Windows Server 2003 security infrastructures /
Windows Server 2003 Security Infrastructures is a must for anyone that wants to know the nuts and bolts of Windows Server 2003 security and wants to leverage the operating system's security infrastructure components to build a more secure I.T. infrastructure. The primary goal of this book is to...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Boston, Mass. :
Digital Press, an imprint of Elsevier,
�2004.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Foreword by Tony Redmond
- Foreword by Mark Mortimore
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter 1. The Challenge of Trusted Security Infrastructures
- 1.1 Introduction
- 1.2 Positioning trusted security infrastructures
- 1.3 The fundamental role of trust
- 1.4 TSI roles
- 1.5 The long road toward unified TSI solutions
- 1.6 Microsoft and the challenge of TSIs
- 1.7 Conclusion
- Chapter 2. Windows Security Authorities and Principals
- 2.1 Security authorities
- 2.2 Security principals
- Chapter 3. Windows Trust Relationships
- 3.1 Defining trust relationships
- 3.2 Trust properties and types
- 3.3 Trust relationships: Under the hood
- 3.4 Forest trust
- 3.5 Trusts and secure channels
- 3.6 Trusts and firewalls
- Chapter 4. Introducing Windows Authentication
- 4.1 Authentication infrastructure terminology
- 4.2 Qualifying authentication
- 4.3 Authentication authentication architecture
- 4.4 Authentication in the Windows machine startup and user logon sequences
- 4.5 NTLM-based authentication
- 4.6 Secondary logon service
- 4.7 Anonymous access
- 4.8 Credential caching
- 4.9 General authentication troubleshooting
- 4.10 What's coming up in the next chapters?
- Chapter 5. Kerberos
- 5.1 Introducing Kerberos
- 5.2 Kerberos: The basic protocol
- 5.3 Logging on to windows using Kerberos
- 5.4 Advanced Kerberos topics
- 5.5 Kerberos configuration
- 5.6 Kerberos and authentication troubleshooting
- 5.7 Kerberos interoperability
- Chapter 6. IIS Authentication
- 6.1 Secure by default in IIS 6.0
- 6.2 Introducing IIS authentication
- 6.3 HTTP authentication
- 6.4 Integrated Windows authentication
- 6.5 Passport-based authentication
- 6.6 Certificate-based authentication
- 6.7 IIS Authentication method comparison
- Chapter 7. Microsoft Passport
- 7.1 Passport-enabling Web technologies
- 7.2 Passport infrastructure
- 7.3 Basic passport authentication exchange
- 7.4 XP and Windows Server 2003 changes
- 7.5 Passport cookies
- 7.6 Passport authentication revisited
- 7.7 Passport and the privacy of user information
- 7.8 Passport integration in Windows Server 2003
- 7.9 Passport futures
- Chapter 8. UNIX and Windows Authentication Interoperability
- 8.1 Comparing Windows and UNIX authentication
- 8.2 Interoperability enabling technologies
- 8.3 UNIX security-related concepts
- 8.4 Windows and UNIX account management and authentication integration approaches
- 8.5 Summary
- Chapter 9. Single Sign-On
- 9.1 Single sign-on: Pros and cons
- 9.2 SSO architectures
- 9.3 Extending SSO
- 9.4 SSO technologies in Windows Server 2003 and XP
- 9.5 Summary
- Chapter 10. Windows Server 2003 Authorization
- 10.1 Authorization basics
- 10.2 The Windows authorization model
- 10.3 Windows 2000 authorization changes
- 10.4 Windows Server 2003 authorization changes
- 10.5 Authorization intermediaries
- T$102.