Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment
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@pmoncho said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@dashrender said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@pmoncho said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@pmoncho said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
just challenging the "most commonly correct approach" statement
It seems you are mistaking the "most common approach" with the "most common correct approach". I haven't been around the SMB as much as JB, but I'm assuming the most common approach to SMB DC implementations are incorrect. Meaning, 2+ DCs are being used when 1 should be used. Perhaps two DCs are used because so many other things are done incorrectly, it's thought 1 should't be used due to so many other things not properly in place, but that's besides the point in my reply here.
IMHO, SMB's use 2 DC's (me included) because it is drilled over and over in our heads by outside forces, including the application developers and the OS companies themselves. On top of that, we are completely stupid if we don't have a second DC if the hardware is available. So to follow "Best Practices," SMB's just do it. It doesn't necessarily mean that things are done incorrectly though. It mostly means, we (aka I) have an extra DC there sitting, waiting, getting monthly updates and then gather more dust for years on end all in the name of protection and risk reduction.
That is why coming here and having extensive discussions about general topics has helped me changed my own thoughts about system/network design in SMB's.
Then I assume you have an extra everything if it costs less than $5k, correct? Especially if other things depend on it... such as redundant ISP, all redundant switches, definitely redundant LoB services, etc... if not, why choose only a DC over things that would be way more beneficial to have HA? If you have extra hardware, extra software, etc... that would go unused and be wasted otherwise, then sure, it could make more sense, but could still cause the same amount of benefits and negatives.
Just because a company has an extra DC doesn't mean every process/product/connection needs to be duplicated. If there are two hosts an extra DC is peanuts. No $5K is needed, $800 tops and there is value (reduced risk) in that $800. Plus, as been mentioned, ceasing roles is less time and MUCH less panic than restoring a VM.
Theres so much more though - now you have to make sure there are no replication issues, and you should likely be backing up that VM (it is a VM, right?) also. You could do it free, but assuming you're using a backup product, that might require another license because it's another box, so more costs. It's also additional time doing updates, 2 boxes vs 1.
In the scenario of 2 DC's, the VM would be backed up but is it worth it? Restoring a DC VM with multiple DC's has a higher probability of creating replication issues.
- In the times worked in environments with multiple AD controllers (2 at my last job, and 6 here), when a DC fails, you don't restore it. You seize the FSMO and other roles with the remaining good DC. Then you do a fresh install and reuse the name of the crashed DC.
If an SMB cannot afford a 2nd DC, then they definitely cannot afford a test environment. So all updates are run directly on production servers. We all know MS can really fork up and update or two.
- In a single AD Server environment, you would take snapshots of your AD Server before doing updates.
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@dafyre said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@pmoncho said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@dashrender said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@pmoncho said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@pmoncho said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
just challenging the "most commonly correct approach" statement
It seems you are mistaking the "most common approach" with the "most common correct approach". I haven't been around the SMB as much as JB, but I'm assuming the most common approach to SMB DC implementations are incorrect. Meaning, 2+ DCs are being used when 1 should be used. Perhaps two DCs are used because so many other things are done incorrectly, it's thought 1 should't be used due to so many other things not properly in place, but that's besides the point in my reply here.
IMHO, SMB's use 2 DC's (me included) because it is drilled over and over in our heads by outside forces, including the application developers and the OS companies themselves. On top of that, we are completely stupid if we don't have a second DC if the hardware is available. So to follow "Best Practices," SMB's just do it. It doesn't necessarily mean that things are done incorrectly though. It mostly means, we (aka I) have an extra DC there sitting, waiting, getting monthly updates and then gather more dust for years on end all in the name of protection and risk reduction.
That is why coming here and having extensive discussions about general topics has helped me changed my own thoughts about system/network design in SMB's.
Then I assume you have an extra everything if it costs less than $5k, correct? Especially if other things depend on it... such as redundant ISP, all redundant switches, definitely redundant LoB services, etc... if not, why choose only a DC over things that would be way more beneficial to have HA? If you have extra hardware, extra software, etc... that would go unused and be wasted otherwise, then sure, it could make more sense, but could still cause the same amount of benefits and negatives.
Just because a company has an extra DC doesn't mean every process/product/connection needs to be duplicated. If there are two hosts an extra DC is peanuts. No $5K is needed, $800 tops and there is value (reduced risk) in that $800. Plus, as been mentioned, ceasing roles is less time and MUCH less panic than restoring a VM.
