Shopping on line can be easy, simple and save you lots of money. It can also take a lot of your time, frustrate you, and result in unwanted purchases. Now the same can be said for regular high street shopping, but with the vast opportunity presented by the Internet it will pay you to spend a few minutes reading this and understanding how to better optimize your Windows 2000 shopping experience:
1. Compare - without doubt the biggest advantage that the Windows 2000 offers shoppers today is the ability to compare thousands of Windows 2000 at a time. This is a great thing, but not necessarily all the time! Too much can be daunting at times so take advantage of the great comparison sites and where possible let them do the hard work for you.
2. Research - if it has been said it will be on the internet. Ignorance is no longer a justifiable reason for buying the wrong thing. Take the time to research in detail everything that you could possible want to know about
3. Testimonials - don't know anybody that has bought a Windows 2000? Wrong! If the Windows 2000 is good the internet will let you know. Use the Internet as a friend and get testimonials before you buy.
4. Questions - Got a question about Windows 2000 then search the Forums, FAQ's, Blogs etc. Don't be afraid to ask .....
5. Reputation - Never heard of the company selling Windows 2000? Don't worry, no reason why you should know every company in the world, but you know someone that does! Use the internet to find out what people are saying about Windows 2000 and build up a picture of their reputation for sales, returns, customer service, delivery etc.
6. Returns - still worried that even after all of the above your Windows 2000 wont be what you want? Check out the returns policy. There is so much competition now that someone, somewhere is bound to offer the terms that you are comfortable with.
7. Feedback - happy with your Windows 2000 then let people know, after all you are depending on others people input in your buying decision, so why not give a little back.
8. Security - check for the yellow padlock on the Windows 2000 site before you buy, and the s after http:/ /i.e. https:// = a secure site
9. Contact - got a question about Windows 2000, or want to leave a comment then check out the sites contact page. Reputable companies have them and respond.
10. Payment - ready to pay for your Windows 2000, then use your credit card or PayPal! Be aware of companies that don't accept them, there may be genuine reasons but given the huge amount of choice you have when buying online there is no reason at all not to buy via credit card or PayPal.
{{Infobox OS version| name = Windows 2000| family = Microsoft Windows| logo = Windows 2000 logo.png| screenshot = Win2000.png| caption = Screenshot of Windows 2000 Professional| developer = Microsoft| website = www.microsoft.com/windows2000| first_release_date = February 17 [2000 [2005| license = Microsoft [EULA| support_status = Extended Support Period until June/July 2010,{{cite web|url=http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/server/evaluation/news/bulletins/extendedsupport.mspx|title=Windows 2000 Transitions to Extended Support-->{{cite web|url=http://support.microsoft.com/lifecycle/search/?sort=PN&alpha=Windows+2000&Filter=FilterNO|title=Microsoft Product Lifecycle for Windows 2000 family--> security updates will be provided free of cost and paid support is still available.
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Windows 2000 (also referred to as
Win2K) is a
Preemption (computing), interruptible, Graphical user interface and business-oriented operating system designed to work with either uniprocessor or
Symmetric multiprocessing 32-bit
Intel x86 computers. It is part of the Microsoft Windows NT line of operating systems and was released on
February 17 2000. It was succeeded by
Windows XP in October 2001 and
Windows Server 2003 in April 2003. Windows 2000 is classified as a hybrid kernel
operating system.
Windows 2000 was made available in four editions: Professional, Server, Advanced Server, and Datacenter Server. Additionally, Microsoft offered Windows 2000 Advanced Server Limited Edition and Windows 2000 Datacenter Server Limited Edition, which were released in 2001 and run on
64-bit Intel Itanium
microprocessors. Whilst all editions of Windows 2000 are targeted to different markets, they each share a core set of common functionality, including many system utilities such as the
Microsoft Management Console and standard system administration applications. Support for people with disabilities was improved over
Windows NT 4.0 with a number of new assistive technology, and Microsoft included increased support for different languages and locale information. All versions of the operating system support the Windows NT filesystem,
NTFS 3.0, the
Encrypting File System, as well as basic and dynamic Logical Disk Manager. The Windows 2000 Server family has additional functionality, including the ability to provide Active Directory services (a hierarchical framework of resources), Distributed File System (Microsoft) (a file system that supports sharing of files) and fault-redundant storage volumes. Windows 2000 can be installed and deployed to corporate desktops through either an attended or unattended installation. Unattended installations rely on the use of answer files to fill in installation information, and can be performed through a bootable CD using Microsoft
Systems Management Server, by the Sysprep. Windows 2000 is the last NT-kernel based version of Microsoft Windows that does not include
Windows Product Activation.
At the time of its release, Microsoft marketed Windows 2000 as the most secure Windows version they had ever shipped,{{cite press release]
2000 and [Nimda (computer worm). More than seven years after its release, it continues to receive patches for security vulnerabilities on a near-monthly basis.
History
Windows 2000 is a continuation of the Microsoft
Windows NT line of operating systems, replacing its predecessor,
Windows NT 4.0. Originally called Windows NT 5.0, then Windows NT 2000, Microsoft changed the name to Windows 2000 on October 27
1998.{{cite web]
1998, though Windows 2000 [Service pack 1 was codenamed "Asteroid" and Windows 2000 64-bit was codenamed "Janus" (not to be confused with
Windows 3.1, which had the same codename). The first beta for Windows 2000 was released on
September 27 1997 and several further betas were released until Beta 3 which was released on
April 29 1999.
DEC Alpha support was removed from the final build. From here, Microsoft issued three release candidates between July and November 1999, and finally released the operating system to partners on December 12
1999.{{cite web]
2000. Three days before the launch of Windows 2000, which Microsoft advertised as "a standard in reliability", a leaked memo from Microsoft reported on by Mary Jo Foley revealed that Windows 2000 had "over 63,000 potential known defects". Bugfest! Win2000 has 63,000 'defects' February 14, 2000 After Foley's article was published, Microsoft blacklisted her for a considerable time: Mary Jo Foley: The Exit Interview September 20, 2006 InformationWeek summarized the release "our tests show the successor to NT 4.0 is everything we hoped it would be. Of course, it isn't perfect either." InformationWeek, December 28, 1999, "Special Report" Wired News later described the results of the February launch as "lackluster". Wired News, November 2000, "The Truth, The Whole Truth, and Nothing But The Truth"
Novell criticized Microsoft's Active Directory, the new directory service architecture to be less scalable or reliable than their own Novell Directory Services (NDS) technology.{{cite web]
1999 and Windows NT 4.0. However, that was later changed. Instead, an updated version of Windows 98 called Windows 98 Second Edition was released in 1999 as a successor to Windows 98. Microsoft released Windows 2000 Datacenter Server, targeted at large-scale computing systems with support for 32 processors, on [September 29, 2000.
On or shortly before
February 12, 2004, "portions of the Microsoft Windows 2000 and Windows NT 4.0
source code were illegally made available on the Internet".{{cite web] 2004 networks. Consequentially, on [February 16, 2004, an Exploit (computer security) "allegedly discovered by an individual studying the leaked source code" for certain versions of Microsoft Internet Explorer was reported.
Architecture
Windows 2000 is a highly modular system that consists of two main layers: a user mode and a kernel mode. The user mode refers to the mode in which user programs are run. Such programs are limited in terms of what system resources they have access to, while the kernel mode has unrestricted access to the system memory and external devices. All user mode applications access system resources through the executive which runs in kernel mode.
User mode
User mode in Windows 2000 is made of subsystems capable of passing
Input/output requests to the appropriate kernel mode drivers by using the I/O manager. Two subsystems make up the user mode layer of Windows 2000: the environment subsystem and the integral subsystem.
The environment subsystem was designed to run applications written for many different types of operating systems. These applications, however, run at a lower priority than kernel mode processes. There are three main environment subsystems:{{cite web|url=http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/Windows2000Pro/reskit/part8/proch36.mspx?mfr=true|title=Appendix D - Running Nonnative Applications in Windows 2000 Professional|work=Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional Resource Kit|publisher=
Microsoft-->
Win32 subsystem runs Microsoft Windows applications and also supports Virtual DOS Machines (VDMs), which allows MS-DOS and 16-bit Windows 3.1x (Win16) applications to run on Windows.
OS/2 environment subsystem supports 16-bit character-based OS/2 applications and emulates OS/2 1.3 and 1.x, but not 32-bit or graphical OS/2 applications as used on OS/2 2.x or later.
POSIX environment subsystem supports applications that are strictly written to either the POSIX.1 standard or the related International Organization for Standardization/International Electrotechnical Commission standards.
The integral subsystem looks after operating system specific functions on behalf of the environment subsystem. It consists of a
security subsystem (grants/denies access and handles logons),
workstation service (helps the computer gain network access) and a
server service (lets the computer provide network services).
Kernel mode
Kernel mode in Windows 2000 has full access to the hardware and system resources of the computer. The kernel mode stops user mode services and applications from accessing critical areas of the operating system that they should not have access to.
