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-Initial Release: August 22, 1996
-Contributor: John H Terpstra <samba-bugs@samba.anu.edu.au>
-Updated: June 27, 1997
-Status: Current - New Content
-
-Subject: Windows NT Domain Control & Samba
-============================================================================
-
-****NOTE:****
-=============
-Microsoft Windows NT Domain Control is an extremely complex protocol.
-We have received countless requests to implement Domain Control in Samba
-and have seriously investigated the potential to support this. The Samba
-Team have now concluded that since Domain Control is a completely
-undocumented protocol we ought NOT to implement our best guess of this
-technology. It is a Microsoft business policy NOT to release the information
-necessary to enable this to be implemented in a dependable manner.
-============================================================================
-
-Windows NT Server can be installed as either a plain file and print server
-(WORKGROUP workstaion or server) or as a server that participates in Domain
-Control (DOMAIN member, Primary Domain controller or Backup Domain controller).
-
-The same is true for OS/2 Warp Server, Digital Pathworks and other similar
-products, all of which can participate in Domain Control along with Windows NT.
-
-To many people these terms can be confusing, so let's try to clear the air.
-
-Every Windows NT system (workstation or server) has a registry database.
-The registry contains entries that describe the initialisation information
-for all services (the equivalent of Unix Daemons) that run within the Windows
-NT environment. The registry also contains entries that tell application
-software where to find dynamically loadable libraries that they depend upon.
-In fact, the registry contains entries that describes everything that anything
-may need to know to interact with the rest of the system.
-
-The registry files will can be located on any Windows NT machine by opening a
-command prompt and typing:
- dir %SystemRoot%\System32\config
-
-The environment variable %SystemRoot% value can be obtained by typing:
- echo %SystemRoot%
-
-The active parts of the registry that you may want to be familiar with are
-the files called: default, system, software, sam and security.
-
-In a domain environment, Microsoft Windows NT domain controllers participate
-in replication of the SAM and SECURITY files so that all controllers within
-the domain have an exactly identical copy of each.
-
-The Microsoft Windows NT system is structured within a security model that
-says that all applications and services must authenticate themselves before
-they can obtain permission from the security manager to do what they set out
-to do.
-
-The Windows NT User database also resides within the registry. This part of
-the registry contains the user's security identifier, home directory, group
-memberships, desktop profile, and so on.
-
-Every Windows NT system (workstation as well as server) will have it's own
-registry. Windows NT Servers that participate in Domain Security control
-have a database that they share in common - thus they do NOT own an
-independant full registry database of their own, as do Workstations and
-plain Servers.
-
-The User database is called the SAM (Security Access Manager) database and
-is used for all user authentication as well as for authentication of inter-
-process authentication (ie: to ensure that the service action a user has
-requested is permitted within the limits of that user's privilidges).
-
-Windows for Workgroups, Windows 95, and Windows NT Workstations and Servers
-can participate in a Domain security system that is controlled by Windows NT
-servers that have been correctly configured. At most every domain will have
-ONE Primary Domain Controller (PDC). It is desirable that each domain will
-have at least one Backup Domain Controller (BDC).
-
-The PDC and BDCs then participate in replication of the SAM database so that
-each Domain Controlling participant will have an up to date SAM component
-within it's registry.
-
-Samba can NOT at this time function as a Domain Controller for any of these
-security services, but like all other domain members can interact with the
-Windows NT security system for all access authentication.
-
-When Samba is configured with the 'security = server' option and the
-'password server = Your_Windows_NT_Server_Name' option, then it will
-redirect all access authentication to that server. This way you can
-use Windows NT to act as your password server with full support for
-Microsoft encrypted passwords.
-