"Andreas S. Haramasz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> edit /etc/passwd and change UID 604 to 1 for Administrator (Windows uses 0 for super user on Unix it is 1). <<
Uh-uh: now that I *am* sure about - root on Unix is 0, while on Windows the domain Administrator is SID -500 (and the Domain Administrators group is -512). >> Also, your life is easier if you don't have Administrator on Unix instead add root=Administrator in the smbusers file. << Yes, I thought about this approach. But now, if you log in as Administrator,and smb.conf has "logon drive = H:", will you get /root mapped to your H: drive? That scares me. What I'm looking for here is a *definitively* correct way to deal with the Administrator logon. If it's not just right, it seems to cause trouble with administering workstations, setting up policies, etc. but I've never seen it written up anywhere. Best, --- Les Bell, RHCE, CISSP [http://www.lesbell.com.au] -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: http://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba