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John Paul Mueller

"Administering Windows Server 2008 Server Core"


A third choice is to configure the Server Core IIS setup using a machine with GUI capabilities.
You can then move the required CONFIG files to Server Core. The ???Modifying the CONFIG Files???
section of this chapter tells you about the CONFIG files. Even if the two servers don??™t have precisely
the same configuration, you can still get the configuration close enough that you can perform some
modifications to the CONFIG files using either the AppCmd utility or an XML file editor such as
XML Notepad.
A fourth choice is to modify the CONFIG files directly from the client system. You can create
a share on the server, use the ICACLs utility to set security properly, and then map a drive to it.
Windows Explorer provides the access you require to the server and the CONFIG files it contains.
Now you can open the CONFIG files on the client using a product such as XML Notepad as if the
file were local to your machine.
The four options provide you with some good ideas for working with Server Core from the client.
Using these four techniques, you can create any setup you require. Of course, there are probably
other ways to perform the task as well.


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