Windows for Workgroups Can Share Windows NT Domain Browse List

ID: Q147795

The information in this article applies to:

SUMMARY

The Windows for Workgroups 3.11 browser service has been modified to allow the Windows for Workgroups computer to act as a subnet master browser for a domain, in a routed TCP/IP network. This effectively means that a Windows for Workgroups computer can behave like a Windows NT computer in that it will share the local subnet browse list with the Windows NT Domain Master Browser (DMB). Note the Windows NT DMB is also the Primary Domain Controller (PDC).

MORE INFORMATION

Previously, a Windows for Workgroups master browser would not share its browse list with the Windows NT PDC, if the PDC was on a different segment. However, there are new updated files that allow a Windows for Workgroups master browser to contact the Windows NT Domain Master Browser to ?share? browse lists.

This activity occurs approximately every 12 to 15 minutes. During this transaction, Windows for Workgroups will request the domain browse list from the DMB, which includes the list of computers in the local domain as well as the list of other domains. The DMB will then request the ?local segment browse list? that Windows for Workgroups has compiled, and then merge it with the domain list.

Thus, the Windows for Workgroups machine will have a compiled domain browse list (local list + DMB list), and the DMB will always have a complete domain-wide browse list of all remote segments that have ?domain members?.

NOTE: in this context, a ?domain member? is a Windows NT machine that has joined the domain, or any Microsoft network client which is part of a workgroup (name) that is identical to the domain (name).

The requirements for this functionality are:

KBCategory: kbnetwork KBSubcategory: ntinterop ntdomain ntprotocol Additional reference words: prodnt 3.50 3.51 3.11 3.11b wfw wfwg
Keywords          : ntdomain NTInterop ntprotocol 
Version           : 3.11 3.11b 3.50 3.51
Platform          : WINDOWS

Last Reviewed: February 17, 1998