When you do talk to them, talk about the Mac as well. It's just BSD with a 
slick UI anyway ;)
 
Al

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Myrick, Todd (NIH/CC/DNA)
Sent: Thu 7/14/2005 9:47 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] DFS Client for Mac and UNIX



Thanks AL,

 

I would prefer a turn key solution.  It looks like ADminMac might be the answer 
for the MAC users.   http://www.thursby.com/products/admitmac.html  Dave is 
more client driven utility.

 

I was planning on contacting Certify about this once I pinged this community. 
To verify what my research has found out on the LINUX / UNIX site.

 

Thanks for the feedback,

 

Todd

 

________________________________

From: Al Mulnick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, July 14, 2005 8:37 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] DFS Client for Mac and UNIX

 

I believe the best way currently is with the samba client for *nix variants 
including the Mac.  Been a while though, so that could have changed a bit more. 
 They did have plans to work on the cifs client, but haven't seen much about 
that.

 

You may also want to check with these guys www.centrify.com to see if they 
offer anything with DFS.  They're goal is to allow you to add a *nix variant to 
the AD infrastructure in such a way as to make it seemless to logon, administer 
etc.  I haven't tested anything with DFS with this product though.  Might be 
worth it to at least drop a note to see if they can be helpful here. 

 

Possibly this one for Mac users (if the above doesn't help) 
http://www.thursby.com/products/dave.html 

 

 

My $0.04 anyway.  

 

Al

 

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Myrick, Todd (NIH/CC/DNA)
Sent: Thu 7/14/2005 6:50 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ActiveDir] DFS Client for Mac and UNIX

Hey All,

Been a while... Got a problem.

I am being tasked to work on an automated provisioning system for network
resources.  Obviously AD will be the security provider HUB.  I would also
like to be able to use DFS as the HUB for access to shared network data.
The problem is that we have a large contingency of Mac's and possibly some
Linux / UNIX.  I have been searching, and it looks like it might be possible
to use SAMBA as a DFS client.

Does anyone here have any experience or suggestions on how best to allow
alternative clients access to DFS shares?

Thanks in Advance,

Todd Myrick
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