15.47 © 2004 pearson education, inc. exam 70-290 managing and maintaining a microsoft® windows®...
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15.1 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Internet Information Services (IIS) 6.0 Web server for Windows Server 2003Using IIS, you can publish Web pages and deploy scalable
and reliable Web sitesOptionally installed components
Background Intelligent Transfer Service (BITS) server extensionCommon IIS program filesFile Transfer Protocol ServiceFrontPage 2002 Server Extensions Internet Information Services Manager Internet PrintingNNTP ServiceSMTP ServiceWorld Wide Web Publishing Service
Introducing Internet Information Services 6.0
(Skill 6)
15.2 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
The IIS Admin Service (also referred to as the IIS metabase) is the parent process for all IIS servicesWhen you stop the IIS Admin Service, all other services
are also stopped IIS Admin also supplies the interface that is used to
administer IIS and all of its components In IIS 6.0, the FTP, NNTP, and SMPT services as well as
the IIS Admin service run in Inetinfo.exe, while the WWW service is hosted by the service host (Svchost.exe)
Introducing Internet Information Services 6.0 (2)
(Skill 6)
15.3 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Features Automatic restart: Will automatically restart in the event of a
system failure or when a Web application becomes unavailable Easy access to Web sites: Each Web site has a unique socket
that consists of an IP address and a port number to identify it Scalability: You can assign different ports, IP addresses, or host
header names to each Web site Bandwidth management: The network or Internet connection
used by a Web server is generally also used by multiple services running on the server such as an e-mail service
Reliability: The newly designed request-processing architecture in IIS 6.0 allows Web-based applications to run in an environment in which they are protected from the malfunctions of other applications
Introducing Internet Information Services 6.0 (3)
(Skill 6)
15.4 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-35 The IIS Admin Service Properties dialog box
(Skill 6)
Iisrest.exe is configured to run by default
15.5 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-36 The Add/Edit Web Site Identification dialog box
(Skill 6)
You can assign different ports, IP addresses, or host header names to each Web site so that you can host multiple Web sites on the same Web server
15.6 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
WebDAV (Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning) Is an extension of the HTTP protocol that is used to access
files on a Web server through an HTTP connectionThe HTTP connection enables users to add, modify, and
delete data from Web pages to facilitate Web page authoring
Introducing Internet Information Services 6.0 (4)
(Skill 6)
15.7 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-37 The Performance tab in the Default Web Site Properties dialog box
(Skill 6)
Used to limit the bandwidth used by IIS; if the bandwidth approaches or exceeds this limit, bandwidth throttling delays or ejects IIS service requests until more bandwidth becomes available
15.8 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-38 Configuring an Application Server
(Skill 6)
15.9 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-39 Installing dynamic content tools
(Skill 6)
15.10 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-40 Enabling additional dynamic content tools
(Skill 6)
15.11 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
New accounts The IUSR_<server_name> account is the account used for Anonymous
access to the IIS server The IWAM_<server_name> account is the user account used to start
out-of-process applications The IIS_WPG group account is the worker process group
New services (depending on components installed) FTP Publishing service Network News Transfer Protocol service Simple Mail Transfer Protocol service World Wide Web Publishing service
Newl folders Inetpub Inetsrv Iishelp
Examining IIS Configuration Changes
(Skill 7)
15.12 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-41 IIS user and group accounts
(Skill 7)
15.13 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-42 The World Wide Web Publishing Service
(Skill 7)
15.14 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-43 Inetpub
(Skill 7)
15.15 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-44 The Inheritance Overrides dialog box
(Skill 7)
15.16 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Internet Information Services (IIS) Manager is the main management tool for your Web serverYou can configure properties for an individual site or
for all sites on the serverYou can tune Web site performance based on the
number of visitors expected per dayThe default setting is to accept an unlimited number of
connectionsTo conserve bandwidth, you can limit the number of
connections
Managing IIS
(Skill 8)
15.17 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Security options and authentication methods Integrated Windows authentication is the default selection
It uses either Kerberos or NTLM (also referred to as Windows NT Challenge/Response authentication)
In NTLM, the user name and password are hashed before they are sent
.NET Passport authentication method A user can create a single sign-in name and passport to access
numerous Web sitesThe sites are configured to use the Passport single sign-on service
(SSI)
Managing IIS (2)
(Skill 8)
