RE: [U2] UD what user is a phantom using

2008-02-18 Thread Colin Alfke
Bill; Good questions. Fortunately, we don't do a lot of ftp'ing (only one client and it was internal) so I haven't had to deal with these types of security issues. The only really "security" issue I've had recently is printing. I have one client that no matter what he does our "overnight" process

RE: [U2] UD what user is a phantom using

2008-02-18 Thread Bill Haskett
ME) is me, even on the phantom'd phantom. So something is amiss (or could use some further explanation). Thanks again, Bill _ From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Colin Alfke Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 7:57 AM To: u2-users@listserver.u2ug.org Subje

RE: [U2] UD what user is a phantom using

2008-02-13 Thread Bill Haskett
o something is amiss (or could use some further explanation). Thanks again, Bill _ From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Colin Alfke Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 7:57 AM To: u2-users@listserver.u2ug.org Subject: RE: [U2] UD what user is a phantom using B

RE: [U2] UD what user is a phantom using

2008-02-13 Thread Colin Alfke
Bill; Normally our phantoms here return a user = "system." We haven't tried firing phantoms from phantoms or starting UniData as another user. I have seen some strange security related things with phantoms - it's like the user isn't quite logged in. You can try looking at @LOGNAME in UniData and

RE: [U2] UD what user is a phantom using

2008-02-12 Thread Bill Haskett
As a follow up (remember we're on Windows 2K3)... If I login to the Windows server as administrator "A" then run a 3rd party "sftpc" command in a DOS window, it works. If I login to UniData as the same administrator "A" and run the same "sftpc" command, from ECL, it works fine. However, if I