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Re: Promoting cygwin system to member server
- From: Dave Korn <dave dot korn dot cygwin at googlemail dot com>
- To: cygwin at cygwin dot com
- Date: Fri, 03 Apr 2009 07:53:42 +0100
- Subject: Re: Promoting cygwin system to member server
- References: <01N7AZJAP67S8XW3IJ@ecr6.ohio-state.edu>
Michael T. Davis wrote:
> We have a standalone server running Windows Server 2003 SP2. We would like
> to promote it to a member server in an existing Windows domain. Will this
> affect how cygwin accounts are managed and maintained? We want to preserve
> the functionality of the existing local accounts, and be able to continue
> to manage them (add, remove, etc.) so that the users can continue to use
> cygwin (esp. the SSH server) independent of the Windows domain. (In fact,
> we don't want domain users to access the system via cygwin's SSH server,
> only local users.)
I can't say for sure but advise caution. I once installed Cygwin as a local
machine user on a non-domain machine which I then joined to a domain and found
some screwy perms settings, but I just fixed them and got on with what I was
doing rather than investigate, so I don't even know whether it was related.
That was on a simple install with no services set up; your arrangement is more
complex. The best advice I can give in the circumstances is to use a system
imaging (or other backup) tool, try it, and test thoroughly.
> we don't want domain users to access the system via cygwin's SSH server,
> only local users.)
That bit should be easy; just don't use the -d option when generating
/etc/{passwd,group} and don't add their keys to the sshd authorized keys file.
cheers,
DaveK
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