Tek-Tips is the largest IT community on the Internet today!

Members share and learn making Tek-Tips Forums the best source of peer-reviewed technical information on the Internet!

  • Congratulations strongm on being selected by the Tek-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Remote Monitoring via http or https??????

Status
Not open for further replies.

iolair

IS-IT--Management
Oct 28, 2002
965
US
On my old Netware server, I could open a browser, type in the address of the server and monitor and admin it via browser. It was actually quite cool for its' time. Does anyone know of a way to do this on a W2K8 server? When I type in the server's address, I get a default IIS page that just tells me IIS is up and running. Is there a page I can point to? Does Windows do this at all? The Netware server used port 8008, I tried that, but it didn't work either. I would like this function on W2K8, if anyone knows how to do it. Thanks.

Iolair MacWalter
Network Engineer
 
It's called RDP. Enable it on the server and then connect via any workstation.

I'm Certifiable, not cert-ified.
It just means my answers are from experience, not a book.

There are no more PDC's! There are DC's with FSMO roles!
 
There is nothing native in Windows that is anything like the Netware portal.

ManageEngine do some products that are web based for AD and server management, perhaps have a look at their site and see if they do what you need.




Paul
VCP4

RFC 2795 - The Infinite Monkey Protocol Suite (IMPS)

Difficult takes a day, impossible takes a week
 
Do I need admin rights for RDP?

Thanks for the ManageEngine tip, pagy. That sort of looks like what I'm looking for. Spiceworks helped some, but nothing like ManageEngine.

Iolair MacWalter
Network Engineer
 
You need to be able to login to use RDP, which means that you need the Allow Logon Locally privilege. In most cases the ability to logon locally to a server is restricted to Administrators.

________________________________________
CompTIA A+, Network+, Server+, Security+
MCTS:Windows 7
MCTS:Hyper-V
MCTS:System Center Virtual Machine Manager
MCTS:Windows Server 2008 R2, Server Virtualization
MCSE:Security 2003
MCITP:Enterprise Administrator
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor

Back
Top