, as illustrated by this screenshot from
SysInternal's WinObjThe executive interfaces with all the user mode subsystems. It deals with I/O, object management, security and process management. It contains various components, including:
- Object Manager (Windows): a special executive subsystem that all other executive subsystems must pass through to gain access to Windows 2000 resources. This is essentially a resource management infrastructure service that allows Windows 2000 to be an object oriented operating system.
- I/O Manager: allows devices to communicate with user-mode subsystems by translating user-mode read and write commands and passing them to device drivers.
- Security Reference Monitor (SRM): the primary authority for enforcing the security rules of the security integral subsystem.Microsoft. " Active Directory Data Storage".
- IPC Manager: short for Interprocess Communication Manager, manages the communication between clients (the environment subsystem) and servers (components of the executive).
- Virtual Memory Manager: manages virtual memory, allowing Windows 2000 to use the hard disk as a primary storage device (although strictly speaking it is secondary storage).
- Process Manager: handles process (computing) and thread (computer science) creation and termination
- PnP Manager: handles Plug and Play and supports device detection and installation at Booting.
- Power Manager: the power manager coordinates power events and generates power I/O request packets.
- The display system is handled by a device driver contained in Win32k.sys. The Window Manager component of this driver is responsible for drawing windows and menus while the Graphics Device Interface (Graphics Device Interface) component is responsible for tasks such as drawing line (mathematics) and curves, rendering fonts and handling Palette (computing). Windows 2000 also introduced alpha blending into the Graphics Device Interface which reflects in the fade effect in menus.
The Windows 2000 Hardware Abstraction Layer, or HAL, is a layer between the physical hardware of the computer and the rest of the operating system. It was designed to hide differences in hardware and therefore provide a consistent platform to run applications on. The HAL includes hardware specific code that controls I/O interfaces,
interrupt controllers and multiple processors.
The hybrid kernel sits between the HAL and the executive and provides multiprocessor synchronization, thread and interrupt scheduling and dispatching, trap handling and exception dispatching. The hybrid kernel often interfaces with the process manager
Inside Microsoft Windows 2000 (Third Edition).
Microsoft Press.and is responsible for initializing device drivers at bootup that are necessary to get the operating system up and running.
Common functionality
Windows 2000 introduced many of the
Windows 98 new features into the NT line, such as, the Windows Desktop Update,
Windows Driver Model,
Internet Connection Sharing,
Windows Media Player,
WebDAV support etc. Certain features are common across all editions of Windows 2000, among them being NTFS 3.0, the Microsoft Management Console (MMC), the Encrypting File System (EFS),
Logical Disk Manager, usability enhancements and multi-language and locale support. Windows 2000 also has several system utilities included as standard. As well as these features, Microsoft introduced a new feature to protect critical system files, called
Windows File Protection. This prevents programs (with the exception of Microsoft's update programs) from replacing critical Windows system files and thus making the system inoperable.
Microsoft recognized that the infamous
Blue Screen of Death (or stop error) could cause serious problems for servers that needed to be constantly running and so provided a system setting that would allow the server to automatically reboot when a stop error occurred. Also included is an option to dump any of the first 64 kilobyte of memory to disk (the smallest amount of memory that is useful for
debugging purposes, also known as a minidump), a dump of only the kernel's memory, or a dump of the entire contents of memory to disk, as well as write that this event happened to the Windows 2000 event log. In order to improve performance on computers running Windows 2000 as a server operating system, Microsoft gave administrators the choice of optimizing the operating system's memory and processor usage patterns for background services or for applications. Windows 2000 also introduced such technologies as the
Windows Installer,
Windows Management Instrumentation, OpenType PostScript fonts (.OTF), Data protection application programming interface (DPAPI) and the Indexing Service into the operating system.
Improvements to Windows Explorer
had a built-in media player in Windows 2000
The Windows Explorer received a number of enhancements in Windows 2000. It was the first
Windows NT release to include
Active Desktop, a component first introduced as a part of
Internet Explorer 4.0, and only pre-installed in
Windows 98 by that time. Renamed in Windows 2000 as "
Windows Desktop Update" , it allowed the users to customize the way folders look and behave by using HTML templates, having the file extension HTT. This feature had been abused by computer viruses that employed malicious scripts,
Java (programming language) applets, or
ActiveX controls in folder template files as their infection vector. Two such viruses are VBS/Roor-C
Sophos, VBS/Roor-C threat analysis. Accessed 2007-08-26. and VBS.Redlof.a.
The "Web-style" folders view, with the left Explorer pane displaying details for the object currently selected, is turned on by default in Windows 2000. For certain file types, such as pictures and media files, the preview is also displayed in the left pane. Until the dedicated interactive preview pane appeared in Windows Vista, Windows 2000 had been the only Windows release to feature an interactive media player as the previewer for sound and video files. However, such a previewer can be enabled in Windows Me and Windows XP through the use of third-party shell extensions, as the extensibility of the updated Windows Explorer allows for custom thumbnail previewers and
tooltip handlers. The default file tooltip displays file title, author, subject and comments; these metadata may be read from a special
NTFS stream, in case the file is located on an NTFS volume, or from an OLE structured storage stream, in case the file is a structured storage document. All
Microsoft Office documents since Office 95 are stored in structured storages, so that their metadata are displayable in Windows 2000 Explorer default tooltip.
The right pane of Windows 2000 Explorer, which usually just lists files and folders, can also be customized. For example, the contents of the system folders aren't displayed by default, instead showing in the right pane a cautionary message telling the user that modifying the contents of the system folders could harm their computer. It's possible to define additional Explorer panes by using
Div (HTML tag) elements in folder template files Other Explorer UI elements that can be customized include columns in "Details" view, icon overlays, and search providers: the new DHTML-based search pane is integrated into Windows 2000 Explorer, unlike the separate search dialog found in all previous Explorer versions. This degree of customizability is new to Windows 2000; neither Windows 98 nor the Desktop Update could provide it.
NTFS 3.0
s, which can be set via the "Quota" tab found in the hard disk properties dialog box.Microsoft released the version 3.0 of the NTFS file system (sometimes incorrectly referred to as NTFS 5 in relation to the kernel version number) as part of Windows 2000; this introduced disk quotas,
Encrypting File System,
sparse files and NTFS reparse point. Sparse files allow for the efficient storage of data sets that are very large yet contain many areas that only have zeros.
NTFS reparse point allow the Object Manager (Windows) to reset a file namespace lookup and let file system drivers implement changed functionality in a transparent manner. Reparse points are used to implement volume mount points, NTFS junction point,
Hierarchical Storage Management, Native
Structured storage and Single Instance Storage. Volume mount points and directory junctions allow for a file to be transparently referred from one file or directory location to another.
Encrypting File System
The Encrypting File System (EFS) introduced strong file system-level encryption to Windows. It allows any folder or drive on an NTFS volume to be encrypted transparently by the end user. EFS works in conjunction with the EFS service, Microsoft's Cryptographic Application Programming Interface and the EFS File System Runtime Library (FSRTL). As of May 2007, its encryption has not been compromised.
EFS works by encrypting a file with a bulk symmetric key (also known as the File Encryption Key, or FEK), which is used because it takes a relatively smaller amount of time to encrypt and decrypt large amounts of data than if an
asymmetric key cipher is used. The symmetric key that is used to encrypt the file is then encrypted with a public key that is associated with the user who encrypted the file, and this encrypted data is stored in the header of the encrypted file. To decrypt the file, the file system uses the private key of the user to decrypt the symmetric key that is stored in the file header. It then uses the symmetric key to decrypt the file. Because this is done at the file system level, it is transparent to the user." Encrypting File System".
Microsoft.
In case of a user losing access to their key, support for recovery agents that can decrypt files is built in to EFS.
Basic and dynamic disk storage
Windows 2000 introduced the
Logical Disk Manager for Logical Disk Manager. All versions of Windows 2000 support three types of
Logical Disk Manager disk volumes (along with basic disks):
simple volumes,
spanned volumes and
striped volumes:
- Simple volume, a volume with disk space from one disk.
- Spanned volumes, where multiple disks (up to 32) show up as one, increasing it in size but not enhancing performance. When one disk fails, the array is destroyed. Some data may be recoverable. This corresponds to JBOD#Concatenation (JBOD or SPAN) and not to Redundant array of independent disks#RAID 1.
- Striped volumes, also known as Redundant array of independent disks#RAID 0, store all their data across several disks in stripes. This allows better performance because disk read and writes are balanced across multiple disks.
Windows 2000 also added support for the iSCSI protocol.
Accessibility support
Microsoft made an effort to increase the usability of Windows 2000 over
Windows NT 4.0 for people with visual and auditory impairments and other
disability. They included several utilities designed to make the system more
Computer accessibility, although many of these accessibility features were already available with previous versions of Windows:
- FilterKeys: These are a group of computer keyboard related features for people with typing issues, and include:
- SlowKeys: Ignore keystrokes that are not held down for a certain time period.
- BounceKeys: Multiple keystrokes to one key to be ignored within a certain timeframe.
- RepeatKeys: allows users to slow down the rate at which keys are repeated via the keyboard's keyrepeat feature.
- ToggleKeys: when turned on, Windows will play a sound when either the CAPS LOCK, NUM LOCK or SCROLL LOCK keys are pressed.
