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3.4 Application Partitions

Application partitions are a new feature in Windows Server 2003. They enable administrators to create areas in Active Directory to store data on DCs they choose rather than on every DC in a domain or forest. You can define which domain controllers hold a copy of the partition, known as a replica. There is no limitation based on domain or site membership, which means you can configure any domain controller in a forest to hold any application partition replica. The existing site topology will be used to automatically create the necessary connection objects to replicate among the servers that hold replicas of an application partition. Domain controllers will also register the necessary SRV records (explained in more detail in Chapter 6), so that clients can use the DC locator process to find the optimal domain controller for an application partition, just as they would for a domain.

There are a few limitations to be aware of with application partitions:

  • Application partitions cannot contain security principals, which most notably includes user, group, and computer objects. Any other type of object can be created in an application partition.

  • None of the objects contained in an application partition are replicated to the global catalog. Even if a domain controller that holds a replica of an application partition is also a global catalog server, the domain controller will not return any objects from the application partition during a global catalog search.

  • Objects in an application partition cannot be moved outside the partition. This is different than objects contained in domains, which can be moved between domains.

  • The Domain Naming FSMO must be on a Windows Server 2003 domain controller to create an application partition. After the application partition has been created, you can move the Domain Naming FSMO back to a Windows 2000 domain controller if necessary.

Application partitions are named similarly to domains. For example, if you created an application partition called "apps" directly under the mycorp.com domain, the DNS name would be apps.mycorp.com and the distinguished name would be dc=apps,dc=mycorp,dc=com. Application partitions can be rooted under domains, as shown in the previous example, nested under other application partitions (for example, dc=sales,dc=apps,dc=mycorp,dc=com) or as part of a new domain tree (for example, dc=apps,dc=local). For more information on creating and managing application partitions, check out the NTDSUTIL utility.

Application partitions tend to store dynamic data—data with a limited lifespan. See the next section for more on this. Dynamic data from network services such as DNS, Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP), Common Open Policy Service (COPS), Remote Access Service (RAS), and RADIUS can all reside in a partition in AD. This allows uniformity of access from applications via a single methodology. This enables developers to write to a special area only available to specific servers rather than into a domain partition that is replicated to every DC. In fact, application partitions will allow multiple versions of COM+ applications to be installed and configured on the same computer, resulting in more cost-effective management of server applications.

3.4.1 Storing Dynamic Data

While application partitions give administrators more control over how to replicate application data, the problem of data cleanup still exists. That is, applications that add data to Active Directory are not always good about cleaning it up after it is no longer needed. That's why the ability to create dynamic data was also added as a feature in Windows Server 2003 Active Directory. Dynamic objects are objects that have a time-to-live (TTL) value that determines how long the object will exist before being automatically deleted by Active Directory. Dynamic objects typically have a fairly short life span (i.e., days). An example use of dynamic objects is an e-commerce website that needs to store user session information temporarily. Since a directory is likely going to be where the user profile information resides, it can be advantageous to use the same store for session-based information, which is generally short-lived. The default TTL that is set for dynamic objects is 1 day, but can be configured to be as short as 15 minutes. Using a Domain NC to store dynamic objects with a very short TTL can be less than ideal because it may take more than the TTL period to replicate to all the domain controllers within the domain. Instead, you can use an application partition to replicate the data to a subset of domain controllers based on application requirements.

To create a dynamic object, you simply have to add "dynamicObject" to the objectClass attribute when creating the object. This is why you cannot make existing static objects into dynamic objects. The entryTTL attribute can also be set at creation time to set the TTL to something other than the one-day default. To prevent a dynamic object from being automatically deleted, you can "refresh" the object by resetting the entryTTL attribute for the object to a new TTL value (time in seconds).

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