15.18 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Tabs in the Default Web Site Properties dialog box you can use to configure options HTTP Headers Custom Errors Documents Home Directory ISAPI Filters
Managing IIS (3)
(Skill 8)
15.19 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-45 The Web Site tab
(Skill 8)
By default, the Enable Logging check box and W3C Extended Log File Format are selected; this includes logging for the Time Taken, Client IP Address, Method, URI Stem, and HTTP Status fields
15.20 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-46 The Performance tab
(Skill 8)
You can limit the number of connections your IIS server will accept in order to conserve bandwidth and memory and to protect your Web server from overload attacks
Use to limit the bandwidth of your Web server
15.21 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-47 The Directory Security tab
(Skill 8)
Click to start the Web Server Certificate Wizard
Click to disable anonymous access or edit the authentication method
15.22 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-48 The Authentication Methods dialog box
(Skill 8)
Clear to disable anonymous access
Select to have user’s credentials sent as an MD5 message digest hash
15.23 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-49 .NET Passport Authentication
(Skill 8)
15.24 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-50 The Deny Access dialog box
(Skill 8)
15.25 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-51 The HTTP Headers tab
(Skill 8)
15.26 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-52 The Content Ratings dialog box
(Skill 8)
15.27 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
IIS backupsCan be used to restore only the IIS configurations, not the
content files or Registry settingsCreate copies of the metabase configuration file
(MetaBase.xml) and the metabase schema file (MBschema.xml
The metabase files are stored in the folder %systemroot%\system32\inetsrv
Managing IIS (4)
(Skill 8)
15.28 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-53 The Custom Errors tab
(Skill 8)
15.29 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-54 The Edit Custom Error Properties dialog box
(Skill 8)
15.30 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-55 The ISAPI Filters tab
(Skill 8)
15.31 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-56 The Configuration Backup/Restore dialog box
(Skill 8)
Automatic Backups
15.32 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
You can use two types of permissions to control access to the resources on your Web serverWeb permissions apply to all HTTP clients and determine
the level of access to server resources NTFS permissions detail the level of access individual
users or groups can have for files and folders on the Web server
Auditing allows you to monitor Web site usage to maintain the security of the Web server and to track the activities users perform on the site
Configuring IIS Security
(Skill 9)
15.33 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-57 Setting Execute permissions
(Skill 9)
Use if the directory has no executable files so the server will not run scripts or executable files in the directory
Use when other types of executable files can run on the server; the types of applications that can be run will not be limited to the Application Mappings list as they are for the Scripts only permission
Use if only scripts such as .asp files can run on the server; the server will be able to execute only the script types you have defined
15.34 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-58 The Application Configuration dialog box
(Skill 9)
When you use the Scripts only Execute permission, the server will be able to execute only those script types you have defined on the Application Mappings list
15.35 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Certificates In IIS, digital identification files called certificates can be
used to authenticate both the client and the serverYou use the Web Server Certificate Wizard to request
certificates, apply certificates, and to remove them from a Web site
Client certificates: Optionally, part of the SSL Handshake Protocol can include client authentication to the server to validate users who are asking for data from your Web site
Client Certificate mapping: Another method is to map client certificates to Windows user accounts on the Web server
Configuring IIS Security (2)
(Skill 9)
15.36 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-59 The Logging Properties dialog box
(Skill 9)
15.37 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-60 The Web Server Certificate Wizard
(Skill 9)
15.38 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-61 The location of SSL within the TCP/IP Protocol suite
(Skill 9)
15.39 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-62 SSL Protocol layers
(Skill 9)
15.40 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-63 How SSL authenticates the server to the client
(Skill 9)
15.41 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
EncryptionEncryption is essential if sensitive data such as credit card
information and personal data, including addresses and phone numbers, is being transmitted
The SSL 3.0 protocol is the basis for IIS encryptionThe default secure communication settings for an IIS Web
server requires that the user’s Web browser support a session key strength of 40 bits or above
Configuring IIS Security (3)
(Skill 9)
15.42 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-64 The Secure Communications dialog box
(Skill 9)
This is the Windows Server 2003 default for SSL secure communication sessions; users must have a browser that supports a 128-bit session key in order to create an encrypted channel with your server
