Okay, the below totally cracked me up. :-) Brian gave you the ADFind answer,
but I guess I would also ask in what format you need to retrieve this
information and whether or not you're plugging it into something. I'm not
sure that last sentence even made sense, sorry. I'm sleep deprived. 
 
Laura


   _____  

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Thommes, Michael M.
Sent: Thursday, November 30, 2006 10:40 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] dynamic variables within an event log entry?



Tony and Laura,

   Thanks for the replies!  Actually, I am already trapping eventid 624 and
I see the “Caller User Name:” entry with the right value.  Where I got
confused was when I built a daily job using adfind (with the –owner switch)
to produce a list of users created during the previous 24 hours.  Laura’s #2
answer explains why I see what I do for accounts created by members of the
“Domain Admins”.  Her #1 answer is going to make me rethink how we do some
of the account creations.  Her #3 answer begs the question of how would I
construct a query to produce new accounts created over a 24 hour period?
Adfind was the first (and maybe only) tool that popped into my head to do
this.  Other suggestions?  Thanks!

 

Mike Thommes


   _____  


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Laura A. Robinson
Sent: Thursday, November 30, 2006 8:22 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] dynamic variables within an event log entry?

 

1. This is one of the eight gazillion reasons to discourage the use of
accounts that are Domain Admins for routine purposes that can be achieved
without that level of rights.

2. By default, when a member of the Domain Admins group creates an object in
the directory, the Domain Admins group becomes the owner of the object. That
is by design. 

3. When I create an object with an account that is a member of Domain
Admins, the creator of the object shows as that account, not as Domain
Admins. Why aren't you just looking at that value in the event logs, rather
than looking at the ownership of the object? That's why auditing allows
tracking of who creates/modifies/deletes directory objects.

 

Laura

 


   _____  


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Thommes, Michael M.
Sent: Thursday, November 30, 2006 7:33 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: [ActiveDir] dynamic variables within an event log entry?

I wonder if someone could explain to me (or point me at some reference)
about what mechanism is used to populate the information in a Windows event
log entry.  The reason why I ask is that I see in the Security log when a
new user account is created by an account which is a member of the Domain
Admins group, the _OBJECT_OWNER=XYZ\Domain Admins , not XYZ\adminacct1 .  If
it is created by an account that is a member of the Account Operators group,
then _OBJECT_OWNER=XYZ\operacct1, not XYZ\Account Operators .

 

This makes auditing somewhat less worthwhile.  Is this design on purpose or
a deficiency?  Any help is appreciated.  Thanks!

 

Mike Thommes

 

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