Chapter 3: Configuring the Windows Server 2008 Environment Flashcards
A security feature that monitors how programs use memory and stops programs that attempt to use memory allocated for system programs and processes. This is intended to foil viruses, Trojan horses, and worms that attempt to invade system memory.
Data Execution Prevention (DEP)
A digital signature incorporated into driver and system files as a way to verify the files and to ensure that they are not inappropriately overwritten.
Driver Signing
A set of related Registry keys and subkeys stored as a file.
Hive
A hardware line that a computer component, such as a disk drive or serial port, uses to communicate to the processor that it is ready to send or receive information. lntel-based computers have 16 IRQ lines, with 15 available for computer components to use.
Interrupt Request (IRQ) Line
The address in memory through which data is transferred between a computer component and the processor.
I/O Address
Used with the Hyper-V role at the server’s network interface card(s) (NICs) to bind or associate the virtual network services to the NIC and enable the use of a virtual switch between the parent partition containing the main operating system, Windows Server 2008, and child partitions containing other operating systems.
Microsoft Virtual Network Switch Protocol
Moving blocks of information, called pages, from RAM to virtual memory (the paging file) on disk.
Paging
Disk space, in the form of a file, for use when memory requirements exceed the available RAM.
Paging File
Ability of added computer hardware, such as an adapter or modem, to identify itself to the computer operating system for installation. PnP also refers to the Intel and Microsoft specifications for automatic device detection and installation. Many operating systems, such as Windows-based, Macintosh, and UNIX/Linux support PnP.
Plug and Play (PnP)
A data parameter in the Registry stored as a value in hexadecimal, binary, or text format.
Registry Entry
A category of information contained in the Windows Registry, such as hardware or software.
Registry Key
A key within a Registry key, similar to a subfolder under a folder.
Registry Subkey
Used on Windows-based networks to facilitate multicast transmissions for multimedia communications.
Reliable Multicast Protocol
On a network, this refers to an object, such as a shared printer or shared directory, which can be accessed by users. On workstations as well as servers, a resource is an IRQ line, 1/0 address, or memory that is allocated to a computer component, such as a disk drive or communications port.
Resource
Also called a subtree, the highest category of data contained in the Registry. There are five root keys.
Root Key