From: Adrian Taylor <A.J.Taylor@soton.ac.uk> To: samba-technical@samba.anu.edu.au Subject: Re: How can linux do this? Date: Tue, 19 May 1998 09:31:22 +0100 (BST)
> >
> >Yes, NT does do that, no Linux can not do that. It is a function of user
> >management within NT. NT would recognize the difference because of the
> >security token that is passed during logon. The ACL is read telling the
> >token what profile to use and file/directory rights the user has. The
> >profiles could quite possibly be stored on an Linux system, but the drive
> >would have to "mapped" before the logon took place. Linux does not have the
> >ability (yet) to do this.
> >
> >Shon Nixon, MCSE and avid Linux user.
I know it's not strictly the greatest way to do it, but I cheat a little
and use TweakUI (on both NT and 95) to specify where a user's desktop and
profile etc. are stored.
For normal users I use their home directory, which I map to drive S: at
log on via samba's netlogon stuff, and for classes, I map a drive F: which
has the class profiles on.
Not elegant, but it does work!
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Adrian Taylor E-mail: ajt@soton.ac.uk
UNIX Systems Support and Development Phone : +44 (0)1703 595546
Southampton University Computing Services Mobile: +44 (0)411 522087
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