Title: Message
Sorry about that.  Glad it works.
-----Original Message-----
From: Henrique Duarte [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, April 09, 2002 5:06 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] tracking users logon to AD

Joe,
 
Thank you very much for the scripts.  They worked very well.  I did run into some problems in the beginning only to find out that my \netlogon\scripts directory was being shared as \netlogon. 
 
-Henrique
 
 
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, April 05, 2002 10:24 PM
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] tracking users logon to AD

Forgot about the logouts.  Copy the logon.cmd and name it Logout.cmd.  I would place another comma delimiter and insert LOGIN into each entry for logon.cmd and LOGOUT for logout.cmd.  This would make it quick and easy.
 
Added each of these batch files to the Group Policy for the OU or domain for scripts to run login and logout. 
 
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Henrique Duarte [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, April 05, 2002 4:31 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] tracking users logon to AD

Joe,
 
thanks for the info.  Do you have a sample script you could post?
 
Thanks,
 
-Henrique
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, April 03, 2002 8:06 PM
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] tracking users logon to AD

I have not tried this with tracking logins, but I am sure it will work.  I have done it when applying reg hacks etc. via batch.  Just create a script that runs at logon and logoff that writes to a txt file on a server somewhere.  You can even put in the time and date etc.  Works great for me when I want to know who ran what at what time. 
 
-JS
-----Original Message-----
From: Henrique Duarte [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, April 03, 2002 6:23 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] tracking users logon to AD

Hello,
 
Does anyone know how to track user's login/logout/session timeout activity within a Win 2000 Domain?  I know it's possible through group policy but there is a lot of irrelevant information that I would have to filter, and as far as I know I cannot automate the filtering in Windows.  All I  need is a sofware/solution that tells me when user "Joe Bloggs " logged in, logged out, and wether he left his desk for an extended period of time.
 
Thanks in advance,
 
-Henrique

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