I have an interesting problem. I can confirm that the OpenVPN server is working because I can connect successfully on other Windows machines. On my personal mac laptop though I can connect but the workstation never receives an ip from the server. I have tried all the mac OpenVPN apps (OpenVPN Connect, Viscosity, Shimo.) They all connect successfully, but I have no IP on the TUN/TAP device.
We operate a Windows 2003 Active Directory network. As the new IT manager I've inherited this infrastructure from previous outside contractors that have come in to help maintain our company network.
My home network has a Windows machine running Server 2008 R2 which provides DHCP and DNS.
In a Windows Server 2008 R2 Active Directory how can I make sure that each user open login have their Desktop, Documents, Links, Pictures, etc folders set to a shared private folder?
For example, instead of the default C:\Users\<username>\Documents I would like that this would be set automatically to Z:\Documents.
Back in the old days of me being Admin, I recall it's some script set up in
It seems to me that tar on windows does not understand directory symbolic links - it treats them as an ordinary folders which in my case leads to infinite recursion. 7-zip has the same problem. Are you aware of any free tool that can simply backup directory with symlinks pointing to parent directory and then restore it on another machine?
I have three computers at home: Win7, Mountain Lion (OSX), and Snow Leopard (OSX).
I want to setup a server on my homenetwork so that I can collaboratively transfer files to/from the server from any of the three machines. Ideally, at the computer startup time the server would be mounted automatically.
I am running a virtual setup with vSphere, with two virtual machines, one running CentOS 6 and the other running Windows server 2008
The idea is to use LDAP to connect from the CentOS (as a client) to the Windows Server 2008 (as a server), and trying to access Active Directory from there.
There is a virtual switch between these two virtual machines, and both are running on the same subnet.
Basically I have the SAME problem as another user. I read his attempts to get a reply that made sense.
But he seemed to get everything but what he asked for.
I have a Windows 2012 NFS server setup to use my AD domain as an authentication source. My domain is ad.example.com with a NetBIOS name of AD. My linux machines have idmapd configured to use ad.example.com as the domain. When I try and ls my folders I get all the user and groups returning as nobody. I tracked it down and I realized that the Windows NFS Server is sending the domain as AD.