Article-ID:
129047 Title : Synchronizing DNS Information in Registry with Boot Files
Article-ID:
142047 Title : Bad Network Packet May Cause Access Violation (AV) on DNS Server
Article-ID:
154984 Title : DNS Server May Not Recursively Resolve Some Names
Article-ID:
154985 Title : DNS Registry Key Not Updated When Changing Zone Type
Article-ID:
159310 Title : Updated Version of Dns.exe Fixes Several Problems
Article-ID:
164300 Title : DNS Registry Parameter - AddressAnswerLimit
Article-ID:
167629 Title : Predictable Query IDs Pose Security Risks for DNS Servers
Article-ID:
169461 Title : Access Violation in DNS.EXE Caused by Malicious Telnet Attack
Article-ID:
170518 Title : DNS Admin Fails When Managing Large Number of Zones
Article-ID:
173676 Title : Client Cannot Resolve MX Record via Microsoft DNS Server
Article-ID:
182227 Title : DNS Server Does Not Check for Delegations Before Forwarding
Article-ID:
182713 Title : Multiple Entries in Zone File Cause Memory Leak in Dnsadmin.exe
Article-ID:
184881 Title : Reverse Lookups with BIND Earlier Than 4.8.3 Fail
Article-ID:
185734 Title : DNS Server Access Violation in Dns!sendNbstatResponse Routine
Article-ID:
185816 Title : DNS Server Event Log IDs Incorrect After Applying SP4
Article-ID:
186820 Title : DNS Server Returns Wrong Response When WINS Lookup Is Enabled
Article-ID:
187800 Title : NSLOOKUP Fails to Return DomainName Option for DHCP Client
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)
This service pack update release includes several quality improvement fixes to correct known Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) problems reported for Microsoft DHCP Server, the DHCP Manager administration tool, and for Microsoft DHCP-enabled clients running under earlier released versions of Windows NT 4.0.
These fixes address specific problems fully described in the following articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Article ID:
194424 Title : DHCP Server May Fail to Record Lease
Article-ID:
141496 Title : DHCP Client Comment Disappears When Obtaining IP Address
Article-ID:
163055 Title : DHCP Client May Fail With WinNT 4.0 SP2 Multinetted DHCP Server
Article-ID:
167708 Title : BOOTP Client Names Disappear in DHCP Manager
Article-ID:
173753 Title : Duplicate IP Addresses After Upgrading Clients to SP2
Article-ID:
175035 Title : Diskless Workstations Cannot Find BOOTP Server With DHCP
Article-ID:
177357 Title : DHCP Client Does Not Immediately Renew Address
Article-ID:
182047 Title : DHCP Server Performance Degraded By Large Number of Scopes
Article-ID:
183875 Title : DHCP Server Leases Excluded Addresses if the Scope Is Expanded
Article-ID:
187802 Title : DHCP Assigns "Bad_Address" to "Host Unreachable"
Article-ID:
188027 Title : Performance, Audit Logging, and Fixes to the DHCP Service
Article-ID:
184353 Title : DHCP ALT+H Shortcut Key for HELP Is Not Available
Article-ID:
189283 Title : No More Than About 570 Reservations Visible in a DHCP Scope
Article-ID:
193436 Title : DHCP Client Shuts Down After Two Declines
Article-ID:
190552 Title : WinNT 4.0 DHCP Client Modified to meet RFC 2131
Article-ID:
184744 Title : DHCP Server Leaks Registry Quota on Alpha Version of Windows NT
Article-ID:
184344 Title : Reconcile on DHCP Scope Does Not Work Correctly for BOOTP Client
Article-ID:
169291 Title : Using Scopes with Different Subnet Masks in a Superscope
You can obtain the specific article from Microsoft Support Online (
http://msdn.microsoft.com/support).
Windows Internet Name Service (WINS)
Windows NT Server includes the following added features for this service update release to Windows Internet Name Service (WINS) and WINS Manager:
- Manual removal of dynamic WINS database records.
- Multi-select operations for WINS database records.
- Burst mode handling for WINS servers.
WINS Manager
WINS Manager now provides improved database management through support for record multi-selection and the ability to remove dynamic-type WINS records from the WINS server database.
Manual Removal of Dynamic WINS Database Records
The ability to manually delete dynamically-registered names mappings from the WINS database is now a part of WINS Manager. Because this support was not provided in previous versions of WINS Manager, deletion was difficult, requiring the advanced use of certain command line tools, such as Winscl.exe, a tool provided by the previous Windows NT Server resource kits.
