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MCITP: Enterprise Administrator - Windows Server 2008 Training | MCITP: Enterprise Administrator - Windows Server 2008 Boot Camp | MCITP: Enterprise Administrator - Windows Server 2008 Training Course
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MCITP: Enterprise Administrator Certification Training Windows Server 2008

MCITP: Enterprise Administrator is the equivalent of MCSE for Windows Server 2008.

MCITP: Enterprise Administrator training boot camp validates your ability to:

  • Design Windows Server infrastructures, evaluate and recommend new technology solutions

  • Serve as an escalation point for infrastructure issues

  • Develop client and server best practices for other teams, such as engineering, development, and operations

  • Keep policy current for authentication, identity, and access management

  • Provide guidance in implementing security policies that affect the infrastructure on multiple levels

  • Participate in application reviews on security and

  • Ensure that the applications adhere to standard security guidelines and practices.

 

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Windows 2003 SP1 Security Configuration Wizard and Exchange servers
Now that Windows 2003 SP1 is out, I wanted to mention a tool that has shipped as part of Windows 2003 SP1. While the tool itself is not installed by SP1, the shortcut to the Help file is placed on the server desktop when SP1 is installed.

What does that have to do with Exchange? About the tool:

Security Configuration Wizard (SCW) is an attack surface reduction tool that is part of Windows Server 2003 SP1. SCW uses a roles-based metaphor (e.g. "File Server", "Web Server", "Domain Controller", etc.) to determine the desired functionality of a particular type of server, then disables functionality that is not required for the role(s) the server needs to perform. Specifically, SCW:

- Disables unneeded services
- Blocks unused ports
- Allows further (address or security) restrictions for ports that are left open
- Prohibits unnecessary web extensions (if running IIS)
- Reduces Protocol Exposure (SMB, LanMan, LDAP)
- Defines an Audit Policy

SCW guides you through the process of creating, editing, applying, or rolling back a security policy based on the selected roles of the server. The security policies that are created with SCW are XML files that, when applied, configure services, network security, specific registry values, audit policy, and if applicable, Internet Information Services (IIS).

So - really, what does all this have to do with Exchange, you ask?

There is a known issue with Exchange server installed into a non-default path (something other than %ProgramFiles%\Exchsrvr) where SCW is run and application of resultant policy might cause Exchange Server not to be accessible by clients anymore. The possible gotcha is in the "Network Security" portion of SCW which configures the Windows Firewall. This portion of SCW is used to turn on and add exceptions to the Windows Firewall. Exceptions are added by pointing the Windows Firewall to the EXE file to the application that is exempt from firewall blocking. SCW however expects those applications (in our case - services) to be in their default installation paths.