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When you install Active Directory on a server, you promote the server to the role of a domain controller for a specified domain. When completing this process, you are prompted to specify a DNS domain name for the Active Directory domain for which you are joining and promoting the server.
If during this process, a DNS server authoritative for the domain that you specified either cannot be located on the network or does not support the DNS dynamic update protocol, you are prompted with the option to install a DNS server. This option is provided because a DNS server is required to locate this server or other domain controllers for members of an Active Directory domain. For more information about how computers locate domain controllers using DNS, see the Using the Windows Deployment and Resource Kits.
Once you have installed Active Directory, you have two options for storing and replicating your zones when operating the DNS server at the new domain controller:
For networks deploying DNS to support Active Directory, directory-integrated primary zones are strongly recommended and provide the following benefits:
On the current DNS server, start DNS Manager.
Right-click a DNS zone, click Properties, click the General tab, and then note the Type value. This will be Primary zone, Secondary zone or Stub zone.
Click Change.
In the Change Zone Type box, click to select the Store the zone in Active Directory (available only if DNS server is a domain controller) check box. When you are prompted to answer whether want this zone to become Active Directory integrated, click Yes, and then click OK
Only DNS servers that run on domain controllers can load Active Directory–integrated zones, Active Directory used DNS Namespaces to add reference records like SOA, A, PTR to maintain association between computer objects.
Regards,
Nadeem
dear mr Adeel Ilyas Hinjrah i am not asking about the way i asked about how this
Generally answer the question as follows The DNS data is stored in Active Directory, each DNS zone is an Active Directory container object AND the objects contains a DNS node object for every unique name within that zone. These unique names include the variations assigned to a specific host computer when it functions, for example, as a primary domain controller or as a Global Catalog server. The dnsNode object has a dnsRecord multivalue attribute that contains a value for every resource record that is associated with an object's name.
While installing active directory (dcpromo wizard) the system ask you to configure and integrate the DNS automatically. Best option is to let the wizard do it's job. However if you skipped it, DNS configuration can be done manually later. There is no need to go in such haphazard unless there is strong reason behind it.
in wich windows server2003 or2008???