NOTE: Dynamic mappings are added to the WINS database when clients start and register their names in WINS before joining the network. Static mappings are administratively added to the WINS database by a network administrator and can be edited or removed in the same manner.
Deletion is a useful practice for clearing up problems where dynamic WINS records are not fully consistent with currently stored mappings that have been replicated to other remote WINS servers. In addition, by allowing deletion of dynamic WINS mappings, WINS administrators can eliminate the practice of using static WINS mappings to correct name resolution problems which can create further problems for WINS.
NOTE: The use of static WINS mappings is not recommended for clients that can directly perform dynamic registration of their names in WINS. Where static mappings are used to resolve connectivity issues and provide domain logon support for WINS clients, these mappings can cause additional problems or be difficult to fully remove from large WINS installations with multiple points of replications.
You can delete records in two ways: simple deletion or tombstoned deletion. With simple deletion, the selected WINS records are only removed from the selected WINS server that is actively being managed using WINS Manager. With simple deletion, records that are deleted are not removed or modified on other WINS servers. This method can be useful for making a "quick deletion" of selected records on a single WINS server. For this method of deletion to be effective, you must make certain that the deleted records do not still appear on other WINS servers used in replication.
NOTE: If records are removed from a server using simple deletion but still exist in WINS data on other servers, the deleted records may reappear on the server where deletion was made when replication next occurs with other WINS servers.
Perform the following steps to use simple or tombstoned deletion:
- Start WINS Manager.
- Click Mappings, and then click Show Database.
- Select the records you want to delete or tombstone.
- Click Delete Mapping. The Confirm Deletion dialog box appears.
- For Operation, click Delete to perform simple deletion of the records on the selected WINS server or Tombstone to tombstone the records for eventual deletion of the records on all WINS servers.
- If a single record is selected, click Yes to delete. If multiple records are selected, click Yes to All to delete all selected records.
How Tombstoning Works
With tombstoning, the "tombstoned" records are marked as extinct on the WINS server and immediately removed from active use by the server for WINS name resolution. However, these mappings are not immediately deleted from the server's database. Instead, the tombstoned records remain present for replication purposes so that other WINS servers are notified as well that these records are inactive in WINS. After the deleted records are marked as tombstoned on all WINS servers where they have been replicated, the records will then be removed during subsequent scavenging operations performed on each server.
To use tombstoning effectively, you should only tombstone WINS records on the WINS server that is the original owner for the records to be deleted.
IMPORTANT: In most cases, WINS records should be tombstoned at the original owning WINS server to prevent deleted records from reappearing in WINS after subsequent replication with other servers. Where a WINS server is no longer active on the network, this is not a problem. For inactive owner servers, you can use tombstoning effectively from other active WINS servers to remove records owned by the inactive servers that are still present in WINS.
The owner of a given WINS server record is typically the first server contacted by the WINS client during the registration process and the actual server first used to register the client's local names in WINS. In most cases, the WINS server that owns a client's name records in WINS will correspond to the primary WINS server as configured on the WINS client computer. Where the configured primary WINS server is not available during client registration, a configured secondary WINS server may be used instead to perform the actual registration of the client's names and become the owner. To verify the exact owner server for a WINS record, view owner information in the Show Database dialog box using WINS Manager.
Tombstoning uses the following sequence of events to remove the selected records from all WINS servers that share and replicate the records to be tombstoned.
- The owner WINS server marks and changes the status of selected WINS records from Active to Tombstoned in its local WINS server database.
WINS then treats the records as inactive and released from use. After these records are tombstoned locally, the owner WINS server will not respond or resolve NetBIOS name queries for these names from other WINS clients and WINS servers unless the records are registered again by the WINS client.
- The owner WINS server replicates the selected records as tombstoned to other WINS servers during subsequent replication cycles.
The records are not forcibly and immediately removed from WINS, but are flagged or marked for eventual deletion. The exact replication cycle (or Extinct Interval) is set in the server's WINS database properties. The records are not removed from WINS data until the extinction interval has actually expired. This allows other WINS servers to be notified that these records are no longer in use, update their replicated mappings for these records, and further replicate this updated WINS data to other servers.
- Records become extinct on all replicated WINS servers and are eventually removed physically from all WINS servers.