- Mouse keys: allows the cursor to be moved around the screen via the Keypad instead of the mouse.
- On-screen keyboard: allows users to use a mouse to use the keyboard and enter on-screen keyboard characters.
- SerialKeys: gives Windows 2000 the ability to support speech augmentation devices.
- Sticky keys: makes modifier keys (ALT, CTRL and SHIFT) become "sticky" — in other words a user can press the modifier key, release that key and then press the combination key. Normally the modifier key must remain pressed down to activate the sequence (Activated by pressing Shift 5 times quickly).
- Microsoft Magnifier: A screen magnifier that assists users with visual impairments by magnifying the part of the screen they place their mouse over.
- Narrator: Microsoft Narrator, introduced in Windows 2000, assists users with visual impairments with system messages, as when these appear the narrator will read this out via the sound system.
- High contrast theme: to assist users with visual impairments.
- SoundSentry: designed to help users with auditory impairments, Windows 2000 will show a visual effect when a sound is played through the sound system.
Language and locale support
Windows 2000 has support for many languages other than
English language. It supports
Arabic language,
Armenian language, Baltic languages, Central European,
Cyrillic, Georgian language, Greek language, Hebrew language,
Indic,
Japanese language,
Korean language,
Simplified Chinese,
Thai language,
Traditional Chinese,
Turkic languages, Vietnamese language and Western European languages. Microsoft Support KB 292264: List of Languages Supported in Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows Server 2003.It also has support for many different locales, a list of which can be found on Microsoft's website.
Games support
Windows 2000 included version 7.0 of the DirectX
Applications Programming Interface, commonly used by game developers on
Windows 98. Ask the Windows 2000 Dev Team. The last supported version of DirectX that Windows 2000 supports is DirectX 9.0c (Shader Model 3.0), the same version as the one shipped with Windows XP Service Pack 2.However, as of mid-2007, Microsoft continues to publish bimonthly minor updates to DirectX 9.0c files; these updates do not advance the overall DirectX version number. The majority of games written for recent versions of DirectX could therefore run on Windows 2000, in contrast to Windows NT 4.0, which only provided support for DirectX 3.0.
System utilities
Windows 2000 introduced the
Microsoft Management Console (MMC), which is used to create, save, and open administrative tools. Each of the tools is called a
console, and most consoles allow an administrator to administer other Windows 2000 computers from one centralised computer. Each console can contain one or many specific administrative tools, called
snap-ins. Snap-ins can be either standalone (performs one function), or extensions (adds functionality to an existing snap-in). In order to provide the ability to control what snap-ins can be seen in a console, the MMC allows consoles to be created in author mode or created in user mode. Author mode allows snap-ins to be added, new windows to be created, all portions of the console tree can be displayed and for consoles to be saved. User mode allows consoles to be distributed with restrictions applied. User mode consoles can grant full access to the user so they can make whatever changes they desire, or they can grant limited access to users which prevents users adding snapins to the console, though they can view multiple windows in a console. Alternatively users can be granted limited access, preventing them from adding to the console and stopping them viewing multiple windows in a single console.
Microsoft Press (2000).
MCSE 70-210, Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional, pages 58-63.
.The main tools that come with Windows 2000 can be found in the Computer Management console (found in Administrative Tools in the Control Panel). This contains the
Event Viewer — a means of seeing events and the Windows equivalent of a log file, a system information utility, a backup utility, a
task scheduler and management consoles to view open shared folders and shared folder sessions, configure and manage COM+ applications, configure Group policy, manage all the local users and user groups, and a Device Manager. It also contains a disk management snap-in, a
Removable Storage snap-in, a Disk Defragmenter (Windows) as well a performance diagnostic console, which displays graphs of system performance and configures data logs and alerts. Lastly, it also contains a
Windows service configuration console, which allows users to view all installed services and to stop and start them on demand, as well as configure what those services should do when the computer starts.
Windows 2000 comes bundled with two utilities to edit the
Windows registry,
REGEDIT.EXE and
REGEDT32.EXE. REGEDIT.EXE was directly ported from
Windows 98, and therefore does not support editing registry permissions. REGEDT32.EXE has the older multiple document interface (MDI) and can edit registry permissions in the same manner that Windows NT's REGEDT32.EXE program could. REGEDIT.EXE has a left-side tree view of the
Windows registry, lists all loaded hives and represents the three components of a value (its name, type, and data) as separate columns of a table. REGEDT32.EXE has a left-side tree view, but each hive has its own window, so the tree displays only keys and it represents values as a list of strings. REGEDIT.EXE supports right-clicking of entries in a tree view to adjust properties and other settings. REGEDT32.EXE requires all actions to be performed from the top
menu bar.Windows XP was the first system to integrate these two programs into a single utility, adopting the REGEDIT.EXE behavior with the additional NT functionality.
The System File Checker (SFC) also comes bundled with Windows 2000. It is a command line utility that scans system files and verifies whether they were signed by Microsoft and works in conjunction with the Windows File Protection mechanism. It can also repopulate and repair all the files in the
Dllcache folder.
Recovery Console
The
Recovery Console is an application that is run from outside the installed copy of Windows and that enables a user to perform maintenance tasks that cannot be run from inside of the installed copy, or cannot be feasibly run from another computer or copy of Windows 2000. It is usually used to recover the system from errors causing booting to fail, which would render other tools useless.
It presents itself as a simple command line interface. The commands are limited to ones for checking and repairing the hard drive(s), repairing boot information (including NTLDR), replacing corrupted system files with fresh copies from the CD, or enabling/disabling services and drivers for the next boot.
The console can be accessed in one of two ways:
Starting from the Windows 2000 CD, and choosing to enter the Recovery Console instead of continuing with setup, or
Installing the Recovery Console via Winnt32.exe, with the /cmdcons switch. However, the console can then only be used if the system boots to the point where NTLDR can start it.
Server family functionality
The Windows 2000 server family consists of Windows 2000 Server, Windows 2000 Advanced Server and Windows 2000 Datacenter Server.
All editions of Windows 2000 Server have the following services and functionality built-in:
- Routing and Remote Access Service (RRAS) support, facilitating Dial-up access and Virtual Private Network connections, support for RADIUS authentication, network connection sharing, Network Address Translation, unicast and multicast routing schemes.
- Microsoft DNS server, including support for Dynamic DNS. Active Directory relies heavily on DNS.
- IPsec support and TCP/IP filtering
- Smart card support
- Microsoft Connection Manager Administration Kit (CMAK) and Connection Point Services
- Support for Distributed File System (Microsoft) (DFS)
- Hierarchical Storage Management support, a service that runs in conjunction with NTFS that automatically transfers files that are not used for some period of time to less expensive storage media
- Fault-tolerant design volumes, namely it supports Redundant array of independent disks#RAID 1 and Redundant array of independent disks#RAID-5
- Group policy (part of Active Directory)
- IntelliMirror, a collection of technologies for Granularity management of Windows 2000 Professional desktops (Roaming profiles, Microsoft Message Queuing, Offline files (also known as Client Side Caching or CSC), TAPI 3.0, COM+ and Microsoft Transaction Server application host, software installation, settings management).
- Kerberos (protocol) authentication
- MS-CHAP v2 protocol
- Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) support
- Terminal Services and support for the Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP)
- Internet Information Services (IIS) 5.0
The Server editions include more features and components, including the Microsoft Distributed File System (DFS), Active Directory support and fault tolerant storage.
Distributed File System
The Distributed File System, or DFS, allows
Server Message Block in multiple different locations to be logically grouped under one folder, or
DFS root. When users try to access a share that exists off the DFS root, the user is really looking at a
DFS link and the DFS server transparently redirects them to the correct
file server and share. A DFS root can only exist on a Windows 2000 version that is part of the server family, and only one DFS root can exist on that server.
There can be two ways of implementing DFS on Windows 2000: through standalone DFS, or through domain-based DFS. Standalone DFS allows for only DFS roots that exist on the local computer, and thus does not use Active Directory. Domain-based DFS roots exist within Active Directory and can have their information distributed to other
domain controllers within the domain — this provides Fault-tolerant system to DFS. DFS roots that exist on a domain must be hosted on a domain controller or on a domain member server. The file and root information is replicated via the Microsoft File Replication Service (FRS).
Active Directory
A new way of organizing Windows Server domain, or groups of resources, called Active Directory, was introduced with Windows 2000 and obsoleted Windows NT's traditional domain model. Active Directory's hierarchical nature allowed administrators a built-in way to manage user and computer policies, user accounts, and to automatically deploy programs and updates with a greater degree of scalability and centralization than provided in previous
List of Microsoft Windows versions. It is one of the main reasons many corporations migrated to Windows 2000. User information stored in Active Directory also provided a convenient phone book-like function to end users. Active Directory domains can vary from small installations with a few hundred objects, to large installations with millions of objects. Active Directory contains the ability to organise and link groups of domains into a contiguous
domain name space to form
trees. Groups of trees existing outside of the same namespace can be linked together to form
forests.
