Hi Tony,
Its nice to see u in my inbox I really very happy to quick response from
the group.
Thanks Dear.
Somesh
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tony Murray
Sent: Monday, January 22, 2007 1:16 PM
To:
Hello everybody,
I am trying to get the CN of a user currently connected to Active Directory
(using a 3rd party library).
I tried the Who am I? extended operation from RFC 4532, but I got an error
120 or 0x78 (I don't know if it is useful).
Do you know of another method to get the CN? I need it
ADAM (starting from ADAM 1.0) and AD (starting from Longhorn) support
WhoAmI extended operation per RFC. In addition, they support
rootDSE/tokenGroups attribute, which is exactly what you need to check
self group membership.
If you have pre-LH AD, then what you can do is read tokenGroups off the
After reading this thread, I have to kick my 2 cents in. I use ESX and
VS day in and day out, and I think I can give fair comparison. I use
only ESX - none of the rest of the suite of related products (virtual
center, vmotion, etc), so this should be a pretty good apples-to-apples
comparison.
I've setup ftp access to users' network drives so they have access to them
remotely. I recently notice some thing very peculiar. Their ftp access
stops working when they start getting warnings that their password is going
to expire. I don't know if this just a coincidence but once they change
Hey guys,
I'm trying to wrap my brain around how best to accomplish this and need
a little help.
I need to create a security group for each department in our company,
and then a security group for each section. At our company sections
fall underneath departments. So we may have a
Do you already have the department names in a list? Or is that something
that you have to gather first?
If you have to gather, then I assume you'll have to iterate each user object
and determine the department value. Then, you'll create a group for every
single unique instance of department
Can you provide some more details?
What are they using to access their shares? (client?)
What are you using to provide ftp access? (IIS?)
How did you prove that this is the case? Log files? Trial and error?
Anything else that's relevant?
Al
On 1/22/07, Antonio Aranda [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: