diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/Samba3-ByExample/SBE-MigrateNW4Samba3.xml')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/Samba3-ByExample/SBE-MigrateNW4Samba3.xml | 14 |
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/docs/Samba3-ByExample/SBE-MigrateNW4Samba3.xml b/docs/Samba3-ByExample/SBE-MigrateNW4Samba3.xml index 9a896e256b..7b290c6de7 100644 --- a/docs/Samba3-ByExample/SBE-MigrateNW4Samba3.xml +++ b/docs/Samba3-ByExample/SBE-MigrateNW4Samba3.xml @@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ <indexterm><primary>migration</primary></indexterm> Contributions to this chapter were made by Misty Stanley-Jones, a UNIX administrator of many years who surfaced on the Samba mailing list with a barrage of questions and who - regularly now helps other administrators to solve thorny Samba migration questions. + regularly helps other administrators to solve thorny Samba migration questions. </para> <para> @@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ <para> The priority that Misty faced was one of migration of the data files off the NetWare 4.11 - server and onto a Samba-ased Windows file and print server. This chapter does not pretend + server and onto a Samba-based Windows file and print server. This chapter does not pretend to document all the different methods that could be used to migrate user and group accounts off a NetWare server. Its focus is on migration of data files. </para> @@ -232,7 +232,7 @@ entering everything from the printed company directory. This used only the inetOrgPerson object class from the OpenLDAP schemas. The next step was to write a shell script that would look at the <filename>/etc/passwd</filename> and <filename>/etc/shadow</filename> - files on our mail server and create a LDIF file from which the information could be + files on our mail server and create an LDIF file from which the information could be imported into LDAP. This would allow use of LDAP for Linux authentication, IMAP, POP3, and SMTP. </para> @@ -971,7 +971,7 @@ The Idealx smbldap-tools package can be configured using a script called <command>configure.pl</command> that is provided as part of the tool. See <link linkend="happy"/> for an example of its use. Many administrators, like Misty, choose to do this manually so as to maintain greater awareness of how the tool-chain works and possibly to avoid -undesirable actions from occurring un-noticed. +undesirable actions from occurring unnoticed. </para></note> <para> @@ -1203,7 +1203,7 @@ masterPw="verysecret" The next step was to run the <command>smbldap-populate</command> command, which populates the LDAP tree with the appropriate default users, groups, and UID and GID pools. It creates a user called Administrator with UID=0 and GID=0 matching the - Domain Admins group. This is fine because you can still log on a root to a Windows system, + Domain Admins group. This is fine because you can still log on as root to a Windows system, but it will break cached credentials if you need to log on as the administrator to a system that is not on the network. </para> @@ -1384,7 +1384,7 @@ sambaAcctFlags: [W ] <para> <indexterm><primary>netlogon</primary></indexterm> - So now I could log on with a test user from the machine w2kengrspare. It was all fine and + So now I could log on with a test user from the machine w2kengrspare. It was all well and good, but that user was in no groups yet and so had pretty boring access. I fixed that by writing the login script! To write the login script, I used <ulink url="http://www.kixtart.org">Kixtart</ulink> because it will work @@ -1619,7 +1619,7 @@ ENDIF One option is to check the OS as part of the Kixtart script, and if it is Win9x and is the first login, copy a premade <filename>autoexec.bat</filename> to the <filename>C:</filename> drive. I - have onlythree such machines, and one is going away in the very near future, + have only three such machines, and one is going away in the very near future, so it was easier to do it by hand. </para> |