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Windows Server 2003 Security Infrastructures: Core Security Features (HP Technologies)
Windows Server 2003 Security Infrastructures: Core Security Features (HP Technologies)
ISBN: 1555582834
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 137
Authors:
Jan De Clercq
BUY ON AMAZON
Table of Contents
BackCover
Windows Server 2003 Security Infrastructures
Foreword
Preface
Chapter 1: The Challenge of Trusted Security Infrastructures
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
2.2 Security principals
Chapter 3: Windows 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
4.2 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
5.2 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
6.2 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
7.2 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
10.2 The Windows authorization model
10.3 Windows 2000 authorization changes
10.4 Windows Server 2003 authorization changes
10.5 Authorization intermediaries
10.6 User rights
10.7 Administrative delegation
10.8 Authorization tools
Chapter 11: Malicious Mobile Code Protection
11.2 Software restriction policies
11.3 Code Access Security
11.4 Comparing SRPs and CAS
Chapter 12: New Authorization Tracks: Role-Based Access Control and Digital Rights Management
12.1 Role-based access control
12.2 Digital rights management
Chapter 13: Introducing Windows Server 2003 Public Key Infrastructure
13.2 A short history of Windows PKI
13.3 Why use the Microsoft PKI software?
13.4 Windows Server 2003 PKI core components
Chapter 14: Trust in Windows Server 2003 PKI
14.2 A trust taxonomy
14.3 PKI trust terminology
14.4 PKI trust models
14.5 User PKI trust management
14.6 CA trust definition
14.7 Summary
Chapter 15: The Certificate Life Cycle
15.2 Certificate enrollment
15.3 Key archival and recovery
15.4 Data recovery
15.5 Certificate validation
15.6 Certificate retrieval
15.7 Key and certificate update
15.8 Certificate revocation
15.9 Certificate expiry and certificate lifetimes
Chapter 16: Building and Maintaining a Windows PKI
16.2 Maintaining a PKI
16.3 Administration and troubleshooting tools
Chapter 17: Windows Server 2003 PKI-enabled Applications
17.2 Secure mail using SMIME
17.3 Leveraging smart cards and USB tokens for PKI-enabled applications
Chapter 18: Windows Server 2003 Security Management
18.2 Security patch management
18.3 Security-related auditing
Appendix A: The ITU-T X.509 Standard for Certificate and CRL Formats
Appendix B: PKCS Standards
Index
Index_B
Index_C
Index_D
Index_E
Index_F
Index_G
Index_H
Index_I
Index_J
Index_K
Index_L
Index_M
Index_N
Index_O
Index_P
Index_Q-R
Index_S
Index_T
Index_U
Index_V
Index_W
Index_X-Z
List of Figures
List of Tables
Windows Server 2003 Security Infrastructures: Core Security Features (HP Technologies)
ISBN: 1555582834
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 137
Authors:
Jan De Clercq
BUY ON AMAZON
Crystal Reports 9 on Oracle (Database Professionals)
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Optimizing: Reducing Parses
The Crystal Repository
Appendix A Common Issues
Appendix B Functions
Systematic Software Testing (Artech House Computer Library)
Detailed Test Planning
Test Implementation
Appendix B Testing Survey
Appendix C IEEE Templates
Appendix E Simplified Unit Test Plan
MySQL Clustering
Testing Your Cluster
Managing MySQL Cluster
Data Retrieval in MySQL Cluster
MySQL Cluster Errors
An Overview of Binary Options
Cisco ASA: All-in-One Firewall, IPS, and VPN Adaptive Security Appliance
Cisco VPN Products
Monitoring and Troubleshooting the Security Contexts
Summary
Configuring CRL Options
System Clock
Java Concurrency in Practice
What is Thread Safety?
Avoiding and Diagnosing Deadlocks
Reducing Lock Contention
Avoiding Performance Testing Pitfalls
Nonblocking Algorithms
User Interfaces in C#: Windows Forms and Custom Controls
Creating Usable Interfaces
Designing with Classes and Tiers
Modern Controls
Custom Controls
Design-Time Support for Custom Controls
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