Anyone figured out how to ZeroTier with AD?
-
@jmoore said in Anyone figured out how to ZeroTier with AD?:
Where is Zoho the company located?
-
Ok cool thanks. Did not realize they were related to ManageEngine.
-
@jmoore said in Anyone figured out how to ZeroTier with AD?:
Ok cool thanks. Did not realize they were related to ManageEngine.
They are the parent.
-
@scottalanmiller Ok I see. Love their stuff though.
-
@jmoore said in Anyone figured out how to ZeroTier with AD?:
@scottalanmiller Ok I see. Love their stuff though.
oh yeah, Zoho has been amazing. We are so happy with the product and just getting into using more and more features of it.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Anyone figured out how to ZeroTier with AD?:
@jmoore said in Anyone figured out how to ZeroTier with AD?:
@scottalanmiller Ok I see. Love their stuff though.
oh yeah, Zoho has been amazing. We are so happy with the product and just getting into using more and more features of it.
Yes I use their stuff at home, make my family use it so I can see how easy/hard it really is to use.
-
@krisleslie I'm logging into my windows machines with Google credentials and pushing out OMA-URI policies via G Suite. Ideal scenario for us.
-
@larsen161 can you point me to a link?
-
@JaredBusch how did you setup your NIC for the workstation that had to remote into the AD via ZeroTier? I'm still trying to figure out exactly what was statically assigned as your post wasn't too clear for me (this is new to me).
-
@krisleslie said in Anyone figured out how to ZeroTier with AD?:
@JaredBusch how did you setup your NIC for the workstation that had to remote into the AD via ZeroTier? I'm still trying to figure out exactly what was statically assigned as your post wasn't too clear for me (this is new to me).
Host file on the remote machine
10.230.2.123 domain.local domain server.domain.local server
but exclude the ZeroTier IP from the DNS Server listen on settings on the server.
also remove the ZeotTier IP from the DNS entries on the server. -
Ok lets walk through this so I can make sure I'm duplicating what you did. You stated you took the IPv6 of the DC and put it into the IPv6 of the laptop. You put the IPv6 in the AD/DNS server into the DNS settings I'm assuming on the NIC? Did you statically assign your IP of the laptop?
-
@krisleslie said in Anyone figured out how to ZeroTier with AD?:
Ok lets walk through this so I can make sure I'm duplicating what you did. You stated you took the IPv6 of the DC and put it into the IPv6 of the laptop. You put the IPv6 in the AD/DNS server into the DNS settings I'm assuming on the NIC? Did you statically assign your IP of the laptop?
I used IPv4 everywhere in ZT.
delete this from the DNS entries.
manually put the the server and domain info in the hosts file of the remote system
10.202.3.21 fsldc02.domain.local domain.local domain fsldc02
-
It fooled me for a moment but didn't work either. Either this isn't all the steps you used or there is something else in play that I'm not aware of.
-
@krisleslie said in Anyone figured out how to ZeroTier with AD?:
It fooled me for a moment but didn't work either. Either this isn't all the steps you used or there is something else in play that I'm not aware of.
Where are things failing for you at this time?
-
It "kinda" started creating the profile and ended up giving me a "black hole" where it will never login completely and keep spinning. So I've tried now flushing the dns on the laptop making sure I adjust the host file right cause I didn't do it right the first go round.
-
@krisleslie said in Anyone figured out how to ZeroTier with AD?:
It "kinda" started creating the profile and ended up giving me a "black hole" where it will never login completely and keep spinning. So I've tried now flushing the dns on the laptop making sure I adjust the host file right cause I didn't do it right the first go round.
is the machine on the same local network as the AD server?
has the machine logged into this profile in the past? -
@scottalanmiller so we have finally got the Microsoft Non-Profit entitlement for Office done. They did hit me with a "gotcha" that I can't use Google as a storage point for the free version, smdh. I would prefer to deploy all Chromebooks, let them use office 365 but have access to google storage. Training people is going to become a hard one. I had the fun of training 6 nurses (all over 50) on being my trial run of taking a team and moving to the Google Sphere lol. Took a few months but they are getting the hang of things and finally, are seeing some shine. All the students at a rate of about 99% use Chrome OS, that 1% is for times they have to go to another lab which only has windows pcs in it. The students pick up fast for about 80% of everything you show them. These are underserved sometimes less computer-savvy students.
It's going to be hard to teach some of the staff to consider using Microsoft OneDrive vs Google Drive vs local server vs their local desktop/flash drives.
I have given up on ZT at the moment. While I got it to work with pretty much any device (without needing AD), getting the AD to work reliably has been a battle. I kinda do miss the AD Client from Pertino.
I'm met with a dilemma in that I have 3 offices (and potentially more offices to come) that I want to link up to one AD controller vs having one at each site managed separately.
-
@krisleslie said in Anyone figured out how to ZeroTier with AD?:
I'm met with a dilemma in that I have 3 offices (and potentially more offices to come) that I want to link up to one AD controller vs having one at each site managed separately.
This should be pretty easy for a site level setup.
Setup Point to Point VPN between the firewalls at your main site and the remote site - then have DHCP provide the DNS server of your DNS servers at the main sight - pretty much done.
I'm doing this for my two remote sites, works perfectly well, and has for nearly 2 decades.
-
@Dashrender i would need pretty detailed help on that (key thing is I’m not a network engineer)
-
Create VPN tunnels between your remote sites and the main site. ensure traffic passes from the main to the remote, and from the remote to the main.. no reason (currently known) for the remotes to talk to each other.
Once that is done, set the dhcp server at the remote sites to hand out the DNS IP address of your AD DNS server in the main branch only, do not assign a secondary DNS address - that will break things. (there is an alternative setup using the DNS inside the firewall appliances, but for now, lets ignore that, and circle back if desired).
Test a PC at a remote location to see if it can ping the AD server by name, and test to see if that PC can get to the internet.
It really should be that simple.