Apple Mac OS X Server Version 10.3 or Later Manual de usuario Pagina 48

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48 Chapter 4 Migrating Users From a Windows Server to Mac OS X Server
Click New User, and specify values you want all imported Windows users to inherit. For
details about how to work with most of the user settings, see the user management
guide. See “Managing Accounts for Windows Users on page 30 for details about
Windows user settings.
Set up password options so that users are forced to change their passwords the next
time they log in. Using this approach means you don’t have to individually specify
passwords for each user in the export file or in Workgroup Manager after importing the
users. To access password option settings, click Advanced, then Options.
When you are finished specifying values, choose Save Preset from the Presets pop-up
menu.
8 In Workgroup Manager, choose Server > Import.
9 Navigate to the user export file and select it. Then choose a duplicate handling option,
identify the preset you want to use, and optionally supply a first user ID and a primary
group ID.
10 Click Import.
11 Optionally define group accounts for controlling access to files.
On Mac OS X computers, file and folder access permissions (Read & Write, Read only,
Write only, or No Access) are specified for an owner (a user), a group, and all users,
known as “Everyone.” Mac OS X Server does not support access control lists (ACLs).
Additional groups can be used to set up group-level permissions for files transferred
from the Windows server.
To define a group, select the group list in Workgroup Manager, click New Group, and
enter group names and a group ID. To add users to the group, click Add (+), select the
users you want to belong to the group, and drag selected users to the Members list.
Step 5: Transfer login scripts to Mac OS X Server
1 Copy login scripts from the Windows server to /etc/netlogon/ on Mac OS X Server.
2 In Workgroup Manager, select each Windows PDC user and make sure that the location
of the login script is correctly specified. The Login Script field should contain the
relative path to a login script located in /etc/logon/. For example, if you’ve copied a
script named setup.bat into /etc/logon/, the Login Script field should contain setup.bat.
Step 6: Join Windows clients to Mac OS X Server PDC
On the workstation of each Windows user for whom you created an account on
Mac OS X Server, join the Windows PDC domain on the server to enable Open
Directory authentication for users who log in at the workstation.
Now when a Windows workstation user logs in to Mac OS X Server, his or her home
directory is automatically created and mounts on the Windows workstation.
LL2356.book Page 48 Thursday, September 4, 2003 3:21 PM
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