Active Directory services could only be installed on a Windows 2000 Server, Advanced Server, or Datacenter Server computer, and cannot be installed on a Windows 2000 Professional computer. However, Windows 2000 Professional was the first client operating system able to exploit Active Directory's new functionality. As part of an organization's migration, Windows NT clients continued to function until all clients were upgraded to Windows 2000 Professional, at which point the Active Directory domain could be switched to native mode and maximum functionality achieved.
Active Directory requires a DNS server that supports
SRV resource records, or that an organization's existing DNS infrastructure be upgraded to support this functionality. It also requires that one or more domain controllers exist to hold the Active Directory database and provide Active Directory
directory services.
Volume fault tolerance
Along with support for simple, spanned and striped volumes, the server family of Windows 2000 also supports fault tolerant volume types. The types supported are
mirrored volumes and
RAID-5 volumes:
- Mirrored volumes: the volume contains several disks, and when data is written to one it is also written to the other disks. This means that if one disk fails, the data can be totally recovered from the other disk. Mirrored volumes are also known as Redundant array of independent disks#RAID 1.
- RAID-5 volumes: a Redundant array of independent disks#RAID 5 volume consists of multiple disks, and it uses Block (data storage)-level striping with parity data distributed across all member disks. Should a disk fail in the array, the parity blocks from the surviving disks are combined mathematically with the data blocks from the surviving disks to reconstruct the data on the failed drive "on-the-fly".
Editions
Microsoft released various versions of Windows 2000 to cater to different markets and business needs. It released Windows 2000 Professional, Windows 2000 Server, Windows 2000 Advanced Server and Windows 2000 Datacenter Server:
- Windows 2000 Professional was designed as the desktop operating system for businesses and power users. It is the basic unit of Windows 2000, and the most common. It offers greater security and stability than many of the previous Windows desktop operating systems. It supports up to two central processing unit, and can address up to 4 Gigabyte of Random Access Memory. The system requirements were a Pentium Processor @133 MHz or greater, at least 64 MB of RAM, 650 MB of hard drive space, and a CD-ROM drive (recommended: Pentium II, 128 MB of RAM, 1 GB of hard drive space, and CD-ROM drive).
- Windows 2000 Server products share the same user interface with Windows 2000 Professional, but contain additional components for running infrastructure and application software. A significant component of the server products is Active Directory, which is an enterprise-wide directory service based on Lightweight Directory Access Protocol. Additionally, Microsoft integrated Kerberos (protocol) network authentication, replacing the often-criticised NTLM authentication system used in previous versions. This also provided a purely transitive-trust relationship between Windows 2000 Windows Server domain in a forest (a collection of one or more Windows 2000 domains that share a common schema, configuration, and global catalogue, being linked with two-way transitive trusts). Furthermore, Windows 2000 introduced a Domain Name System server which allows dynamic registration of Internet Protocol addresses.
- Windows 2000 Advanced Server is a variant of Windows 2000 Server operating system designed for medium-to-large businesses. It offers Computer clustering infrastructure for high availability and scalability of applications and services, including main memory support of up to 8 gigabytes (GB) on Physical Address Extension (PAE) systems and the ability to do 8-way Symmetric multiprocessing. It has support for TCP/IP load balancing (computing) and enhanced two-node server clusters based on the Microsoft Cluster Server (MSCS) in the Windows NT Server 4.0 Enterprise Edition.Microsoft. Windows 200 Resource Kit, Chap. 1, "Introducing Windows 2000 Deployment Planning". A limited edition 64-bit version of Windows 2000 Advanced Server was made available via the OEM Channel. It also supports failover and load balancing.
- Windows 2000 Datacenter Server is a variant of the Windows 2000 Server that is designed for large businesses that move large quantities of confidential or sensitive data frequently via a central Server (computing). As with Advanced Server, it supports clustering, failover and load balancing. Its minimum system requirements are normal, but it was designed to be capable of handing more advanced hardware - for instance it was capable of supporting computers with up to 32 CPUs and 64 gigabyte RAM. A limited edition 64-bit version of Windows 2000 Datacenter Server was made available via the OEM Channel.
System Requirements
Windows 2000 has relatively low minimum system requirements, they are shown below:
Windows 2000 Professional:
*133 MHz or higher Pentium-compatible CPU
*64 megabytes (MB) of RAM recommended minimum
*2 GB hard disk space
{{cite web|url=http://www.dewassoc.com/support/win2000/require.htm|title = Windows 2000 Hardware Requirements|accessdate=2007-09-22-->
Windows 2000 Server:
*133 MHz CPU
*256 MB of RAM minimum
*2 GB hard disk space
{{cite web|url=http://www.dewassoc.com/support/win2000/require.htm|title = Windows 2000 Hardware Requirements|accessdate=2007-09-22-->
Windows 2000 Advanced Server:
*133 MHz CPU
*256 MB of RAM recommended minimum
*2 GB hard disk space
{{cite web|url=http://www.dewassoc.com/support/win2000/require.htm|title = Windows 2000 Hardware Requirements|accessdate=2007-09-22-->
Deployment
Windows 2000 can be deployed to a site via various methods. It can be installed onto servers via traditional media (such as via CD) or via distribution folders that reside on a shared folder. Installations can be attended or unattended. An attended installation requires the manual intervention of an operator to choose options when installing the operating system. Unattended installations are scripted via an answer file, or predefined script in the form of an
initialization file that has all the options filled in already. An answer file can be created manually or using the graphical
Setup manager. The Winnt.exe or Winnt32.exe program then uses that answer file to automate the installation. Unattended installations can be performed via a bootable CD, using Microsoft Systems Management Server (SMS), via the
Sysprep, via running the Winnt32.exe program using the /syspart switch or via running Remote Installation Services (RIS).
The Sysprep method is started on a standardised reference computer — though the hardware need not be similar — and it copies the required installation files from the reference computer's hard drive to the target computer's hard drive. The hard drive does not need to be in the target computer and may be swapped out to it at any time, with hardware configuration still needing to be done later. The Winnt.exe program must also be passed a /unattend switch that points to a valid answer file and a /s file to point to the location of one or more valid installation sources.
Sysprep allows the duplication of a
disk image on an existing Windows 2000 Server installation to multiple servers. This means that all applications and system configuration settings will be copied across to the new Windows 2000 installations, but it also means that the reference and target computers must have the same HALs,
ACPI support, and mass storage devices — though Windows 2000 automatically detects
Plug and Play devices. The primary reason for using Sysprep is for deploying Windows 2000 to a site that has standard hardware and that needs a fast method of installing Windows 2000 to those computers. If a system has different HALs, mass storage devices or ACPI support, then multiple images would need to be maintained.
Systems Management Server can be used to upgrade system to Windows 2000 to multiple systems. Those operating systems that can be upgraded in this process must be running a version of Windows that can be upgraded (Windows NT 3.51, Windows NT 4.0, Windows 98 and Windows 95 OSR2.x) and those versions must be running the SMS client agent that can receive software installation operations. Using SMS allows installations to happen over a wide geographical area and provides centralised control over upgrades to systems.
Remote Installation Services (RIS) are a means to automatically install Windows 2000 Professional (and not Windows 2000 Server) to a local computer over a network from a central server. Images do not have to support specific hardware configurations and the security settings can be configured after the computer reboots as the service generates a new unique security ID (SID) for the machine. This is required so that local accounts are given the right identifier and do not clash with other Windows 2000 Professional computers on a network.Mark Minasi.
Installing Windows 2000 On Workstations with Remote Installation Services.RIS requires that client computers are able to boot over the network via either a
network interface card that has a
Pre-Boot Execution Environment (PXE) boot
Read-only memory installed or that it has a network card installed that is supported by the remote
boot disk generator. The
remote computer must also meet the Net PC specification. The server that RIS runs on must be Windows 2000 Server and the server must be able to access a network Domain Name System Service, a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol service and the Active Directory services.
Microsoft Press (2000).
MCSE 70-210, Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional, pages 543-551.
Total cost of ownership
In October 2002, Microsoft commissioned
International Data Corporation to determine the total cost of ownership (TCO) for enterprise applications on Windows 2000 versus the TCO of
Linux on the same enterprise applications. IDC looked at security and other infrastructure tasks, and Web Serving. According to the report, Windows 2000 had a lower TCO for four infrastructure items and Linux had a lower TCO for web serving. IDC's report was based on telephone interviews of IT executives and managers of 104
North American companies in which they determined what they were using for a specific workload for file, print, security and networking services.
IDC determined that the four areas where Windows 2000 had a better TCO than Linux — over a period of five years for an average organization of 100 employees — were in the use of file, print, network infrastructure and security infrastructure. They determined, however, that Linux had a better TCO than Windows 2000 when it came to web serving. The report also found that the greatest cost was not in the procurement of software and hardware, but in staffing costs and downtime. The report did not take into consideration the impact of downtime to the profitability of the business (although they did apply a 40% productivity factor, in order to recognize that employees are not entirely unproductive during periods of IT infrastructure downtime) though it did find that Linux servers had less unplanned downtime than Windows 2000 Servers. They found that most Linux servers ran less workload per server than Windows 2000 servers and also found that none of the businesses they interviewed used 4-way SMP Linux computers. IDC also did not take into account specific
application servers — servers that need low maintenance and are provided by a specific vendor — when they performed their study. The report did emphasise that TCO was only one factor in considering whether to use a particular IT platform, and also noted that as management and server software improved and became better packaged the overall picture that was being shown in their report could change." Windows 2000 Versus Linux in Enterprise Computing",
IDC.
