Bah.  This doesn't work... you have to enter the actual user's password.

Sorry for the bum advice!
- Mick



On Wed, Jun 10, 2009 at 8:55 PM, Michael Douglas<[email protected]> wrote:
> If you're an admin, you should be able to force the wmic check to
> happen in the scope of another user.
>
> wmic /user:"domain\user" netlogin get passwordexpires
> (note you'll likely need to keep the quotes in the line above. wmic is
> very picky about global flag values.)
>
> I believe this will work... But I'm not VPNed into my lab at work
> right now to test and see.  Please let us know if this works as you
> wanted it to.
>
> My answers might be wrong, but they're FAST!   ;-)
> - Mick
>
> On Wed, Jun 10, 2009 at 4:29 PM, Kennith Asher<[email protected]> wrote:
>> Hey all you WMIC gurus out there.  I'm trying to find a straightforward
>> means of identifying when a domain user's password will expire.  Is there a
>> modifier or switch I can set to bring back password expiry for another
>> domain user?
>>
>> I know I can use:
>>
>> Wmic netlogin get passwordexpires
>>
>> to find when my password expires, can this be done for another domain user?
>> Assume I have admin privileges.
>>
>> Oh, and just so that we're clear here, this is for the domain we use at
>> work, I am doing this on behalf of a user I support.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Ken
>>
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