Theres so much more though - now you have to make sure there are no replication issues, and you should likely be backing up that VM (it is a VM, right?) also. You could do it free, but assuming you're using a backup product, that might require another license because it's another box, so more costs. It's also additional time doing updates, 2 boxes vs 1.
In the scenario of 2 DC's, the VM would be backed up but is it worth it? Restoring a DC VM with multiple DC's has a higher probability of creating replication issues.
- In the times worked in environments with multiple AD controllers (2 at my last job, and 6 here), when a DC fails, you don't restore it. You seize the FSMO and other roles with the remaining good DC. Then you do a fresh install and reuse the name of the crashed DC.
I agree wholeheartedly. Just seize and remove bad DC and be done. Bring up new DC later during down time.
If an SMB cannot afford a 2nd DC, then they definitely cannot afford a test environment. So all updates are run directly on production servers. We all know MS can really fork up and update or two.
- In a single AD Server environment, you would take snapshots of your AD Server before doing updates.
Snapshot is fine if issues appear immediately which they mostly do. What happens if it appears 1-3 days later? Then issues are compounded. Unless their is a huge vulnerability that needs patched, I wait at least till Sat for initial update and then the rest of production servers days later.
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@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@scottalanmiller said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
By now, hopefully everyone knows that in the SMB having only a single Active Directory Domain Controller, for those companies that truly need AD in the first place, isn't just acceptable but is the most commonly correct approach, since AD failover often has almost no value, but a second DC generally is expensive (there are exceptions to both cases, of course.)
But this brings up (and brought up in an offline discussion) a concern around when your AD server is also your DNS server, how do you handle DNS failover, rather than AD failover, when they are tied together?
I'm not sure you ever addressed my contentions to your opening statement. There was a lot of discussion that went back and forth, but I was responding to your initial statement that a single AD DC is "most commonly correct approach" based on cost and lack of value. My long post was showing that the cost of it disappears very quickly in an outage in the typical SMB. If things are properly configured and laid out those costs can be mitigated, but also at a cost. I don't buy the "most commonly correct approach" statement based on common implementations. Maybe common ML IT pro implementations, but not generally. Not so I would want to recommend it as a best practice which the language of your statement appears to assert.
I see what you are saying. But nothing I said in any way suggested it was Best Practice, not in the least. A Best Practice means "essentially always correct", which is nothing whatsoever like I said. There can be no best practice with something where there is any reasonable possibility of discussion.
"We should take backups of critical data." Now that's a best practice. There is no reasonable scenario or discussion about when not to do it.
"We should use RAID 10 with spinning disks." Is not a best practice, it's an overgeneralized rule of thumb. A good starting point for discussion, yes, but in no way a best practice, because there are real world scenarios (and lots of them) where it isn't the best option.
In the SMB, what I said was that a single controller was the most often correct choice - that only means that 51% or more of the time that it is a better choice than having two. That doesn't imply that having two isn't the best choice 49% if the time. That's nothing like a best practice.
And what is best for a business in no way implies what is actually done. Most (nearly all) companies do things, and IT especially, very badly. The assumption is that nearly all AD implementations are "over the top" and have wasted money in the SMB. That someone put in two doesn't tell us that they should have two, only that they did it. But if we analyze their risk and needs, I contend that most SMBs should have only one if doing the best thing for their business.
But we must never mix the idea of most (which means 51% or more) or most common (which means largest percentage out of a range of potential options, so can be the highest statistical total without hitting the 50% mark), with Best Practice (which implies roughly three nines or more of applicability.) Very different things.
With a "most" we still expect up to essentially half of all scenarios not to agree. With a BA, we expect to never find even one.
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@dashrender said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@dashrender said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@scottalanmiller said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
By now, hopefully everyone knows that in the SMB having only a single Active Directory Domain Controller, for those companies that truly need AD in the first place, isn't just acceptable but is the most commonly correct approach, since AD failover often has almost no value, but a second DC generally is expensive (there are exceptions to both cases, of course.)
But this brings up (and brought up in an offline discussion) a concern around when your AD server is also your DNS server, how do you handle DNS failover, rather than AD failover, when they are tied together?
I'm not sure you ever addressed my contentions to your opening statement. There was a lot of discussion that went back and forth, but I was responding to your initial statement that a single AD DC is "most commonly correct approach" based on cost and lack of value. My long post was showing that the cost of it disappears very quickly in an outage in the typical SMB. If things are properly configured and laid out those costs can be mitigated, but also at a cost. I don't buy the "most commonly correct approach" statement based on common implementations. Maybe common ML IT pro implementations, but not generally. Not so I would want to recommend it as a best practice which the language of your statement appears to assert.
Sure - but you can't include bad "common" implementations in a conversation like this.
Not sure what you're getting at. Scott is stating that a single AD DC is the "most commonly correct approach" based on costs vs risks. My postulation is that this not necessarily correct in the majority of implementations. Even a perfect implementation that mitigates entirely the risks of not having a failover DC carries costs that can remove any benefits gained.
What expenses are you going to have, in a SMB, that are generally going to outweigh the costs of that DC?
If we limit ourselves only to a DC with AD, DNS and DHCP on it, we've show how easy it is to mitigate those specific situations. Now if you have other things tied to AD, that's when you have a possible point where a second DC makes sense.
And in the SMB, what we see anecdotally and logically, is that most implementations tie very little to AD. The most common SMB scenarios are very small businesses using AD for only desktop management. Adding in other third party services is common, but not the majority, I don't believe, and is mostly larger SMBs. Smaller SMBs, which are a much larger total volume per "company count" do the simpler deployments.
To the point that as Jared mentioned, Microsoft built a natural "one DC" product just for that market.
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@pmoncho said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
In the scenario of 2 DC's, the VM would be backed up but is it worth it? Restoring a DC VM with multiple DC's has a higher probability of creating replication issues.
I thought this was resolved in Windows Server 2016? I.e. a restored DC would check with the other DCs and see that it was behind, and assuming authentication was still valid, it would update itself from the other DCs?
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@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@jaredbusch said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@jaredbusch said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
Maybe common ML IT pro implementations, but not generally.
I've been doing it since Server 2003 days.
This was the entire point of the Windows SBS model from 2003 through 2011.
So I think you have blinders on to claim it is only Scott or only ML.
Either I'm not communicating well, or I'm misunderstanding what y'all are getting at. Can you clarify what you mean?
I’ve been implementing single AD DC stacks for years in the methods described here.
I have been using various techniques for handling failure of the services on them for all of that time. The router based strategy I posted above for DNS is something I first used in 2007. It included disabled, but configured, DHCP also.
Is that more clear? Or am I misunderstanding you completely?
It seems like my point is being missed by specifying in response to my generalities. I entered the discussion to address a generality made by @scottalanmiller, because frequently the things he states as definites become rules of thumb for the less experienced. They are frequently nuanced in later posts, but sometimes only after being challenged.
Anyhow, I am open to having my assumptions and math challenged in the generalities, but the responses have all been specific. My point was that making a rule of thumb out of the single AD DC design is dangerous because of how quickly the costs of downtime and configuration can make it cost effective. Not that single AD DC is not a good solution, or that it can be done well, just challenging the "most commonly correct approach" statement with a framework of assumptions so that we could establish common ground on where we were each drawing our conclusions.
I don't think that I do this as often as people claim that I have. I didn't state a rule of thumb nor a best practice here. I simply stated the majority case, which is not either of those two things.
I have found it incredibly common for me to state a statistical majority or similar, basically any time I state that something is common but unpopular, and people think I've said it is something that everyone should do when I've said nothing like that whatsoever.
Go back and read my original posts. I was very clear that it was only the majority case. That's standard math, not something I would need to explain as nuance.
If your point was that we shouldn't make a rule, you are correct and I agree. That's why no one made one, though. So your argument is with a perceived position that I don't think anyone here had and definitely is not something I had said or implied.
The point of knowing that the single AD is the majority (or if I am wrong, a huge minority) is good for understanding that we must always consider it a viable option to consider, instead of dismissing it as so many people do, because most people in IT blindly believe the opposite to be true - that you need two AD DCs and that it is more than a rule of thumb, but a best practice. I've seen that stated a ridiculous number of times.
Pointing out that what people believe to be a BP actually violates what we believe is the majority case only tells us how much it isn't a BP, but never tells us that the opposite must then be a BP. The only true best practice here is "you must always evaluate your specific needs."