Current status
Windows 2000 has now been superseded by newer Microsoft operating systems. Microsoft replaced Windows 2000 Server products with
Windows Server 2003, and Windows 2000 Professional with Windows XP.The Windows 2000 family of operating systems moved from mainstream support to the extended support phase on June 30, 2005. Microsoft says that this marks the progression of Windows 2000 through the Microsoft Lifecycle policy. Under the extended support phase, Microsoft continues to provide critical security updates on a monthly basis and pay per incident telephone support. However, free
technical support and design changes are no longer provided. Because of its old age, Microsoft is not offering current components such as Internet Explorer 7 for Windows 2000. They claim that IE 7 is reliant on security features designed only for Windows XP Service Pack 2 and Windows Vista, and is thus non-trivial to port back to the Windows 2000 platform. Microsoft is strongl
{{Infobox OS version| name = Windows 2000| family = Microsoft Windows| logo = Windows 2000 logo.png| screenshot = Win2000.png| caption = Screenshot of Windows 2000 Professional| developer = Microsoft| website = www.microsoft.com/windows2000| first_release_date = February 17 [2000 [2005| license = Microsoft [EULA| support_status = Extended Support Period until June/July 2010,{{cite web|url=http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/server/evaluation/news/bulletins/extendedsupport.mspx|title=Windows 2000 Transitions to Extended Support-->{{cite web|url=http://support.microsoft.com/lifecycle/search/?sort=PN&alpha=Windows+2000&Filter=FilterNO|title=Microsoft Product Lifecycle for Windows 2000 family--> security updates will be provided free of cost and paid support is still available.
-->
Windows 2000 (also referred to as
Win2K) is a
Preemption (computing), interruptible, Graphical user interface and business-oriented
operating system designed to work with either uniprocessor or
Symmetric multiprocessing 32-bit Intel
x86 computers. It is part of the Microsoft
Windows NT line of operating systems and was released on
February 17 2000. It was succeeded by Windows XP in October 2001 and Windows Server 2003 in April 2003. Windows 2000 is classified as a hybrid kernel operating system.
Windows 2000 was made available in four editions: Professional, Server, Advanced Server, and Datacenter Server. Additionally, Microsoft offered Windows 2000 Advanced Server Limited Edition and Windows 2000 Datacenter Server Limited Edition, which were released in 2001 and run on
64-bit Intel Itanium
microprocessors. Whilst all editions of Windows 2000 are targeted to different markets, they each share a core set of common functionality, including many system utilities such as the
Microsoft Management Console and standard system administration applications. Support for people with disabilities was improved over Windows NT 4.0 with a number of new
assistive technology, and Microsoft included increased support for different languages and locale information. All versions of the operating system support the Windows NT filesystem, NTFS 3.0, the Encrypting File System, as well as basic and dynamic
Logical Disk Manager. The Windows 2000 Server family has additional functionality, including the ability to provide
Active Directory services (a hierarchical framework of resources), Distributed File System (Microsoft) (a file system that supports sharing of files) and fault-redundant storage volumes. Windows 2000 can be installed and deployed to corporate desktops through either an attended or unattended installation. Unattended installations rely on the use of answer files to fill in installation information, and can be performed through a bootable CD using Microsoft
Systems Management Server, by the Sysprep. Windows 2000 is the last NT-kernel based version of Microsoft Windows that does not include Windows Product Activation.
At the time of its release, Microsoft marketed Windows 2000 as the most secure Windows version they had ever shipped,{{cite press release] 2000 and [Nimda (computer worm). More than seven years after its release, it continues to receive patches for security vulnerabilities on a near-monthly basis.
History
Windows 2000 is a continuation of the Microsoft
Windows NT line of operating systems, replacing its predecessor, Windows NT 4.0. Originally called Windows NT 5.0, then Windows NT 2000, Microsoft changed the name to Windows 2000 on
October 27 1998.{{cite web]
1998, though Windows 2000 [Service pack 1 was codenamed "Asteroid" and Windows 2000 64-bit was codenamed "Janus" (not to be confused with Windows 3.1, which had the same codename). The first beta for Windows 2000 was released on
September 27 1997 and several further betas were released until Beta 3 which was released on April 29
1999. DEC Alpha support was removed from the final build. From here, Microsoft issued three release candidates between July and November 1999, and finally released the operating system to partners on December 12
1999.{{cite web] 2000. Three days before the launch of Windows 2000, which Microsoft advertised as "a standard in reliability", a leaked memo from Microsoft reported on by Mary Jo Foley revealed that Windows 2000 had "over 63,000 potential known defects". Bugfest! Win2000 has 63,000 'defects' February 14, 2000 After Foley's article was published, Microsoft
blacklisted her for a considerable time: Mary Jo Foley: The Exit Interview September 20, 2006
InformationWeek summarized the release "our tests show the successor to NT 4.0 is everything we hoped it would be. Of course, it isn't perfect either." InformationWeek, December 28, 1999, "Special Report" Wired News later described the results of the February launch as "lackluster". Wired News, November 2000, "The Truth, The Whole Truth, and Nothing But The Truth"
Novell criticized Microsoft's
Active Directory, the new directory service architecture to be less scalable or reliable than their own
Novell Directory Services (NDS) technology.{{cite web] 1999 and Windows NT 4.0. However, that was later changed. Instead, an updated version of Windows 98 called Windows 98 Second Edition was released in 1999 as a successor to Windows 98. Microsoft released Windows 2000 Datacenter Server, targeted at large-scale computing systems with support for 32 processors, on [September 29, 2000.
On or shortly before
February 12,
2004, "portions of the Microsoft Windows 2000 and Windows NT 4.0 source code were illegally made available on the Internet".{{cite web]
2004 networks. Consequentially, on [February 16,
2004, an
Exploit (computer security) "allegedly discovered by an individual studying the leaked source code" for certain versions of Microsoft Internet Explorer was reported.
Architecture
Windows 2000 is a highly modular system that consists of two main layers: a user mode and a kernel mode. The user mode refers to the mode in which user programs are run. Such programs are limited in terms of what system resources they have access to, while the kernel mode has unrestricted access to the system memory and external devices. All user mode applications access system resources through the executive which runs in kernel mode.
User mode
User mode in Windows 2000 is made of subsystems capable of passing
Input/output requests to the appropriate kernel mode drivers by using the I/O manager. Two subsystems make up the user mode layer of Windows 2000: the environment subsystem and the integral subsystem.
The environment subsystem was designed to run applications written for many different types of operating systems. These applications, however, run at a lower priority than kernel mode processes. There are three main environment subsystems:{{cite web|url=http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/Windows2000Pro/reskit/part8/proch36.mspx?mfr=true|title=Appendix D - Running Nonnative Applications in Windows 2000 Professional|work=Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional Resource Kit|publisher=Microsoft-->
Win32 subsystem runs Microsoft Windows applications and also supports Virtual DOS Machines (VDMs), which allows MS-DOS and 16-bit Windows 3.1x (Win16) applications to run on Windows.
OS/2 environment subsystem supports 16-bit character-based OS/2 applications and emulates OS/2 1.3 and 1.x, but not 32-bit or graphical OS/2 applications as used on OS/2 2.x or later.
POSIX environment subsystem supports applications that are strictly written to either the POSIX.1 standard or the related International Organization for Standardization/International Electrotechnical Commission standards.
The integral subsystem looks after operating system specific functions on behalf of the environment subsystem. It consists of a
security subsystem (grants/denies access and handles logons),
workstation service (helps the computer gain network access) and a
server service (lets the computer provide network services).
Kernel mode
Kernel mode in Windows 2000 has full access to the hardware and system resources of the computer. The kernel mode stops user mode services and applications from accessing critical areas of the operating system that they should not have access to.
, as illustrated by this screenshot from
SysInternal's WinObjThe executive interfaces with all the user mode subsystems. It deals with I/O, object management, security and process management. It contains various components, including:
- Object Manager (Windows): a special executive subsystem that all other executive subsystems must pass through to gain access to Windows 2000 resources. This is essentially a resource management infrastructure service that allows Windows 2000 to be an object oriented operating system.
- I/O Manager: allows devices to communicate with user-mode subsystems by translating user-mode read and write commands and passing them to device drivers.
- Security Reference Monitor (SRM): the primary authority for enforcing the security rules of the security integral subsystem.Microsoft. " Active Directory Data Storage".
- IPC Manager: short for Interprocess Communication Manager, manages the communication between clients (the environment subsystem) and servers (components of the executive).
- Virtual Memory Manager: manages virtual memory, allowing Windows 2000 to use the hard disk as a primary storage device (although strictly speaking it is secondary storage).
- Process Manager: handles process (computing) and thread (computer science) creation and termination
- PnP Manager: handles Plug and Play and supports device detection and installation at Booting.
- Power Manager: the power manager coordinates power events and generates power I/O request packets.
