DNSsec
The DNS client in Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 and the DNS server in Windows Server 2080 R2 support DNS Security Extensions (DNSSECs) as per RFCs 4033, 4034, and 4035 to validate the integrity of DNS records. By validating that a DNS record was generated by the authoritative DNS server and that the DNS record has not been modified, Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 can validate the integrity of DNS responses.
With DNSsec, authoritative DNS servers running Windows Server 2008 R2 that support DNSSEC will sign a DNS zone cryptographically to generate digital signatures for all the resource records in the zone. Other DNS servers can verify that a DNS record was signed by the authoritative DNS server and that it has not been modified. The DNS client running Windows 7 is DNSSEC-aware and relies on its local DNS server for DNSSEC validation.
In this tutorial:
- Configuring Windows Networking
- Usability Improvements
- Network And Sharing Center
- Network Explorer
- How Windows Finds Network Resources
- How Windows Publishes Network Resources
- How Windows Creates the Network Map
- Network Map
- Set Up A Connection Or Network Wizard
- Manageability Improvements
- Network Location Types
- Policy-Based QoS
- Selecting DSCP Values
- Planning Traffic Throttling
- Configuring QoS Policies
- Configuring System-Wide QoS Settings
- Configuring Advanced QoS Settings
- Testing QoS
- Windows Firewall and IPsec
- Windows Connect Now in Windows 7
- Core Networking Improvements
- Networking BranchCache
- How Hosted Cache Works
- How Distributed Cache Works
- Configuring BranchCache
- BranchCache Protocols
- File Sharing Using SMB
- Web Browsing with HTTP (Including HTTPS)
- DNSsec
- GreenIT
- Efficient Networking
- What Causes Latency, How to Measure It, and How to Control It
- TCP Receive Window Scaling
- Scalable Networking
- Improved Reliability
- IPv6 Support
- 802.1X Network Authentication
- Server Message Block (SMB) 2.0
- Strong Host Model
- Wireless Networking
- Improved APIs
- Network Awareness
- Improved Peer Networking
- Services Used by Peer-to-Peer Networking
- Managing Peer-to-Peer Networking
- Peer-to-Peer Name Resolution
- EAP Host Architecture
- Layered Service Provider (LSP)
- Windows Sockets Direct Path for System Area Networks
- How to Configure Wireless Settings
- Configuring Wireless Settings Manually
- Using Group Policy to Configure Wireless Settings
- How to Configure TCP/IP
- DHCP
- Configuring IP Addresses Manually
- Command Line and Scripts
- How to Connect to AD DS Domains
- How to Connect to a Domain When 802.1X Authentication Is Not Enabled
- How to Connect to a Domain When 802.1X Authentication Is Enabled