Mail Archives: cygwin/2000/11/08/13:10:48
No, these groups are different. They are domain groups, yet there seems to be a
distinction between a "global" domain group and a "local" domain group. These
"local" domain groups do not show up with either 'mkgroup -d' or 'mkgroup -l'.
Sorry, I should have been more specific.
Rick Rankin
rick_rankin AT yahoo DOT com
--- "Larry Hall (RFK Partners, Inc)" <lhall AT rfk DOT com> wrote:
> At 12:56 PM 11/8/2000, Rick Rankin wrote:
> >On our NT domain, there are apparently some "local" groups and some "global"
> >groups. Right now, I don't know what the distinction is, but most of the
> groups
> >on our domain seem to be defined as local. Unfortunately, 'mkgroup -d' only
> >picks up the ones that are defined as global, and most people belong to
> local
> >groups.
> >
> >Is there are reason mkgroup only shows the global groups? (I hope this makes
> >some sense; I'm not sure how else to explain it.)
> >
> >Thanks,
> >
> >Rick Rankin
> >rick_rankin AT yahoo DOT com
>
>
>
> Have you looked at mkgroup --help? mkgroup -l will give you local groups.
>
>
>
> Larry Hall lhall AT rfk DOT com
> RFK Partners, Inc. http://www.rfk.com
> 118 Washington Street (508) 893-9779 - RFK Office
> Holliston, MA 01746 (508) 893-9889 - FAX
>
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Thousands of Stores. Millions of Products. All in one Place.
http://shopping.yahoo.com/
--
Want to unsubscribe from this list?
Send a message to cygwin-unsubscribe AT sourceware DOT cygnus DOT com
- Raw text -