spikespiegal
Golden Member
This is one of the Active Directory 101 questions that seems easy, but I've never found two people agreeing on the right way to do this.
Basically, if you have a simple Active Directory domain, what's the best way to deliver external (internet/ISP/DNS) server resolution to client machines?
- manually set external DNS servers in the IP config of client machines (seem rather primitive, but it works)
- add external DNS servers to the IP config of main Active Directory box. (if 'localhost' is a part of DNS server forwarding, it *should* work).
- Add the external server addresses to the 'forwarders' tab under the AD controller's object properties in DNS manager. (never seems to work real well in my experience)
- other?
Basically, if you have a simple Active Directory domain, what's the best way to deliver external (internet/ISP/DNS) server resolution to client machines?
- manually set external DNS servers in the IP config of client machines (seem rather primitive, but it works)
- add external DNS servers to the IP config of main Active Directory box. (if 'localhost' is a part of DNS server forwarding, it *should* work).
- Add the external server addresses to the 'forwarders' tab under the AD controller's object properties in DNS manager. (never seems to work real well in my experience)
- other?