After all WINS servers that participate in replication have completed a full replication cycle and arrived at a consistent state, the tombstoned records expire and are removed from each server's WINS database when it performs the next database scavenging operation. After scavenging occurs on all servers, the records no longer appear in WINS Manager and are no longer physically stored in the WINS database.
Multi-select Operations for WINS Database Records
WINS Manager now provides support for deletion or removal operations to multiple records in the Show Database dialog box. In previous versions of WINS Manager, only one record could be selected at a time.
Burst Mode Handling for WINS Servers
WINS servers can now support handling of high-volume, or burst server loads, where a large number of WINS clients actively seek to register their local names in WINS at the same time. With burst mode support, the WINS server can respond positively to clients that submit registration requests before it has processed and physically entered these updates in the WINS server database.
Burst mode uses a burst queue size as a threshold value to determine how many name registration and name refresh requests sent by WINS clients will be processed normally before burst mode handling is started. By default, the burst queue is sized to allow 500 requests before burst handling is used.
How Burst Handling Works
Burst handling is enabled for any WINS server running under Windows NT Server 4.0 with the current service pack update release applied. Where a WINS server supports burst handling, the server will initiate burst handling once the number of WINS client registration requests exceeds the burst queue size.
Burst handling is used to temporarily achieve a steady and gradual registration state for the WINS server when the server is first started with a clean database or when many WINS clients come online for the first time. Either situation can cause a large amount of name registration and name refresh traffic to occur.
For burst handling, additional client requests beyond the amount specified by the burst queue size are immediately answered with a positive success response by the WINS server. The response also includes a varied time-to- live (TTL) to clients to help regulate the client registration load and distribute processing of the requests over time.
The purpose of using TTLs in the success responses is to slow the refresh and retry rate for new WINS clients and regulate the burst of WINS client traffic. For example, if the default burst queue size (500 entries) is used, the WINS server will reply immediately to the next 100 WINS client registration requests by sending early success responses that use a starting TTL value of 5 minutes.
For each additional round of 100 client requests, the TTL is incremented by the WINS server to add 5 minutes (such as 10, 15, 20 minutes, and so on) until a maximum of 50 minutes is used as the response TTL value. If WINS client traffic is still arriving at bursted levels after the maximum TTL has been used to answer clients, the next round of 100 client requests will be answered starting over with the initial TTL value of 5 minutes and the entire process for incrementing the response TTL is repeated.
This behavior will continue until the WINS server reaches its maximum intake level of 25,000 name registration and refresh queries. At this point, the WINS server will begin dropping queries.
Configuring Burst Mode Support
You may use these additional registry values to further configure or disable burst mode support where desired.
NOTE: By default, the following WINS registry values are not present and must be manually added to reconfigure or disable burst mode support on the WINS server. However, if you plan to use the default server behavior (which enables burst mode handling at the WINS server using a default burst queue size of 500 entries), you will not need to add these Registry values or make any additional configuration changes to the WINS server.
WARNING: Using Registry Editor incorrectly can cause serious problems that may require you to reinstall your operating system. Microsoft cannot guarantee that problems resulting from the incorrect use of Registry Editor can be solved. Use Registry Editor at your own risk.
For information about how to edit the registry, view the "Changing Keys And Values" online Help topic in Registry Editor (Regedit.exe) or the "Add and Delete Information in the Registry" and "Edit Registry Data" online Help topics in Regedt32.exe. Note that you should back up the registry before you edit it.
- BurstQueSize
You can add this registry value to adjust the maximum number of WINS client request entries that will be queued at the WINS server before it begins using burst handling.
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services \Wins\Parameters\BurstQueSi
NOTE: The above registry key is one path; it has been wrapped For readability.
Type: REG_DWORD Default: 500 Range: Valid values are 50-50
Description: Sets the maximum number of name registration and refresh queries that are stored in the server's intake queue before burst handling is activated by the WINS server. This value has no effect where burst handling is disabled (for example, if the BurstHandling key has been added and set to a value of 0).
- BurstHandling
You can add this registry value to disable the use of burst mode handling by the WINS server.
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Wins\Parameters \BurstHandli
NOTE: The above registry key is one path; it has been wrapped for readability.
Type: REG_DWORD Default: 1 Range: 0 (disabled) or 1 (enable
Description: This key determines whether the WINS server will use burst handling to send success responses to the clients in the queue. If the value of this entry is 0, the WINS server does not support burst handling or send early success responses to WINS clients. If the value of this entry is 1, the WINS server supports burst handling and sends early success responses to WINS clients.