e. a network task that it handles, such as file storage, DHCP, DNS, Exchange, etc. I have run almost every service available on a single 2k3 server (DNS, DHCP, DC (Global Catalog), Exchange, File server, Print server, SQL for another machine, IIS, ISA for Proxy).
btw, that last box, running all those services is BAD!! (and I know now that, but I didn't at the time. )
There are two types of servers:
1) mainframes
2) not working