Hi,

To further illustrate this, here is the result of nmblookup against a 
Windows NT system that is the DC for a small domain we use:

Looking up status of 172.17.133.233
        SUNNYVALE       <00> -         M <ACTIVE> 
        TIGERTEAM       <00> - <GROUP> M <ACTIVE> 
        SUNNYVALE       <03> -         M <ACTIVE> 
        SUNNYVALE       <20> -         M <ACTIVE> 
        TIGERTEAM       <1e> - <GROUP> M <ACTIVE> 
        INet~Services   <1c> - <GROUP> M <ACTIVE> 
        IS~SUNNYVALE    <00> -         M <ACTIVE> 
        TIGERTEAM       <1d> -         M <ACTIVE> 
        ..__MSBROWSE__. <01> - <GROUP> M <ACTIVE> 
        ADMINISTRATOR   <03> -         M <ACTIVE> 

The following was actually against the DC, so you can see the <1C> entry 
for the domain, TIGERTEAM, in the DCs list:

Looking up status of 10.0.1.15
        NT4PDC          <00> -         M <ACTIVE> 
        NT4PDC          <20> -         M <ACTIVE> 
        TIGERTEAM       <00> - <GROUP> M <ACTIVE> 
        TIGERTEAM       <1c> - <GROUP> M <ACTIVE> 
        TIGERTEAM       <1b> -         M <ACTIVE> 
        TIGERTEAM       <1e> - <GROUP> M <ACTIVE> 
        NT4PDC          <03> -         M <ACTIVE> 
        INet~Services   <1c> - <GROUP> M <ACTIVE> 
        IS~NT4PDC       <00> -         M <ACTIVE> 
        TIGERTEAM       <1d> -         M <ACTIVE> 
        ..__MSBROWSE__. <01> - <GROUP> M <ACTIVE> 
        ADMINISTRATOR   <03> -         M <ACTIVE> 
 
Regards
-----
Richard Sharpe, rsharpe[at]ns.aus.com, rsharpe[at]samba.org, 
sharpe[at]ethereal.com, http://www.richardsharpe.com

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