yes, for DLs this would definitely be an issue - in a multi-domain
forest be sure only to use UGs as DLs... (and DON'T nest GGs into the
UGs).   In a single domain forest it doesn't matter.

/Guido

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tony Murray
Sent: Tuesday, July 27, 2004 11:48 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] group structure -universal groups

Daniel

Well, one option would be to simply skip the Global Group part and add
your accounts directly to the UG.  

A problem with UGs in Windows 2000 AD was that they potentially created
a lot of replication traffic between GCs.  Any change to a UG membership
would result in the whole membership being replicated.  Windows 2003 AD
offers Linked Value Replication (LVR), which allows individual group
membership changes to be replicate, rather than the whole attribute.
This is clearly much more efficient and removes this limitation on the
use of UGs.

In any case, wouldn't having Global Groups nested in UGs cause a problem
for Distribution Groups expansion?  For example, how would a GC from
DomainA manage to successfully expand a distribution group that contains
Global Groups from DomainB?  

Tony  _____  

From: Cariglia, Daniel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Montag, 26. Juli 2004 22:08
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] group structure -universal groups


Hello,
 
            I have a question regarding group structure and
administration
of such.  We run a multi-domain AD environment with basically an empty
root
domain and 2 child domains where the users live.  The problem is if we
structure groups the way it is recommended (accounts into Global groups
which are then placed into Universal Groups which are then placed into
Domain Local groups in the domain where the resource lives and
permissions
applied using the Domain local group.  
            The problem is we prefer our distribution lists (universal
groups) to be managed/administered by the users/owner of the list.   All
distribution lists are composed of individual users presently (came from
an
NT 4 domain) and if we follow the recommended group practices we will
nest
the Global group(s) from both domains inside the Universal groups and
remove
the individual users presently in them and effectively they will have
the
same members, but when the owners try to modify the members through
their
Outlook client they will only see the Global group(s) and not the
members of
the group who will receive the messages sent to the distribution list.
Is
there a better way to administer permissions in a multi domain Active
Directory environment or do we set every owner of a distribution list up
with rights and a tool to manage the global groups effectively adding
these
users to the Universal groups by nesting the global groups?   Any
feedback
is appreciated, thank you.
 
 


 




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