presumably setting the scriptPath attribute on accounts...
 
Thanks,
Brian Desmond
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
c - 312.731.3132

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Al Mulnick
Sent: Fri 12/30/2005 8:13 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] icmp's


When you say legacy way, what does that mean exactly? 


On 12/30/05, Tom Kern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

        would this also affect clients from getting logon scripts?
        and when i say logon scripts, i mean the legacy way of distributing 
them, NOT thru GPO's.
         
        Thanks again
        
         
        
        On 12/30/05, Brian Desmond <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > wrote: 

                You need to enable ICMP echo source clients dest dc's, and icmp 
echo-reply source dc's dest clients.
                
                The rules look something like this:
                
                access-list DC_VLAN_OUT line 1 permit icmp any object-group 
domain_controllers echo
                
                access-list DC_VLAN_IN line 1 permit icmp object-group 
domain_controllers any echo-reply 
                
                Have your network people considered rate-limiting ICMP packets 
rather than shutting them down all together. IMHO that's the correct way to 
handle this. Ping (echo, echo-reply) and traceroute (traceroute, time-exceeded) 
are necessary pieces of a network. 
                
                Thanks,
                Brian Desmond
                [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                
                c - 312.731.3132
                
                ________________________________ 
                
                From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Tom Kern
                Sent: Fri 12/30/2005 9:25 AM 
                To: activedirectory
                Subject: [ActiveDir] icmp's
                
                
                What affect would blocking icmp packets on all vlans have on 
win2k/xp client logons in a win2k forest? 
                any?
                
                I know clients ping dc's to see which responds first and later 
ping dc's to determine round trip time for GPO processing, but would blocking 
icmp's have any adverse affects on clients? 
                I only ask because my corp blocks icmp's on all our vlans and i 
get a lot of event id 1000 from Usernev with error code of 59 which when i 
looked up, refers to network connectivity issues. i think this event id is 
related to the fact we block icmp packets and i was wondering if thats 
something i should worry about in a win2k network. 
                Thanks
                
                



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