Bago Learning Server 2003 - Deployment File Service

  

Who is Pakistani? This person is an aspiring young man. The creed that he abides by is "small and bitter nights, why don't you go on a candle tour?" So every night, he picks up the lights and crawls the net, and suddenly he likes the golden phase. Bago is a network-born person (嘘! whispered, is a secondary school graduate.), the ideal is to be a qualified network administrator, hoping to manage the network with hundreds of computers in an orderly manner. Bargo realized that the theoretical knowledge he had learned at school was too little. For Bargo, who lacks practical experience, it is necessary to grasp the current popular knowledge of network management as soon as possible.

Fortunately, Bago met a classmate who has extensive network management experience. As a classmate, Lao Weiyi is obliged to be a volunteer teacher of Bago. Bargo listened to Lao Wei, Windows Server 2003 is Microsoft's latest network operating system, can provide a lot of network services, not only powerful, but also easier to get started. So Bargo decided to start from the network service of Windows Server 2003, as the first step to enter the network management system...

Everything is difficult at first, and Bargo, who just started to contact Windows Server 2003, feels that he can't learn. Lao Wei asked what the most common things that Bago himself did in the LAN. Bargo recalled the fact that he often exchanged documents with his classmates in "My Network Places" when he went to school. At that time, he felt very convenient. Lao Wei listened and laughed and said: "In Windows Server 2003, there is a service dedicated to file sharing. Let's start by deploying file services." The journey of webmaster learning in Bago began.

Part 1: Deployment File Service

Lao Wei said that file service is one of the most commonly used services in the LAN. Since Windows NT, it has been retained with the continuous upgrading of the Windows Server family. After setting up a file server in the LAN, you can ensure the security of shared resources by setting user access rights to shared resources.

"How do you use Windows Server 2003 to provide file services on the LAN?" Bargo looked confused. To explain, in fact, just set up a file server, and then set the appropriate access rights for different users for different shared resources. The specific implementation process is as follows:

First, install the file server

Because Windows Server 2003 does not install the "file server" component by default, Laowei manually added these components Come in.

Step 1, click "Start" /Administrative Tools /Manage Your Server", open the "Manage your server" window. Click "Add or" in the "Manage your server role" area. after you remove the role "button, enter the configuration wizard and click" Next "button (Figure 1).

step 2, complete the configuration wizard detects the network settings the first time you use the wizard, You will be taken to the "Configuration Options" wizard page. Click on the "Customize" configuration radio button and click the "Next" button.

Step 3 Open the "Server Roles" wizard page, at " In the Server Roles list, select the File Server option and click the Next button (Figure 2).


Figure 2

Step 4, Open In the "File Server Disk Quotas" wizard page, select the "Set default disk space quota for new users for this server" check box, and then limit the disk space to "and the warning level" according to the disk spare space and the actual needs of users. Set the appropriate number in the edit box In addition, by selecting the "Reject disk space to users exceeding the quota limit" check box, you can prevent users from writing data to the server after they have reached the quota for the used disk space. Click the "Next" button (Figure 3)


Step 5, in the "File Server Indexing Service" tab, click the "Yes, Enable Indexing Service" radio button to enable indexing services for shared folders. Indexing Service Pairs spending a lot of server resources, it is recommended only enable the service in case users need to search for the shared folder, click "next" button (Figure 4).

step 6, open " Select the Summary Wizard page and confirm that the option settings are correct and click the Next button. The Add Wizard starts to enable the selected service and automatically opens the Shared Folder Wizard when you are done. Click the Next button.

Step 7, click the "Browse" button in the opened "Folder Path" wizard page, find the folder ready to be set as a public resource (such as "MCSE Learning Materials") from the local disk, and then Click the "OK /Next" button (Figure 5).


Step 8, open the "Name, Description and Settings" wizard page, set the share name (such as "MCSE Learning Materials") here, and enter a language describing the share. Click the "Next" button (Figure 6).


Figure 6

Step 9, in the "Permissions" wizard page, click the "Administrator has full access; other users have read-only access" radio button, And click the "Finish /Close /Finish" button to end the settings (Figure 7).


Second, create a user account

Baga see the file server so fast to build, I thought this is not very simple. However, Lao Wei went on to say that one of the purposes of setting up a file server is to set the user's access rights to shared resources. Users need to have a legitimate account to access these resources, so a user account needs to be created in the server. Right-click the "My Computer" icon on the desktop and execute the "Manage" command in the pop-up shortcut menu. Open the Computer Management window and expand the Local Users and Groups directory in the left pane. Then right-click the "Users" folder in the expanded directory and execute the "New User" command in the pop-up shortcut menu to open the "New User" dialog box. In the corresponding edit box, type the user name (such as "bage") and password, cancel the "user must change this password when logging in next time" option and check "User can not change the password" and "Password never expires" Finally, click the "Create" button (Figure 8).


Figure 8

III. Setting User Access Rights

"Can I access shared resources now?" Barco looked a little impatient. Lao Wei laughed, it’s OK, but if each user has their own private folder and wants to let other users access their own folders besides the administrator group members and the users themselves, this needs to be done further. already setup.

Step 1, click the "Start /Administrative Tools /File Server Management" menu item to open the "File Server Management" window. In the right pane, click the Add Shared Folder option to enter the Shared Folder Wizard. Click the "Next /Browse" button, find and select an employee's private folder (such as "bage") in the "Browse for Folder" dialog box that opens, click "OK /Next /Next " button (Figure 9).


Step 2, go to the "Permissions" wizard page, click the "Use custom sharing and folder sharing" radio button, and click the "Customize" button. Click the Delete button in the Custom Permissions dialog that opens to delete the Everyone group. Click the "Add /Advanced /Find Now" button, then hold down the "Ctrl" key, find and select the "Administrators" group and "bage" in the "Search Results" list box, click the "OK /OK" button (Figure 10).


Figure 10

Step 3, return to the "Custom Permissions" dialog box, respectively, "Bage permissions" and "Administrators permissions" check "Allow full control" "Check box and click the "OK /Finish /Close" button. Repeat the above steps to set the appropriate access permissions for other folders (Figure 11).


Figure 11

IV. Verification Effect

Now you can verify the effect. With Awei's consent, Barco couldn't wait to come to a computer and access the "bage" folder by typing a UNC path. When prompted to verify the identity of the user, Pago typed the user account "bage" and the corresponding password and found that the "bage" folder could be accessed, while other ordinary user accounts could not access the folder. It can be seen that the file service has been successfully deployed.

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