- The display system is handled by a device driver contained in Win32k.sys. The Window Manager component of this driver is responsible for drawing windows and menus while the Graphics Device Interface (Graphics Device Interface) component is responsible for tasks such as drawing line (mathematics) and curves, rendering fonts and handling Palette (computing). Windows 2000 also introduced alpha blending into the Graphics Device Interface which reflects in the fade effect in menus.
The Windows 2000 Hardware Abstraction Layer, or HAL, is a layer between the physical hardware of the computer and the rest of the operating system. It was designed to hide differences in hardware and therefore provide a consistent platform to run applications on. The HAL includes hardware specific code that controls I/O interfaces,
interrupt controllers and multiple processors.
The hybrid kernel sits between the HAL and the executive and provides multiprocessor synchronization, thread and interrupt scheduling and dispatching, trap handling and exception dispatching. The hybrid kernel often interfaces with the process manager
Inside Microsoft Windows 2000 (Third Edition).
Microsoft Press.and is responsible for initializing device drivers at bootup that are necessary to get the operating system up and running.
Common functionality
Windows 2000 introduced many of the Windows 98 new features into the NT line, such as, the
Windows Desktop Update, Windows Driver Model, Internet Connection Sharing, Windows Media Player,
WebDAV support etc. Certain features are common across all editions of Windows 2000, among them being NTFS 3.0, the Microsoft Management Console (MMC), the
Encrypting File System (EFS),
Logical Disk Manager, usability enhancements and multi-language and locale support. Windows 2000 also has several system utilities included as standard. As well as these features, Microsoft introduced a new feature to protect critical system files, called
Windows File Protection. This prevents programs (with the exception of Microsoft's update programs) from replacing critical Windows system files and thus making the system inoperable.
Microsoft recognized that the infamous
Blue Screen of Death (or stop error) could cause serious problems for servers that needed to be constantly running and so provided a system setting that would allow the server to automatically reboot when a stop error occurred. Also included is an option to dump any of the first 64 kilobyte of memory to disk (the smallest amount of memory that is useful for debugging purposes, also known as a minidump), a dump of only the kernel's memory, or a dump of the entire contents of memory to disk, as well as write that this event happened to the Windows 2000 event log. In order to improve performance on computers running Windows 2000 as a server operating system, Microsoft gave administrators the choice of optimizing the operating system's memory and processor usage patterns for background services or for applications. Windows 2000 also introduced such technologies as the
Windows Installer, Windows Management Instrumentation, OpenType PostScript fonts (.OTF), Data protection application programming interface (DPAPI) and the
Indexing Service into the operating system.
Improvements to Windows Explorer
had a built-in media player in Windows 2000
The Windows Explorer received a number of enhancements in Windows 2000. It was the first
Windows NT release to include
Active Desktop, a component first introduced as a part of Internet Explorer 4.0, and only pre-installed in Windows 98 by that time. Renamed in Windows 2000 as "Windows Desktop Update" , it allowed the users to customize the way folders look and behave by using HTML templates, having the
file extension HTT. This feature had been abused by computer viruses that employed malicious scripts,
Java (programming language) applets, or ActiveX controls in folder template files as their infection vector. Two such viruses are VBS/Roor-C
Sophos, VBS/Roor-C threat analysis. Accessed 2007-08-26. and VBS.Redlof.a.
The "Web-style" folders view, with the left Explorer pane displaying details for the object currently selected, is turned on by default in Windows 2000. For certain file types, such as pictures and media files, the preview is also displayed in the left pane. Until the dedicated interactive preview pane appeared in
Windows Vista, Windows 2000 had been the only Windows release to feature an interactive media player as the previewer for sound and video files. However, such a previewer can be enabled in Windows Me and
Windows XP through the use of third-party shell extensions, as the extensibility of the updated Windows Explorer allows for custom thumbnail previewers and tooltip handlers. The default file tooltip displays file title, author, subject and comments; these metadata may be read from a special
NTFS stream, in case the file is located on an NTFS volume, or from an OLE
structured storage stream, in case the file is a structured storage document. All
Microsoft Office documents since Office 95 are stored in structured storages, so that their metadata are displayable in Windows 2000 Explorer default tooltip.
The right pane of Windows 2000 Explorer, which usually just lists files and folders, can also be customized. For example, the contents of the system folders aren't displayed by default, instead showing in the right pane a cautionary message telling the user that modifying the contents of the system folders could harm their computer. It's possible to define additional Explorer panes by using
Div (HTML tag) elements in folder template files Other Explorer UI elements that can be customized include columns in "Details" view, icon overlays, and search providers: the new DHTML-based search pane is integrated into Windows 2000 Explorer, unlike the separate search dialog found in all previous Explorer versions. This degree of customizability is new to Windows 2000; neither Windows 98 nor the Desktop Update could provide it.
NTFS 3.0
s, which can be set via the "Quota" tab found in the hard disk properties
dialog box.Microsoft released the version 3.0 of the NTFS file system (sometimes incorrectly referred to as NTFS 5 in relation to the kernel version number) as part of Windows 2000; this introduced disk quotas, Encrypting File System,
sparse files and
NTFS reparse point. Sparse files allow for the efficient storage of data sets that are very large yet contain many areas that only have zeros.
NTFS reparse point allow the
Object Manager (Windows) to reset a file namespace lookup and let file system drivers implement changed functionality in a transparent manner. Reparse points are used to implement volume mount points, NTFS junction point,
Hierarchical Storage Management, Native
Structured storage and
Single Instance Storage. Volume mount points and directory junctions allow for a file to be transparently referred from one file or directory location to another.
Encrypting File System
The Encrypting File System (EFS) introduced strong file system-level encryption to Windows. It allows any folder or drive on an NTFS volume to be encrypted transparently by the end user. EFS works in conjunction with the EFS service, Microsoft's
Cryptographic Application Programming Interface and the EFS File System
Runtime Library (FSRTL). As of May 2007, its encryption has not been compromised.
EFS works by encrypting a file with a bulk symmetric key (also known as the File Encryption Key, or FEK), which is used because it takes a relatively smaller amount of time to encrypt and decrypt large amounts of data than if an
asymmetric key cipher is used. The symmetric key that is used to encrypt the file is then encrypted with a
public key that is associated with the user who encrypted the file, and this encrypted data is stored in the header of the encrypted file. To decrypt the file, the file system uses the private key of the user to decrypt the symmetric key that is stored in the file header. It then uses the symmetric key to decrypt the file. Because this is done at the file system level, it is transparent to the user." Encrypting File System".
Microsoft.
In case of a user losing access to their key, support for recovery agents that can decrypt files is built in to EFS.
Basic and dynamic disk storage
Windows 2000 introduced the Logical Disk Manager for Logical Disk Manager. All versions of Windows 2000 support three types of
Logical Disk Manager disk volumes (along with basic disks):
simple volumes,
spanned volumes and
striped volumes:
- Simple volume, a volume with disk space from one disk.
- Spanned volumes, where multiple disks (up to 32) show up as one, increasing it in size but not enhancing performance. When one disk fails, the array is destroyed. Some data may be recoverable. This corresponds to JBOD#Concatenation (JBOD or SPAN) and not to Redundant array of independent disks#RAID 1.
- Striped volumes, also known as Redundant array of independent disks#RAID 0, store all their data across several disks in stripes. This allows better performance because disk read and writes are balanced across multiple disks.
Windows 2000 also added support for the
iSCSI protocol.
Accessibility support
Microsoft made an effort to increase the usability of Windows 2000 over Windows NT 4.0 for people with visual and auditory impairments and other
disability. They included several utilities designed to make the system more
Computer accessibility, although many of these accessibility features were already available with previous versions of Windows:
- FilterKeys: These are a group of computer keyboard related features for people with typing issues, and include:
- SlowKeys: Ignore keystrokes that are not held down for a certain time period.
- BounceKeys: Multiple keystrokes to one key to be ignored within a certain timeframe.
- RepeatKeys: allows users to slow down the rate at which keys are repeated via the keyboard's keyrepeat feature.
- ToggleKeys: when turned on, Windows will play a sound when either the CAPS LOCK, NUM LOCK or SCROLL LOCK keys are pressed.
- Mouse keys: allows the cursor to be moved around the screen via the Keypad instead of the mouse.
- On-screen keyboard: allows users to use a mouse to use the keyboard and enter on-screen keyboard characters.
- SerialKeys: gives Windows 2000 the ability to support speech augmentation devices.
- Sticky keys: makes modifier keys (ALT, CTRL and SHIFT) become "sticky" — in other words a user can press the modifier key, release that key and then press the combination key. Normally the modifier key must remain pressed down to activate the sequence (Activated by pressing Shift 5 times quickly).
- Microsoft Magnifier: A screen magnifier that assists users with visual impairments by magnifying the part of the screen they place their mouse over.
- Narrator: Microsoft Narrator, introduced in Windows 2000, assists users with visual impairments with system messages, as when these appear the narrator will read this out via the sound system.
- High contrast theme: to assist users with visual impairments.
- SoundSentry: designed to help users with auditory impairments, Windows 2000 will show a visual effect when a sound is played through the sound system.
