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Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/Samba3-HOWTO/TOSHARG-PDC.xml | 28 |
1 files changed, 28 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/Samba3-HOWTO/TOSHARG-PDC.xml b/docs/Samba3-HOWTO/TOSHARG-PDC.xml index 3a85e33645..111f3e22c1 100644 --- a/docs/Samba3-HOWTO/TOSHARG-PDC.xml +++ b/docs/Samba3-HOWTO/TOSHARG-PDC.xml @@ -105,6 +105,34 @@ SID plus the RID) can be used to create access control lists (ACLs) attached to organizational access control. UNIX systems recognize only local security identifiers. </para> +<para> +<indexterm><primary>SID</primary></indexterm> +A SID represents a security context. For example, every Windows machine has local accounts within the security +context of the local machine which has a unique SID. Every domain (NT4, ADS, Samba) contains accounts that +exist within the domain security context which is defined by the domain SID. +</para> + +<para> +<indexterm><primary>SID</primary></indexterm> +<indexterm><primary>RID</primary></indexterm> +A domain member server will have a SID that differs from the domain SID. The domain member server can be +configured to regard all domain users as local users. It can also be configured to recognize domain users and +groups as non-local. SIDs are persistent. A typical domain of user SID looks like this: +<screen> +S-1-5-21-726309263-4128913605-1168186429 +</screen> +Every account (user, group, machine, trust, etc.) is assigned a RID. This is done automatically as an account +is created. Samba produces the RID algorithmically. The UNIX operating system uses a separate name space for +user and group identifiers (the UID and GID) but Windows allocates the RID from a single name space. A Windows +user and a Windows group can not have the same RID. Just as the UNIX user <literal>root</literal> has the +UID=0, the Windows Administrator has the well-known RID=500. The RID is catenated to the Windows domain SID, +so Administrator account for a domain that has the above SID will have the user SID +<screen> +S-1-5-21-726309263-4128913605-1168186429-500 +</screen> +The result is that every all accounts in the Windows networking world have a globally unique security identifier. +</para> + <note><para> <indexterm><primary>domain</primary><secondary>member</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm><primary>machine account</primary></indexterm> |