This book is primarily a discussion of protocols (what you might see on the wire during communication) and processes (how things work under the covers), rather than a discussion of planning, configuration, deployment, management, or application development. For a discussion of TCP/IP planning, configuration, deployment, and management, see Windows Server® 2008 Networking and Network Access Protection (NAP) (Redmond, Wash.: Microsoft Press, 2008; ISBN 978-0735624221), Help And Support for Windows Server 2008, and the Windows Server 2008 TechCenter at http://technet.microsoft.com/windowsserver/2008. For a discussion of TCP/IP application development using Windows Sockets, see the Microsoft Developer Network at http://msdn.microsoft.com.
This book does not contain code-level details of the Microsoft implementation of TCP/IP in Windows Server 2008 and Windows Vista, such as internal structures, tables, buffers and their use, or coding logic. These details are only of interest to a relative handful of readers and are not published for security reasons and to protect Microsoft intellectual property. However, this book does contain details of how the Microsoft implementation of TCP/IP in Windows Server 2008 and Windows Vista works for described TCP/IP processes and how to modify default behaviors with registry values and Netsh.exe tool commands.