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@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
just challenging the "most commonly correct approach" statement
It seems you are mistaking the "most common approach" with the "most common correct approach". I haven't been around the SMB as much as JB, but I'm assuming the most common approach to SMB DC implementations are incorrect. Meaning, 2+ DCs are being used when 1 should be used. Perhaps two DCs are used because so many other things are done incorrectly, it's thought 1 should't be used due to so many other things not properly in place, but that's besides the point in my reply here.
Jared and I are meaning, I believe, that one AD DC is most common correct. That's certainly what I meant (and think that I said.) I also believe most shops get things wrong, so finding the most common correct to also be the most common implementation is not something I generaly expect in any endeavor.
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@pmoncho said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
just challenging the "most commonly correct approach" statement
It seems you are mistaking the "most common approach" with the "most common correct approach". I haven't been around the SMB as much as JB, but I'm assuming the most common approach to SMB DC implementations are incorrect. Meaning, 2+ DCs are being used when 1 should be used. Perhaps two DCs are used because so many other things are done incorrectly, it's thought 1 should't be used due to so many other things not properly in place, but that's besides the point in my reply here.
IMHO, SMB's use 2 DC's (me included) because it is drilled over and over in our heads by outside forces, including the application developers and the OS companies themselves. On top of that, we are completely stupid if we don't have a second DC if the hardware is available. So to follow "Best Practices," SMB's just do it. It doesn't necessarily mean that things are done incorrectly though. It mostly means, we (aka I) have an extra DC there sitting, waiting, getting monthly updates and then gather more dust for years on end all in the name of protection and risk reduction.
That is why coming here and having extensive discussions about general topics has helped me changed my own thoughts about system/network design in SMB's.
Exactly. I know in other communities and in vendor sales white papers, it is stated as a Best Practice, blindly and without any acknowledgement as to why it goes against basic business practice (which is to never do HA without evaluation. HA is basically never the default business case.)
That false Best Practice mantra is so strong, that's why standing up to it feels like something crazy and people think you must be insane to suggest it isn't true.
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@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@pmoncho said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
just challenging the "most commonly correct approach" statement
It seems you are mistaking the "most common approach" with the "most common correct approach". I haven't been around the SMB as much as JB, but I'm assuming the most common approach to SMB DC implementations are incorrect. Meaning, 2+ DCs are being used when 1 should be used. Perhaps two DCs are used because so many other things are done incorrectly, it's thought 1 should't be used due to so many other things not properly in place, but that's besides the point in my reply here.
IMHO, SMB's use 2 DC's (me included) because it is drilled over and over in our heads by outside forces, including the application developers and the OS companies themselves. On top of that, we are completely stupid if we don't have a second DC if the hardware is available. So to follow "Best Practices," SMB's just do it. It doesn't necessarily mean that things are done incorrectly though. It mostly means, we (aka I) have an extra DC there sitting, waiting, getting monthly updates and then gather more dust for years on end all in the name of protection and risk reduction.
That is why coming here and having extensive discussions about general topics has helped me changed my own thoughts about system/network design in SMB's.
Then I assume you have an extra everything if it costs less than $5k, correct? Especially if other things depend on it... such as redundant ISP, all redundant switches, definitely redundant LoB services, etc... if not, why choose only a DC over things that would be way more beneficial to have HA? If you have extra hardware, extra software, etc... that would go unused and be wasted otherwise, then sure, it could make more sense, but could still cause the same amount of benefits and negatives.
If the FSMO role holder goes down, it will take way longer ceasing those roles to DC2 and fixing all these troubles, than it would to simply restore a DC VM from backup. I understand IT may not be there, and some shops only have one IT employee, if any, but there are ways to become non-dependent on AD/DNS/DHCP etc so that an SMB can run for a while during the absence of someone coming to fix it.
If the cost of the outage and the simplicity of bringing it back up again is worth the redundancy. Seizing roles takes almost no time. Certainly less than restoring a VM.
If cost were not in the equation an organization would be foolish not to have a second DC. If the cost of the outage compared to the cost of the second DC approach zero then it would be foolish not to have one. That is my point. Yes, vendors have pushed more software on companies that don't need it, but I was contesting that a single DC scenario is the most commonly correct deployment, and using math rather than anecdotal or speculation to look at the two costs.
