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
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
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
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
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