I see
no reason to separate DNS from AD, except in extreme circumstances. AD and DNS
are both core infrastructure, so there's no reason not to colocate them. It
works well for both our 500 user company and the 4500 user company prior to
that.
My
DC/DNS servers here are running on 800MHz boxes with half a gig of RAM, and we
do quite heavy DNS traffic (lots of Unix systems in house) and never have load
issues on the DC's.
Roger
--------------------------------------------------------------
Roger D. Seielstad - MTS MCSE MS-MVP Sr. Systems Administrator Inovis Inc.
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Title: Message
- [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Rogers, Brian
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Roger Seielstad
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Craig Cerino
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Rogers, Brian
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Roger Seielstad
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question ... Rick Kingslan
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Craig Cerino
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Roger Seielstad
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Roger Seielstad
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Rogers, Brian
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Rogers, Brian
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Rick Kingslan
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Roger Seielstad
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Rogers, Brian
- RE: [ActiveDir] Quick AD integrated DNS question :) Rogers, Brian