I've never tried it, but it seems like FSMO Seizure and/or Automatic AD DC restoration, could be automated to make both insanely fast, like a couple minutes with no IT intervention.
Anyone tried either?
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@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
But generally, setting things up correctly from the start, means a single DC implementation for an SMB is best practice, unless there are other factors requiring you to have two.
No, absolutely not a best practice. "Most common correct practice" meaning it is the right solution for the majority (51% or more) yes, BP, no. BP requires that there be no reasonable exceptions. I'd not even call a single DC a rule of thumb, it's not that strong.
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@scottalanmiller said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
But generally, setting things up correctly from the start, means a single DC implementation for an SMB is best practice, unless there are other factors requiring you to have two.
No, absolutely not a best practice. "Most common correct practice" meaning it is the right solution for the majority (51% or more) yes, BP, no. BP requires that there be no reasonable exceptions. I'd not even call a single DC a rule of thumb, it's not that strong.
Well - for it to gain any real traction, it needs to be something, some catchy name. say - The place an SMB always starts? ok horrible name.
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@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@pmoncho said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
just challenging the "most commonly correct approach" statement
It seems you are mistaking the "most common approach" with the "most common correct approach". I haven't been around the SMB as much as JB, but I'm assuming the most common approach to SMB DC implementations are incorrect. Meaning, 2+ DCs are being used when 1 should be used. Perhaps two DCs are used because so many other things are done incorrectly, it's thought 1 should't be used due to so many other things not properly in place, but that's besides the point in my reply here.
IMHO, SMB's use 2 DC's (me included) because it is drilled over and over in our heads by outside forces, including the application developers and the OS companies themselves. On top of that, we are completely stupid if we don't have a second DC if the hardware is available. So to follow "Best Practices," SMB's just do it. It doesn't necessarily mean that things are done incorrectly though. It mostly means, we (aka I) have an extra DC there sitting, waiting, getting monthly updates and then gather more dust for years on end all in the name of protection and risk reduction.
That is why coming here and having extensive discussions about general topics has helped me changed my own thoughts about system/network design in SMB's.
Then I assume you have an extra everything if it costs less than $5k, correct? Especially if other things depend on it... such as redundant ISP, all redundant switches, definitely redundant LoB services, etc... if not, why choose only a DC over things that would be way more beneficial to have HA? If you have extra hardware, extra software, etc... that would go unused and be wasted otherwise, then sure, it could make more sense, but could still cause the same amount of benefits and negatives.
If the FSMO role holder goes down, it will take way longer ceasing those roles to DC2 and fixing all these troubles, than it would to simply restore a DC VM from backup. I understand IT may not be there, and some shops only have one IT employee, if any, but there are ways to become non-dependent on AD/DNS/DHCP etc so that an SMB can run for a while during the absence of someone coming to fix it.
If the cost of the outage and the simplicity of bringing it back up again is worth the redundancy. Seizing roles takes almost no time. Certainly less than restoring a VM.
If cost were not in the equation an organization would be foolish not to have a second DC. If the cost of the outage compared to the cost of the second DC approach zero then it would be foolish not to have one. That is my point. Yes, vendors have pushed more software on companies that don't need it, but I was contesting that a single DC scenario is the most commonly correct deployment, and using math rather than anecdotal or speculation to look at the two costs.
I could hurt a 10-man shop, or it couldn't. But generally, setting things up correctly from the start, means a single DC implementation for an SMB is best practice, unless there are other factors requiring you to have two.
I'm getting the feeling that I'm not communicating very well with you...
So why is a single DC best practice? @scottalanmiller indicated it was cost relative to ROI. My contention is that the ROI has the potential to be realized sufficiently quickly so as to not make it a best practice. A good baseline maybe, but not a best practice.
Yes, but I said nothing about it being anything like a best practice. Hence why your assertions that there were other cases seemed like a bizarre argument as it wasn't contradicting anything I had said. Now that I realize you perceived a suggestion of best practice, your posts make more sense. It's not what I had suggested, so they don't disagree with me. But at least now I know why you were arguing - because I had no idea at all before.
The way that you presented it, it seemed like you were saying we could never use a single AD approach because there were "some cases" where you needed two. But it was because you thought you were trying to break a "best practice" by showing a case where it wasn't true. But since BP wasn't stated (or implied) arguing that there was an exception looked like you were saying that we always had to have two, since we had never said otherwise.
