What is a Site?

Posted by mcsenow on January 20, 2010 in Uncategorized |

A site is a collection of one or more well-connected (usually a local area network) TCP/IP subnets. The network between the subnets must be highly reliable and fast (512 Kbps and higher). Although the sites are generally defined on the basis of location, they can be spanned over more than one location. A site structure corresponds to the physical environment, whereas a domain is the logical environment of the network. A site can contain single or multiple domains, and a domain can contain single or multiple sites.

The sites are created to physically group the computers and resources to optimize network traffic. Administrators can configure Active Directory access and replication technology to take advantage of the physical network by configuring sites. When a user logs on to the network, the authentication request searches for the domain controllers in the same site as the user. A site prevents the network traffic from traveling on slow wide area network (WAN) links.

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