One of the reasons why Microsoft synchronizes the
releases of Windows Vista SP1 and Windows Server 2008 is the need to
emphasize a high level of interoperability between the latest Windows
client and server platforms. A level which is not reflected in the
interaction between Windows Server 2008 and down-level operating
systems such as Windows XP and Windows Server 2008. And in order to
make all Windows products play well together, Microsoft has released
the Windows Server 2008 read-only domain controller compatibility pack
in mixed environments running XP and Windows Server 2003.
"To provide support for mixed mode operations (Win2003 & Win2008) in domains involving
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Win2008 DCs, all the features are made available for downlevel
clients (XP and Win2003) also. However, since XP and Win2003 were not
developed to support the additional checks and flags introduced in
RODC, some of the features fail to work with downlevel clients are
interacting with RODC. This is more apparent in Demilitarized (DMZ)
networked branch offices. In this kind of setup, the clients are
restricted access ONLY to RODCs and not other write-able DCs, outside
the network," explained Jane Lewis, Platforms Engineer Customer Environment in the Premier Field Engineering at Microsoft.
Essentially,
what Lewis pointed out is that there are inherent compatibility
problems between Windows Server 2008 and older versions of Windows
clients. This is because neither Windows XP, nor Windows Server 2008
feature support for Windows Server 2008 RODC features. According to the
Redmond company, the issue affects XP SP2, XP SP3 and the 64-bit
version of XP, as well as Windows Server 2003 SP1 and SP2. A total of
five updates are available for download, designed to integrate with all
the impacted operating systems.
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