Managing The Windows 2000 Registry
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- Nombre de pages541
- PrésentationBroché
- Poids0.89 kg
- Dimensions17,8 cm × 23,3 cm × 3,2 cm
- ISBN1-56592-943-8
- EAN9781565929432
- Date de parution01/08/2000
- ÉditeurO'Reilly
Résumé
The Windows 2000 Registry is the repository for all hardware, software, and application configuration settings, and Managing the Windows 2000 Registry is the system administrator's guide to maintaining, monitoring, and updating the Registry database. The book, which is an update and expansion of Managing the Windows NT Registry, addresses four areas:
• What is the Registry? Where does it live on disk? How do system services access and use it? What do you do if it's damaged or corrupted? Every 2000 administrator faces questions like these, often in a desperate attempt to fix something that's broken.
• What tools are available? Detailed descriptions of Regedit, RegEdt32, the System Policy Editor, Group Policy Editor, and selected Resource Kit utilities explain how to edit and secure the Registry, on both local and remote computers.
• How can I access the Registry from a program? Regularly monitoring the Registry's contents is one way to preclude unpleasant surprises. Using examples in C++, Visual Basic, and Perl, Managing the Windows 2000 Registry demonstrates how to create Registry-aware tools and scripts.
• What's in the Registry? Not all Registry keys are adequately documented by Microsoft or by the other vendors who store configuration data in the Registry. Managing the Windows 2000 Registry offers a guided tour of some of these undocumented keys.
This book is a "must have" for every Windows 2000 system manager or administrator.
The Windows 2000 Registry is the repository for all hardware, software, and application configuration settings, and Managing the Windows 2000 Registry is the system administrator's guide to maintaining, monitoring, and updating the Registry database. The book, which is an update and expansion of Managing the Windows NT Registry, addresses four areas:
• What is the Registry? Where does it live on disk? How do system services access and use it? What do you do if it's damaged or corrupted? Every 2000 administrator faces questions like these, often in a desperate attempt to fix something that's broken.
• What tools are available? Detailed descriptions of Regedit, RegEdt32, the System Policy Editor, Group Policy Editor, and selected Resource Kit utilities explain how to edit and secure the Registry, on both local and remote computers.
• How can I access the Registry from a program? Regularly monitoring the Registry's contents is one way to preclude unpleasant surprises. Using examples in C++, Visual Basic, and Perl, Managing the Windows 2000 Registry demonstrates how to create Registry-aware tools and scripts.
• What's in the Registry? Not all Registry keys are adequately documented by Microsoft or by the other vendors who store configuration data in the Registry. Managing the Windows 2000 Registry offers a guided tour of some of these undocumented keys.
This book is a "must have" for every Windows 2000 system manager or administrator.