Language and locale support
Windows 2000 has support for many languages other than English language. It supports Arabic language,
Armenian language, Baltic languages,
Central European, Cyrillic,
Georgian language,
Greek language, Hebrew language,
Indic, Japanese language, Korean language, Simplified Chinese,
Thai language,
Traditional Chinese,
Turkic languages,
Vietnamese language and Western European languages. Microsoft Support KB 292264: List of Languages Supported in Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows Server 2003.It also has support for many different
locales, a list of which can be found on Microsoft's website.
Games support
Windows 2000 included version 7.0 of the DirectX Applications Programming Interface, commonly used by game developers on Windows 98. Ask the Windows 2000 Dev Team. The last supported version of DirectX that Windows 2000 supports is DirectX 9.0c (Shader Model 3.0), the same version as the one shipped with Windows XP Service Pack 2.However, as of mid-2007, Microsoft continues to publish bimonthly minor updates to DirectX 9.0c files; these updates do not advance the overall DirectX version number. The majority of games written for recent versions of DirectX could therefore run on Windows 2000, in contrast to Windows NT 4.0, which only provided support for DirectX 3.0.
System utilities
Windows 2000 introduced the Microsoft Management Console (MMC), which is used to create, save, and open administrative tools. Each of the tools is called a
console, and most consoles allow an administrator to administer other Windows 2000 computers from one centralised computer. Each console can contain one or many specific administrative tools, called
snap-ins. Snap-ins can be either standalone (performs one function), or extensions (adds functionality to an existing snap-in). In order to provide the ability to control what snap-ins can be seen in a console, the MMC allows consoles to be created in author mode or created in user mode. Author mode allows snap-ins to be added, new windows to be created, all portions of the console tree can be displayed and for consoles to be saved. User mode allows consoles to be distributed with restrictions applied. User mode consoles can grant full access to the user so they can make whatever changes they desire, or they can grant limited access to users which prevents users adding snapins to the console, though they can view multiple windows in a console. Alternatively users can be granted limited access, preventing them from adding to the console and stopping them viewing multiple windows in a single console.
Microsoft Press (2000).
MCSE 70-210, Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional, pages 58-63.
.The main tools that come with Windows 2000 can be found in the Computer Management console (found in Administrative Tools in the Control Panel). This contains the Event Viewer — a means of seeing events and the Windows equivalent of a
log file, a system information utility, a backup utility, a
task scheduler and management consoles to view open shared folders and shared folder sessions, configure and manage COM+ applications, configure
Group policy, manage all the local users and user groups, and a Device Manager. It also contains a disk management snap-in, a
Removable Storage snap-in, a
Disk Defragmenter (Windows) as well a performance diagnostic console, which displays graphs of system performance and configures data logs and alerts. Lastly, it also contains a
Windows service configuration console, which allows users to view all installed services and to stop and start them on demand, as well as configure what those services should do when the computer starts.
Windows 2000 comes bundled with two utilities to edit the Windows registry,
REGEDIT.EXE and
REGEDT32.EXE. REGEDIT.EXE was directly ported from
Windows 98, and therefore does not support editing registry permissions. REGEDT32.EXE has the older multiple document interface (MDI) and can edit registry permissions in the same manner that Windows NT's REGEDT32.EXE program could. REGEDIT.EXE has a left-side tree view of the
Windows registry, lists all loaded hives and represents the three components of a value (its name, type, and data) as separate columns of a table. REGEDT32.EXE has a left-side tree view, but each hive has its own window, so the tree displays only keys and it represents values as a list of strings. REGEDIT.EXE supports right-clicking of entries in a tree view to adjust properties and other settings. REGEDT32.EXE requires all actions to be performed from the top menu bar.
Windows XP was the first system to integrate these two programs into a single utility, adopting the REGEDIT.EXE behavior with the additional NT functionality.
The
System File Checker (SFC) also comes bundled with Windows 2000. It is a command line utility that scans system files and verifies whether they were signed by Microsoft and works in conjunction with the
Windows File Protection mechanism. It can also repopulate and repair all the files in the
Dllcache folder.
Recovery Console
The Recovery Console is an application that is run from outside the installed copy of Windows and that enables a user to perform maintenance tasks that cannot be run from inside of the installed copy, or cannot be feasibly run from another computer or copy of Windows 2000. It is usually used to recover the system from errors causing booting to fail, which would render other tools useless.
It presents itself as a simple
command line interface. The commands are limited to ones for checking and repairing the hard drive(s), repairing boot information (including NTLDR), replacing corrupted system files with fresh copies from the CD, or enabling/disabling services and drivers for the next boot.
The console can be accessed in one of two ways:
Starting from the Windows 2000 CD, and choosing to enter the Recovery Console instead of continuing with setup, or
Installing the Recovery Console via Winnt32.exe, with the /cmdcons switch. However, the console can then only be used if the system boots to the point where NTLDR can start it.
Server family functionality
The Windows 2000 server family consists of Windows 2000 Server, Windows 2000 Advanced Server and Windows 2000 Datacenter Server.
All editions of Windows 2000 Server have the following services and functionality built-in:
- Routing and Remote Access Service (RRAS) support, facilitating Dial-up access and Virtual Private Network connections, support for RADIUS authentication, network connection sharing, Network Address Translation, unicast and multicast routing schemes.
- Microsoft DNS server, including support for Dynamic DNS. Active Directory relies heavily on DNS.
- IPsec support and TCP/IP filtering
- Smart card support
- Microsoft Connection Manager Administration Kit (CMAK) and Connection Point Services
- Support for Distributed File System (Microsoft) (DFS)
- Hierarchical Storage Management support, a service that runs in conjunction with NTFS that automatically transfers files that are not used for some period of time to less expensive storage media
- Fault-tolerant design volumes, namely it supports Redundant array of independent disks#RAID 1 and Redundant array of independent disks#RAID-5
- Group policy (part of Active Directory)
- IntelliMirror, a collection of technologies for Granularity management of Windows 2000 Professional desktops (Roaming profiles, Microsoft Message Queuing, Offline files (also known as Client Side Caching or CSC), TAPI 3.0, COM+ and Microsoft Transaction Server application host, software installation, settings management).
- Kerberos (protocol) authentication
- MS-CHAP v2 protocol
- Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) support
- Terminal Services and support for the Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP)
- Internet Information Services (IIS) 5.0
The Server editions include more features and components, including the Microsoft Distributed File System (DFS), Active Directory support and fault tolerant storage.
Distributed File System
The Distributed File System, or DFS, allows Server Message Block in multiple different locations to be logically grouped under one folder, or
DFS root. When users try to access a share that exists off the DFS root, the user is really looking at a
DFS link and the DFS server transparently redirects them to the correct file server and share. A DFS root can only exist on a Windows 2000 version that is part of the server family, and only one DFS root can exist on that server.
There can be two ways of implementing DFS on Windows 2000: through standalone DFS, or through domain-based DFS. Standalone DFS allows for only DFS roots that exist on the local computer, and thus does not use Active Directory. Domain-based DFS roots exist within Active Directory and can have their information distributed to other domain controllers within the domain — this provides Fault-tolerant system to DFS. DFS roots that exist on a domain must be hosted on a domain controller or on a domain member server. The file and root information is replicated via the Microsoft
File Replication Service (FRS).
Active Directory
A new way of organizing Windows Server domain, or groups of resources, called Active Directory, was introduced with Windows 2000 and obsoleted Windows NT's traditional domain model. Active Directory's hierarchical nature allowed administrators a built-in way to manage user and computer policies, user accounts, and to automatically deploy programs and updates with a greater degree of scalability and centralization than provided in previous
List of Microsoft Windows versions. It is one of the main reasons many corporations migrated to Windows 2000. User information stored in Active Directory also provided a convenient phone book-like function to end users. Active Directory domains can vary from small installations with a few hundred objects, to large installations with millions of objects. Active Directory contains the ability to organise and link groups of domains into a contiguous
domain name space to form
trees. Groups of trees existing outside of the same namespace can be linked together to form
forests.
Active Directory services could only be installed on a Windows 2000 Server, Advanced Server, or Datacenter Server computer, and cannot be installed on a Windows 2000 Professional computer. However, Windows 2000 Professional was the first client operating system able to exploit Active Directory's new functionality. As part of an organization's migration, Windows NT clients continued to function until all clients were upgraded to Windows 2000 Professional, at which point the Active Directory domain could be switched to native mode and maximum functionality achieved.
Active Directory requires a DNS server that supports
SRV resource records, or that an organization's existing DNS infrastructure be upgraded to support this functionality. It also requires that one or more domain controllers exist to hold the Active Directory database and provide Active Directory directory services.
Volume fault tolerance
Along with support for simple, spanned and striped volumes, the server family of Windows 2000 also supports fault tolerant volume types. The types supported are
mirrored volumes and
RAID-5 volumes:
- Mirrored volumes: the volume contains several disks, and when data is written to one it is also written to the other disks. This means that if one disk fails, the data can be totally recovered from the other disk. Mirrored volumes are also known as Redundant array of independent disks#RAID 1.
