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| trebor 2001-02-27, 4:11 am |
| What do the acronyms A G DL P
and LKGC stand for?
And while we are at it which bootstage is LKGC (whatever that may be) available?
Trebor | |
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| LKGC
Last Known Good Configuration
not sure about the others | |
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| A G DL P is all one acronym. I got it out of a question at Skilldrill. I don't remember the choices.
LKGC =
Last Known Good Configuration - I should have known that one. | |
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| A= Accounts (Computers/Users)
G= Groups
DL= Domain Local
P= Permissions
Create the accounts and put them into groups (for easier management.) Place the groups into domain local groups and assign the appropriate permissions. Hope this helps. | |
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| That sure does. I never would have figured that one out. And I didn't even know where to start looking.
Thanks
trebor | |
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| Actually, I need to add to what Old Salt wrote: the G stands for Global Group, not just group. As for DL it stands for Domain Local Group.
There are 3 groups scopes in win2K: Global, Domain Local and Universal.
You use Global Groups to organize users, Domain Local to assign permissions to resources.
Accounts go in to Global Groups, who in turn are nested inside of Domain Local groups, thereby acquiring the permissions to the Network Share by transitivity. This is known as AGDLP, and is Microsoft's strategy.
In NT 4.0, it was known as AGLP.
Don't forget that there are 2 types of groups: security and distribution. The former are used to assign permissions and for mailing lists, and the latter are used only for mailing lists...
hope this helps  | |
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| Thanks for covering my back freak! Errare humanum est! |
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