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Recipe 11.20 Finding the Site for a Client11.20.1 ProblemYou want to find which site a client computer is in. 11.20.2 Solution11.20.2.1 Using a command-line interfaceIn the following command, replace <HostName> with the name of the host you want to find the site for: > nltest /server:<HostName> /DsGetSite 11.20.2.2 Using VBScriptAlthough you cannot use it directly from a scripting language like VBScript, Microsoft provides a DsGetSiteName method that can be used by languages, such as Visual Basic and C++, to retrieve site coverage information. In fact, the nltest command shown in the CLI solution is a wrapper around this method. The IADsTool interface provides a wrapper around this method: set objIadsTools = CreateObject("IADsTools.DCFunctions") strSite = objIadsTools.DsGetSiteName("<HostName>") Wscript.Echo "Site: " & strSite 11.20.3 DiscussionEach domain controller has a server object that is contained with a site. Clients are different—they are associated with a site based on their IP address and the corresponding subnet that it matches is in the Subnets container. The client site information is important because it determines the domain controller the client authenticates with. If the client's IP address does not match a subnet range of any of the subnets stored in Active Directory, it will randomly pick a site to use, which means it could authenticate against any domain controller in the domain. See Recipe 11.21 for a way to hardcode the site association for a client. 11.20.4 See AlsoRecipe 11.21 for forcing a host to a particular site, MS KB 247811 (How Domain Controllers Are Located in Windows), and MSDN: DsGetSiteName |
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