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Windows Server Automation with PowerShell Cookbook, Fifth Edition

Windows Server Automation with PowerShell Cookbook, Fifth Edition

By : Thomas Lee
4.7 (21)
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Windows Server Automation with PowerShell Cookbook, Fifth Edition

Windows Server Automation with PowerShell Cookbook, Fifth Edition

4.7 (21)
By: Thomas Lee

Overview of this book

The Windows Server Automation with PowerShell Cookbook is back with a new edition, featuring over 100 PowerShell recipes that will make your day-to-day work easier. This book is designed to help you learn how to install, configure and use PowerShell 7.2 effectively. To start with, we’ll look at how to install and configure PowerShell 7.2, along with useful new features and optimizations, and show you how the PowerShell compatibility solution bridges the gap to older versions of PowerShell. We’ll also be covering a wide range of fundamental and more advanced use cases, including how to create a VM and set up an Azure VPN, as well as looking at how to back up to Azure. As you progress, you’ll explore topics such as using PowerShell to manage networking and DHCP in Windows Server, objects in Active Directory, Hyper-V, and Azure. We’ll also take a closer look at WSUS, containers and see how to handle modules that are not directly compatible with PowerShell 7. Finally, you’ll also learn how to use some powerful tools to diagnose and resolve issues with Windows Server. By the end of this PowerShell book, you’ll know how to use PowerShell 7.2 to automate tasks on Windows Server 2022 with ease, helping your Windows environment to run faster and smoother.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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15
Other Books You May Enjoy
16
Index

Implementing DHCP Fail Over/Load Balancing

As shown in previous recipes, installing and configuring a single on-premises DHCP server is straightforward. However, a single DHCP server represents a single point of failure, which is never a good thing. The solution is always to have a second DHCP server with as much independence as possible from the first server. That would include running the second DHCP service on a separate host (physical or virtual) on different subnets and using independent power and networking components.

In earlier versions of Windows, one approach to fault tolerance was to stand up two DHCP servers and define the necessary scopes on each DHCP host. You split the full set of IP addresses and allowed each server to have part of that set. The traditional 'wisdom' was to do an 80/20 split (have 80% of the scope supplied by your primary DHCP server and 20% on the backup server).

Independent DHCP servers are an error-prone approach and were never ideal since...

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