- RAID-5 volumes: a Redundant array of independent disks#RAID 5 volume consists of multiple disks, and it uses Block (data storage)-level striping with parity data distributed across all member disks. Should a disk fail in the array, the parity blocks from the surviving disks are combined mathematically with the data blocks from the surviving disks to reconstruct the data on the failed drive "on-the-fly".
Editions
Microsoft released various versions of Windows 2000 to cater to different markets and business needs. It released Windows 2000 Professional, Windows 2000 Server, Windows 2000 Advanced Server and Windows 2000 Datacenter Server:
- Windows 2000 Professional was designed as the desktop operating system for businesses and power users. It is the basic unit of Windows 2000, and the most common. It offers greater security and stability than many of the previous Windows desktop operating systems. It supports up to two central processing unit, and can address up to 4 Gigabyte of Random Access Memory. The system requirements were a Pentium Processor @133 MHz or greater, at least 64 MB of RAM, 650 MB of hard drive space, and a CD-ROM drive (recommended: Pentium II, 128 MB of RAM, 1 GB of hard drive space, and CD-ROM drive).
- Windows 2000 Server products share the same user interface with Windows 2000 Professional, but contain additional components for running infrastructure and application software. A significant component of the server products is Active Directory, which is an enterprise-wide directory service based on Lightweight Directory Access Protocol. Additionally, Microsoft integrated Kerberos (protocol) network authentication, replacing the often-criticised NTLM authentication system used in previous versions. This also provided a purely transitive-trust relationship between Windows 2000 Windows Server domain in a forest (a collection of one or more Windows 2000 domains that share a common schema, configuration, and global catalogue, being linked with two-way transitive trusts). Furthermore, Windows 2000 introduced a Domain Name System server which allows dynamic registration of Internet Protocol addresses.
- Windows 2000 Advanced Server is a variant of Windows 2000 Server operating system designed for medium-to-large businesses. It offers Computer clustering infrastructure for high availability and scalability of applications and services, including main memory support of up to 8 gigabytes (GB) on Physical Address Extension (PAE) systems and the ability to do 8-way Symmetric multiprocessing. It has support for TCP/IP load balancing (computing) and enhanced two-node server clusters based on the Microsoft Cluster Server (MSCS) in the Windows NT Server 4.0 Enterprise Edition.Microsoft. Windows 200 Resource Kit, Chap. 1, "Introducing Windows 2000 Deployment Planning". A limited edition 64-bit version of Windows 2000 Advanced Server was made available via the OEM Channel. It also supports failover and load balancing.
- Windows 2000 Datacenter Server is a variant of the Windows 2000 Server that is designed for large businesses that move large quantities of confidential or sensitive data frequently via a central Server (computing). As with Advanced Server, it supports clustering, failover and load balancing. Its minimum system requirements are normal, but it was designed to be capable of handing more advanced hardware - for instance it was capable of supporting computers with up to 32 CPUs and 64 gigabyte RAM. A limited edition 64-bit version of Windows 2000 Datacenter Server was made available via the OEM Channel.
System Requirements
Windows 2000 has relatively low minimum system requirements, they are shown below:
Windows 2000 Professional:
*133 MHz or higher Pentium-compatible CPU
*64 megabytes (MB) of RAM recommended minimum
*2 GB hard disk space
{{cite web|url=http://www.dewassoc.com/support/win2000/require.htm|title = Windows 2000 Hardware Requirements|accessdate=2007-09-22-->
Windows 2000 Server:
*133 MHz CPU
*256 MB of RAM minimum
*2 GB hard disk space
{{cite web|url=http://www.dewassoc.com/support/win2000/require.htm|title = Windows 2000 Hardware Requirements|accessdate=2007-09-22-->
Windows 2000 Advanced Server:
*133 MHz CPU
*256 MB of RAM recommended minimum
*2 GB hard disk space
{{cite web|url=http://www.dewassoc.com/support/win2000/require.htm|title = Windows 2000 Hardware Requirements|accessdate=2007-09-22-->
Deployment
Windows 2000 can be deployed to a site via various methods. It can be installed onto servers via traditional media (such as via CD) or via distribution folders that reside on a shared folder. Installations can be attended or unattended. An attended installation requires the manual intervention of an operator to choose options when installing the operating system. Unattended installations are scripted via an
answer file, or predefined script in the form of an initialization file that has all the options filled in already. An answer file can be created manually or using the graphical
Setup manager. The Winnt.exe or Winnt32.exe program then uses that answer file to automate the installation. Unattended installations can be performed via a bootable CD, using Microsoft Systems Management Server (SMS), via the
Sysprep, via running the Winnt32.exe program using the /syspart switch or via running
Remote Installation Services (RIS).
The Sysprep method is started on a standardised reference computer — though the hardware need not be similar — and it copies the required installation files from the reference computer's hard drive to the target computer's hard drive. The hard drive does not need to be in the target computer and may be swapped out to it at any time, with hardware configuration still needing to be done later. The Winnt.exe program must also be passed a /unattend switch that points to a valid answer file and a /s file to point to the location of one or more valid installation sources.
Sysprep allows the duplication of a
disk image on an existing Windows 2000 Server installation to multiple servers. This means that all applications and system configuration settings will be copied across to the new Windows 2000 installations, but it also means that the reference and target computers must have the same HALs, ACPI support, and mass storage devices — though Windows 2000 automatically detects
Plug and Play devices. The primary reason for using Sysprep is for deploying Windows 2000 to a site that has standard hardware and that needs a fast method of installing Windows 2000 to those computers. If a system has different HALs, mass storage devices or ACPI support, then multiple images would need to be maintained.
Systems Management Server can be used to upgrade system to Windows 2000 to multiple systems. Those operating systems that can be upgraded in this process must be running a version of Windows that can be upgraded (Windows NT 3.51, Windows NT 4.0, Windows 98 and Windows 95 OSR2.x) and those versions must be running the SMS client agent that can receive software installation operations. Using SMS allows installations to happen over a wide geographical area and provides centralised control over upgrades to systems.
Remote Installation Services (RIS) are a means to automatically install Windows 2000 Professional (and not Windows 2000 Server) to a local computer over a network from a central server. Images do not have to support specific hardware configurations and the security settings can be configured after the computer reboots as the service generates a new unique security ID (SID) for the machine. This is required so that local accounts are given the right identifier and do not clash with other Windows 2000 Professional computers on a network.Mark Minasi.
Installing Windows 2000 On Workstations with Remote Installation Services.RIS requires that client computers are able to boot over the network via either a network interface card that has a Pre-Boot Execution Environment (PXE) boot
Read-only memory installed or that it has a network card installed that is supported by the remote boot disk generator. The remote computer must also meet the
Net PC specification. The server that RIS runs on must be Windows 2000 Server and the server must be able to access a network
Domain Name System Service, a
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol service and the Active Directory services.
Microsoft Press (2000).
MCSE 70-210, Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional, pages 543-551.
Total cost of ownership
In October 2002, Microsoft commissioned International Data Corporation to determine the total cost of ownership (TCO) for enterprise applications on Windows 2000 versus the TCO of
Linux on the same enterprise applications. IDC looked at security and other infrastructure tasks, and Web Serving. According to the report, Windows 2000 had a lower TCO for four infrastructure items and Linux had a lower TCO for web serving. IDC's report was based on telephone interviews of IT executives and managers of 104 North American companies in which they determined what they were using for a specific workload for file, print, security and networking services.
IDC determined that the four areas where Windows 2000 had a better TCO than Linux — over a period of five years for an average organization of 100 employees — were in the use of file, print, network infrastructure and security infrastructure. They determined, however, that Linux had a better TCO than Windows 2000 when it came to web serving. The report also found that the greatest cost was not in the procurement of software and hardware, but in staffing costs and downtime. The report did not take into consideration the impact of downtime to the profitability of the business (although they did apply a 40% productivity factor, in order to recognize that employees are not entirely unproductive during periods of IT infrastructure downtime) though it did find that Linux servers had less unplanned downtime than Windows 2000 Servers. They found that most Linux servers ran less workload per server than Windows 2000 servers and also found that none of the businesses they interviewed used 4-way SMP Linux computers. IDC also did not take into account specific
application servers — servers that need low maintenance and are provided by a specific vendor — when they performed their study. The report did emphasise that TCO was only one factor in considering whether to use a particular IT platform, and also noted that as management and server software improved and became better packaged the overall picture that was being shown in their report could change." Windows 2000 Versus Linux in Enterprise Computing",
IDC.
Current status
Windows 2000 has now been superseded by newer Microsoft operating systems. Microsoft replaced Windows 2000 Server products with
Windows Server 2003, and Windows 2000 Professional with
Windows XP.The Windows 2000 family of operating systems moved from mainstream support to the extended support phase on June 30, 2005. Microsoft says that this marks the progression of Windows 2000 through the Microsoft Lifecycle policy. Under the extended support phase, Microsoft continues to provide critical security updates on a monthly basis and pay per incident telephone support. However, free technical support and design changes are no longer provided. Because of its old age, Microsoft is not offering current components such as
Internet Explorer 7 for Windows 2000. They claim that IE 7 is reliant on security features designed only for Windows XP Service Pack 2 and Windows Vista, and is thus non-trivial to port back to the Windows 2000 platform. Microsoft is strongl
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