Overview:
This walk through will walk you through the basic setup and configuration of Windows Server 2016 Standard. In this walk through I won’t be covering any roles or features, I will just be going from bare metal server/VM to a point where you are ready to install any software onto the server.
Prerequisites:
Build a Server/VM with at least the minimum specs from Microsoft. I never build my servers with the minimum specs because it would be very under power for most tasks. Here are the specs I use for most servers unless the minimum specs for the software I am running are higher then this:
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4 cores (2 cores per socket)
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4GB of RAM
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80GB Hard Drive for the OS Drive
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1 Network Connection
Installing:
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Boot from the install image (Use Rufus to create a boot USB, burn a disk or PXE Network Boot to a WDS Server).
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Select your Language and Keyboard.
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Unless you really need Data Center Edition, Standard Edition will be fine for most installs.
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Select the hard drive you want to install the OS.
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Wait for Windows to be installed and reboot.
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Select your Region settings.
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Accept the License Terms.
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Enter a Password for the Local Administrator Account.
OS Setup:
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Login to the Local Administrator Account.
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If you are running the server inside a VM, install the Tools now.
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Reboot.
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Login to the Local Administrator Account.
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Once the Server Manager launches, click on “Local Server” on the Left Panel.
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Click on “Server Name” and change it to something that fits your naming convention.
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Reboot.
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Login to the Local Administrator Account.
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Once the Server Manager launches, click on “Local Server” on the Left Panel.
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Click on “Ethernet Adapter” and set the IPv4 address you want the server to use.
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Disable IPv6.
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Click on “Domain” and join the server to your Domain.
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Reboot.
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Login to your Active Directory Server and move the newly added server to the Organization Unit you want the server to be in.
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Back on your new server, login to the Local Administrator Account.
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Launch a Command Prompt.
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Run “gpupdate /force”.
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Reboot.
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Login to the Local Administrator Account.
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Once the Server Manager launches, click on “Local Server” on the Left Panel.
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Click on “Remote Desktop” and then select “Allow remote connections to this computer”.
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Click “OK” to confirm.
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Enable Jumbo Packets if your network supports it.
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Click on “Product ID” and activate your OS product key.
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Click on “Windows Update” and install all updates for the OS.
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Reboot.
At this point, the process varies. If I am working in a VM, I like to shutdown the server and take a “Clean” snapshot of the whole VM so I have something to easily fall back to if I screw anything up with the software install.
Then I move on to deploying any software, roles or features for the reason I created the server.