!== !== PROFILES.txt for Samba release 2.0.0-alpha5 17 Sep 1998 !== Contributors: Bruce Cook Copyright (C) 1998 Bruce Cook John Terpstra Copyright (C) 1998 John H. Terpstra Wolfgang Ratzka Copyright (C) 1998 Wolfgang Ratzka Created: April 11, 1998 Updated: April 11, 1998 Subject: User Profiles =========================================================================== From BC3-AU@bigfoot.com Sat Apr 11 13:36:05 1998 Date: Sat, 11 Apr 1998 17:13:49 +1000 From: Bruce Cook To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: RE: A question about NT Domains Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton writes: > On Fri, 10 Apr 1998, Jean-Francois Micouleau wrote: > > > On Fri, 10 Apr 1998, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: > > > > > ah, then i need to explain better. two or more users have identical > > > profiles. say only one user installs a program which adds additional keys > > > into the registry. those keys, as i understand it, will *not* be removed > > > from HKEY_LOCAL_USER when subsequent users log in. > > > > under W95 or NT ? > > my experience is with Win95, but i expect the same for NT, and have been > told that it is so by someone who runs NT admin training courses. > > > and why do you want to have one profile shared between multiples users ? > > you don't. how did you get that impression? i said multiple users with > identical profiles, not multiple users sharing one profile. In my experience with both Win95 and NT, is that the HKEY_LOCAL_USER information is stored in USER.dat or NTuser.DAT for NT. ALL of this branch is in this file and there is no overlap between any two users (Unless you have '95 set up to use a single common profile). [** lkcl: see jht's message for conditions under which an overlap can occur **] The HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE branch is machine based, and shared by all users of that machine. [And now for a whole stack of caveats] 1. User start menu paths are not stored in the registry (obviously) they're a directory structure that located by settings in HKEY_LOCAL_USER. If you want start menues / desktop / favorites to be individual to a user you must set up your user registry so these can be located individually. The easiest tool to manage this is the policy editor. 2. When you log onto 'Doze 95, it has to find the user registry. If you have specified a common profile, a "default user" USER.DAT is used. If you have specified individualised profiles, then USER.DAT will be found by the following formula: 1. if NET USE x: /HOME was used at startup, try for x:\USER.DAT (where x: is any drive letter from A to Z. if no USER.DAT is found go to step 3 2. if no home is specified in a mapping, ...\windows\profiles\username\USER.DAT is used. If no USER.DAT exists go to step 3. 3. If neither of the previous two found a USER.DAT, then it will use a prototype USER.DAT which it will later save to the above specified path when the user logs out. The interesting thing here is that the prototype USER.DAT used here is actually a copy of the last USER.DAT used on this machine. (This may be the effect that the original poster is seeing) 4. As discussed above the start menu and desktop are specified in the registry contained within USER.DAT. When a new USER.DAT is created from a prototype, new directories are created for the start menu and desktop ACCORDING TO HOW THE COPIED PROTOTYPE DEFINES THEM. So if the prototype USER.DAT says that start menu is in H:\Start Menu but programs folder is C:\windows\start menu\programs, then the H:\start menu will be created, and the existing machine programs folder used. This means that is is important when creating roving profiles to get your prototype USER.DAT and general user directory structure set up exactly as you want it, and then make a copy of it that you know will be safe from modification. When creating a new user you then copy this prototype into the new user area, so that the new user doesn't just inherit what the previous user had. 3. When you log onto 'Doze NT, it has to find the user registry. NT is easier to see what's going on, but follows much the same rules as '95. The big difference being that 'NT gets its profile location from the login server when it's logged in. (On an NT system have a look at user manager/user/profile - you will see that you can specify the user profile path) Under NT3.51 this profile path was a path to NTuser.DAT, on 4.0 this seems to be a path to a directory structure (haven't played with many NT4 servers) I'm not sure how this works in samba, as I haven't yet tried the NT_DOM stuff yet (Luke: I assume you have a keyword for this?) [lkcl: nt workstations should look in exactly the same places for things on samba or other SMB servers as they do on an NT server, as long as that SMB server looks like NT. if anyone finds that something fails, alert us on samba-bugs@samba.anu.edu.au and we'll look into it]. When an NT system find a user without a NTuser.DAT, it copies from a prototype that it stores especially for this purpose, so while unlike '95 the user doesn't get whatever happened last on the machine, the user will get a fairly minimalist configuration. [[jht: When a Win95 machine logs onto a Windows NT Domain the Win95 machine looks for the presence of a file called Config.Pol in the following location: \\"Authenticating Server"\NETLOGON It reads this file and uses it to ammend both the desktop environment as well as the file %WinDir%\Profiles\%USERNAME%\User.DAT. As with Windows NT, on log out this file gets written back to the profile server into the %USERNAME% directory in the profile share. It is thus possible to share a common desktop profile between Windows NT and Windows 9x. :jht]] 4. There are a *LOT* of reasons that the 'doze machine might not find USER.DAT and therefore default to a prototype. 1. Can't execute logon script & therefore no /HOME mapping (Most common) .Make sure the script exists .that you have your logon script set right .Netlogon share must exist .Protection/ownership of the script and share 2. no /HOME mapping in the logon script 3. no home path specified in /etc/smb.conf (Or no home mapping set up for that user in NT's user manager) 4. Protection/ownership of the user directory 5. protection/ownership of USER.DAT 6. basic networking problems .Is the networking available (Test it by manually mapping to both the user share and netlogon share) .Was the networking working during logon ? 7. Has it defaulted to a prototype, and then had you map the home directory afterwards ? - This will result in the bad prototype being written into the users home, and them being stuck with it, (Just replace USER.DAT again) 5. Interesting NOTE When '95 is performing the logon script, the HKEY_LOCAL_USERS has NOT been mapped from the USER.DAT. What has been mapped at this stage is the prototype registry (last one used). I assume the reason for this is that '95 is waiting for the logon script to complete so that it can identify where the user's home directory is. If at this point you attempt to do anything that uses the USER registry, (installing something for example or reading something from the user registry) you will actually be operating on the machine stored prototype profile not the user profile. This means that nothing will realy happen to the user setup (No menu items, no settings etc). To get around this you can name a process in the "run once" entries in the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE branch, and these "run once" processes will be executed once the USER.DAT is loaded, and all the user directories are accessible. To sum up: NET USE H: /HOME is the key to getting your user profiles loaded from a server. NET USE H: \\server\homes Won't get it right without a lot of stuffing about. Windoze '95 goes through a lot to bring you your user profile and if anything goes wrong during this process, it will drop back to using whatever profile was last used on the machine. From samba@aquasoft.com.au Sat Apr 11 13:48:54 1998 Date: Sat, 11 Apr 1998 09:34:08 +1000 From: Samba Bugs To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Re: A question about NT Domains Just for the sake of completeness I thought I'd add a bit to this. Let's be clear about which files affect registry changes (or contents). Under NT, open a command prompt interface: cd %SystemRoot%\System32\config dir The standard registry files are: Default - all component default settings System - all HKLM\System entries Software - all HKLM\Software entries Security - Domain/Machine releated User Rights & Privs. SAM - the Security Access Manager database (ie:Passwords etc.) [[jht: The SAM and Security files are the only files that get synchronised between Windows NT Domain Controllers. :jht]] These are used by EVERYTHING!! When a user logs in the following files get checked: 1) \\"Authenticating Server"\NETLOGON\NTConfig.Pol 2) %SystemRoot%\Profiles\Policies\NTConfig.Pol this one is a copy of the last NTConfig.Pol downloaded from (1) above - if available. 3) %SystemRoot%\Policies\%UserName%\NTUser.DAT [[jht: The System Policy Editor on Windows NT can be used to create both the Windows 95 "Config.Pol" file, as well as the Windows NT "NTConfig.Pol" file. To create the Windows 95 policy file you MUST load the Windows 95 policy template BEFORE creating the Config.Pol file. :jht]] The later, is first obtained from a profile server if the User_Init_Info passed from the Domain Logon Server specifies use of a roaming profile. If item (3) does NOT exist and/or NO default profile is available one gets created from the system default settings PLUS the last loaded file at item (2) above. The HKCU is always unique to the currently logged in user, BUT if the currently logged in user is using a shared profile that has NOT been made exclusive then on logout the HKCU will be written over the top of the source files. That is why Mandatory profiles are essential when sharing a roaming profile. On Sat, 11 Apr 1998, Wolfgang Ratzka wrote: > Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: > > > my experience is with