Hi there

yep, The machine is part of that domain, I am logging in as a member of the domain and 
this is the only domain we have. 

Both commands end up with the same results:

mkpasswd -d
mkpasswd -d mydomain

One thing I have noticed is that there are 12 entries for the local accounts for the 
machine. It seems that the mkpasswd -d is starting getting the right users, but stops 
after reaching the count of the local entries.

Hope this helps

thank you

Serge

>>> Corinna Vinschen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 09/15/01 01:57AM >>>
On Fri, Sep 14, 2001 at 08:23:49AM -0700, Serge Pluess wrote:
> Hi and thank you for your response.
> 
> I am logged in as a Domain user that has administrative rights. I run the install 
>and at the end I can see a command prompt window pop up and it runs mkpasswd with the 
>-l option so /etc/passwd then has all the local users listed.
> 
> Then I bring up the cygwin bash shell and try to run mkpasswd with the -d option. It 
>starts to run and lists the first 12 entries of the domain list and then just stops. 
>As these first 12 entries are still in the A's I cannot get my account to be listed 
>(which is under the S's.

Same result with `mkpasswd -d domainname'?  Are you sure you're
in the same domain?  Or does your company have multiple domains?

Corinna

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Corinna Vinschen                  Please, send mails regarding Cygwin to
Cygwin Developer                                mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Red Hat, Inc.

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