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@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
If you start from teh beginning with a LANless design, there's no way a 2nd DC (let alone a single one) financially makes sense. But if you start 10 years in after shit's hit the fan, then definitely keep the 2+ DCs already in place.
There are plenty of cases where it makes sense, but LANless doesn't let you use AD at all, since AD is LAN-based. But that's a different discussion.
There are loads of good one AND more than one AD implementations. Single is just, we believe, the more common of the two in the SMB.
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@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@black3dynamite said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
If the domain controller is down, will that prevent users from accessing DFS file shares?
It will prevent them from resolving the DNS name of the DFS share at a minimum. Access going down will probably depend on the AD policy for how long the user authentication token is retained and when they last accessed the file share.
That's only if DNS is down, not AD. There are simple ways with a single AD controller to allow DNS to keep working. That was the crux of this thread. Not to discuss if a single or dual AD DCs was appropriate, but when you only have one, how to keep DNS working.
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@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@pmoncho said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
just challenging the "most commonly correct approach" statement
It seems you are mistaking the "most common approach" with the "most common correct approach". I haven't been around the SMB as much as JB, but I'm assuming the most common approach to SMB DC implementations are incorrect. Meaning, 2+ DCs are being used when 1 should be used. Perhaps two DCs are used because so many other things are done incorrectly, it's thought 1 should't be used due to so many other things not properly in place, but that's besides the point in my reply here.
IMHO, SMB's use 2 DC's (me included) because it is drilled over and over in our heads by outside forces, including the application developers and the OS companies themselves. On top of that, we are completely stupid if we don't have a second DC if the hardware is available. So to follow "Best Practices," SMB's just do it. It doesn't necessarily mean that things are done incorrectly though. It mostly means, we (aka I) have an extra DC there sitting, waiting, getting monthly updates and then gather more dust for years on end all in the name of protection and risk reduction.
That is why coming here and having extensive discussions about general topics has helped me changed my own thoughts about system/network design in SMB's.
Then I assume you have an extra everything if it costs less than $5k, correct? Especially if other things depend on it... such as redundant ISP, all redundant switches, definitely redundant LoB services, etc... if not, why choose only a DC over things that would be way more beneficial to have HA? If you have extra hardware, extra software, etc... that would go unused and be wasted otherwise, then sure, it could make more sense, but could still cause the same amount of benefits and negatives.
If the FSMO role holder goes down, it will take way longer ceasing those roles to DC2 and fixing all these troubles, than it would to simply restore a DC VM from backup. I understand IT may not be there, and some shops only have one IT employee, if any, but there are ways to become non-dependent on AD/DNS/DHCP etc so that an SMB can run for a while during the absence of someone coming to fix it.
If the cost of the outage and the simplicity of bringing it back up again is worth the redundancy. Seizing roles takes almost no time. Certainly less than restoring a VM.
If cost were not in the equation an organization would be foolish not to have a second DC. If the cost of the outage compared to the cost of the second DC approach zero then it would be foolish not to have one. That is my point. Yes, vendors have pushed more software on companies that don't need it, but I was contesting that a single DC scenario is the most commonly correct deployment, and using math rather than anecdotal or speculation to look at the two costs.
I could hurt a 10-man shop, or it couldn't. But generally, setting things up correctly from the start, means a single DC implementation for an SMB is best practice, unless there are other factors requiring you to have two.
I'm getting the feeling that I'm not communicating very well with you...
So why is a single DC best practice? @scottalanmiller indicated it was cost relative to ROI. My contention is that the ROI has the potential to be realized sufficiently quickly so as to not make it a best practice. A good baseline maybe, but not a best practice.
Because the cost isn't what you make it out to be, and it depends on a lot of things, and at what point in time you are "snapshotting" the infrastructure to make the call of whether or not a single DC is worth it.
You're right. The cost of the second DC is significantly less than I quoted in my first post. Assuming that I have zero extra hardware I could purchase a "server" for less than $500 and a Server Essentials license for $350 (https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=1B4-003A-00063). $850 goes poof very fast when there is a hiccup if you have a single service reliant on realtime AD authentication or DNS for internal resolution.