Win95, but i expect the same for NT, and have been > > told that it is so by someone who runs NT admin training courses. > > On NT it is quite definitely not so. HKCU will always be loaded completely from > the user's NTuser.dat file and unloaded again after logout. > In fact HKCU is not a proper registry hive but a symbolic reference to the subkey of > HKEY_USERS that corresponds to the current user. If more than one user > is active on an NT machine (on plain vanilla NT this *is* possible if you have > services running as a non-system user; on WinFrame or Hydra multiple users > can be logged in) you will see several subkeys of HKU that correspond to > the active users and don't interfere with each other. > > Of course some settings that a user can change do not go into the HKCU hive > but into HKLM, most notably the screen resolution and the number of colours > (you can use policies to prevent user's from changing these). > Some applications put information that should go into HKCU into HKLM instead. > (Hall of Shame: Netscape Communicator, Microsoft Office 97 [User dictionaries!]...). > Others just use plain good old INI files in their program directory or even > in \WINNT\SYSTEM32. Those changes will not be user specific but machine > specific and those programs will cause trouble, when one tries to run them > on WinFrame or Hydra... :-). > > Summarizing: > > Q: Will the next user inherit a previous user's additions > to the HKCU registry hive? > A: Quite definitely not. Correct. > > Q: Can a user foul up the configuration for the next user? > A: Quite definitely yes! See above. Yes, but not if correctly configured. > > Q: Is this discussion out of place on the samba-ntdom list? > A: Errr.... Errr... Really? I think it is. Do we, or do we not, want to help people to gain stable and dependable use of samba? > -- > Wolfgang Ratzka (dialing in from home) Cheers, John H Terpstra (Also from home!!!!) ============================================================================= Further notes by Bruce Cook Date: Sun, 12 Apr 1998 14:12:22 +1000 From: Bruce Cook Subject: Re: Win95 / NT Profiles (was: RE: A question about NT Domains) Ah yes I knew there was something I forgot. here it is for completeness. ============================================================================= When a user logs into a specific machine for the first time, they will be told that they've never logged into the machine, and would they like to store the user setting for future use. If the user answers NO, they will be nagged about this every time they log into the machine until they say YES. (How about it MS, could we possible do something about this feature?) When the user answers YES, thereafter upon logging out of the machine, a copy of the user's profile is also written onto the machines local disk for later use. When a user logs into a machine where his/her profile has previously been saved, a comparison is made between the date of the profile copy kept on the machine, and the date of the profile stored on the server. In theory the server date should be later or the same. If the local machine date is later than the server date, the client machine will tell you the the settings on the local machine are more recent than those of the server, and would you like to user them instead. This occurs for a couple of reasons: 1. Server not available when the user logs out 2. Date mismatch between the server and the client (I always use NET TIME \\server /SET /YES in my logon scripts) Logging in with NO server available. In some cases a client will want to log into a network with no server available. (Portables away from the office, or a dead server) This can only happen if the administrator has NOT set the machine to give access only upon password verification from the server. (If the admin has done this, it can be circumvented by restarting the machine in safe mode, and running poledit, or regedit and disabling that feature) If you are able to log in while the server is unavailable, you have two choices 1. Log in as a user that previously stored a profile (The password won't have to match unless the machine is set up to store passwords) 2. log in as the default user (bit the cancel button or escape key) If you choose to use your profile stored on the local machine, there are several things you should be wary of: 1. the profile stored on the machine will be a copy of the last profile used when you logged into THAT machine. You may get quite an old profile. 2. When you log out, that local profile is garunteed to be later than the one on the server, and if the server is available, or you later log into that machine when the server is available you could overwrite the good server profile with a bogus profile. Technique note: I set portable computers up so that they don't use roaming profiles, rather they have a single profile kept on the machine. This means that a user has the same desktop look an feel regardless of where they are. This follows the philosophy that laptops tend to be used by only one person.