15.43 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-65 Allowing directory settings to override Web site settings
(Skill 9)
Click to select all of the child nodes and apply the site setting to the directories
15.44 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
IIS supports the hosting of multiple Web sites on a single Web server, so you can add new Web and FTP sites in addition to the defaults
By default, the home directory for the WWW service is %systemroot%\Inetpub\wwwroot
The default FTP service home directory is %systemroot%\InetPub\Ftproot
A virtual directory is used to make a directory “appear” to be within the home directory, when it really isn’t
Administering the Web Environment
(Skill 10)
15.45 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-66 Default WWW service home directory
(Skill 10)
15.46 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-67 Default FTP service home directory
(Skill 10)
15.47 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-68 The Web Site Creation Wizard
(Skill 10)
15.48 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-69 The Web Site Description screen
(Skill 10)
15.49 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-70 The IP Address and Port Settings screen
(Skill 10)
15.50 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-71 The Web Site Home Directory screen
(Skill 10)
15.51 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-72 Specifying the path to the virtual directory
(Skill 10)
15.52 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-73 Setting Virtual Directory Access Permissions
(Skill 10)
15.53 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-74 Viewing the new Web site
(Skill 10)
15.54 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
The MetaBase.xml file is a text file that can be edited in any text editor such as Notepad
IIS 6.0 also includes new logging functionality, UTF-8 (Uniform Transformation Format-8-bit) logging
MIMESMIME types are used to prevent attackers from sending
malicious files In IIS, only static files that have extensions on the MIME
(Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) types list can be served to users
A default global list of MIME types is installed with IIS 6.0
Administering the Web Environment (2)
(Skill 10)
15.55 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-75 Enabling Direct Metabase Edit
(Skill 10)
15.56 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-76 The metabase History folder
(Skill 10)
15.57 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-77 The MIME Types dialog box
(Skill 10)
15.58 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
When you are running IIS 6.0 in worker process isolation mode, you can group Web applications into application pools
You can assign any Web directory or virtual directory to an application pool Improves the efficiency of your IIS server Ensures that other Web applications will not have their service
interrupted when the applications in the new application pool stop
Guidelines for creating application pools Create an application pool for each Web site Configure a user account (process identity) for each application
pool Create a unique application pool for applications that you want to
run with their own unique set of properties
Creating Application Pools
(Skill 11)
15.59 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-78 The Add New Application Pool dialog box
(Skill 11)
15.60 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-79 Assigning an application to an application pool
(Skill 11)
15.61 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-80 The Identity tab on the Properties dialog box for an application pool
(Skill 11)
15.62 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
IIS 6.0 has two modes Worker process isolation mode
The default (and preferred) mode for IIS 6.0Capable of separating applications into isolated pools Identifies unhealthy processes, resources that are being
overtaxed, and memory leaks IIS 5.0 isolation mode
Should be used if you are running legacy Web applications that may not be compatible with worker process isolation mode
Not as secure as worker process isolation mode
Troubleshooting the Web Environment
(Skill 12)
15.63 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-81 Running the WWW service in IIS 5.0 isolation mode
(Skill 12)
IIS 6.0 runs in one of two modes: Worker process isolation mode or IIS 5.0 isolation mode, which provides backward compatibility with older applications
15.64 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-82 Changing IIS modes
(Skill 12)
15.65 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-83 Enabling Web service extensions
(Skill 12)
15.66 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
IIS problemsApplications are denied access to resourcesUsers request dynamic content and receive error 404Users request static content and receive error 404The application session state is dropped by worker
process recyclingClients receive error 503 (Service Unavailable message)
Troubleshooting the Web Environment (2)
(Skill 12)
15.67 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-84 Disabling worker process recycling
(Skill 12)
Clear to disable worker process recycling
15.68 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-85 Increasing the application pool queue length limit
(Skill 12)
15.69 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.
Exam 70-290 Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft® Windows® Server 2003 Environment
Lesson 15: Configuring a Windows Server 2003 Application Server
Figure 15-86 Configuring rapid-fail protection
(Skill 12)