You can't use Essentials that way. Only one Essentials license per company. And it has to be the root of the forest. So it has to be your first controller. If you do a second AD DC with an Essentials domain, then you can't use Essentials for that second one, it has to be Standard or higher. So the cost has to be the full $800 or whatever.
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@dbeato said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
I do also understand that all SMBs are not equal, some may be running software that absolutely requires 99.999 uptime of AD... I get it. Then on the other side I coudl question why something like that was chosen in the first place. There are great alternatives to Windows for SMBs.
When you say they are great alternative to Windows for SMBs, what do you have in mind? Because if you see the SMB landscape you will find the opposite of what you are stating.
There are plenty of alternatives that work REALLY well in the SMB. Just nearly all SMBs don't consider them and lock themselves in to other things. If you were dealing with greenfield, there is nearly no industry or business that needs Windows.
Should have Windows? Maybe most (majority). Need Windows? Nearly none.
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@travisdh1 said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@dbeato said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
I do also understand that all SMBs are not equal, some may be running software that absolutely requires 99.999 uptime of AD... I get it. Then on the other side I coudl question why something like that was chosen in the first place. There are great alternatives to Windows for SMBs.
When you say they are great alternative to Windows for SMBs, what do you have in mind? Because if you see the SMB landscape you will find the opposite of what you are stating.
Just because many places deploy something, doesn't mean it was the right tool to use. There are reasons why so many SMB fail.
Right, SMBs do things REALLY badly on average. Even worse than enterprises, which are also bad on average. The average SMB fails in under two years. So what most "do" is a very bad guideline to follow. Bad decision making is the hallmark of the SMB.
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@dbeato said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@travisdh1 said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@dbeato said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
I do also understand that all SMBs are not equal, some may be running software that absolutely requires 99.999 uptime of AD... I get it. Then on the other side I coudl question why something like that was chosen in the first place. There are great alternatives to Windows for SMBs.
When you say they are great alternative to Windows for SMBs, what do you have in mind? Because if you see the SMB landscape you will find the opposite of what you are stating.
Just because many places deploy something, doesn't mean it was the right tool to use. There are reasons why so many SMB fail.
So what is the answer, that is all I am looking for.
The answer is easy. Both single and dual DCs have their place. Like all HA, you must always evaluate it for your specific business.
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@jaredbusch said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@kelly is certainly right that @scottalanmiller has no facts to support his point of view. He has only provided anecdotal evidence.
I am firmly in the single DC camp, and have been for years. But that does not mean that @kelly's points should be ignored like they are.
Some of you are going in fucking circles.
I didn't ignore his points in the least. They just weren't points that made sense based on what I had said. They were points that matched exactly what I said. So they didn't make sense, which is why he felt like they were ignored. But in no way did I ignore them, it was simply that, in reality, what I had actually said was ignored in the first place.
His points didn't suggest in any way that the original hypothesis was incorrect. So I was unclear what response was desired.
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@dbeato said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@travisdh1 said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@dbeato said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@travisdh1 said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@dbeato said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
@obsolesce said in Handling DNS in a Single Active Directory Domain Controller Environment:
I do also understand that all SMBs are not equal, some may be running software that absolutely requires 99.999 uptime of AD... I get it. Then on the other side I coudl question why something like that was chosen in the first place. There are great alternatives to Windows for SMBs.
When you say they are great alternative to Windows for SMBs, what do you have in mind? Because if you see the SMB landscape you will find the opposite of what you are stating.
Just because many places deploy something, doesn't mean it was the right tool to use. There are reasons why so many SMB fail.
So what is the answer, that is all I am looking for.
Unless you want to provide very specific examples, there won't be "the answer", unless you want a good old 42.
Let's take a greenfield example. I'd use Nethserver and be done with it, if AD services are required. That's a large if tho.
Walking into a place that already has 2016 AD services in place? Then stick with that.
It's all about knowing the different options and the requirements that need to be met.
Sure, which is fine on a recommended basis and that's how you would find out but making generalizations makes it harder to really get to the matter of things. Saying that using Microsoft Windows Server or a Microsoft Environment l or using Linux Server on a Linux or Windows Environment makes a SMB unsuccessful, muddies things.
Most companies are bad. Most companies use Windows. Using Windows isn't suggested to be bad or that using it makes companies bad. Only that both are common and you can't justify the majority use of Windows as being good because most companies are bad so that makes no sense.