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Adding a client to the domain
Showing all messages in thread #1203304594 Windows Server 2003 Annoyances Discussion Forum
The following are all of the messages in this thread (5 in all), shown in chronological order. Click any message subject to view that message by itself or to view the thread hierarchy.
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Adding a client to the domain
Sunday, February 17, 2008 at 7:16 pm Posted by David
(3 messages posted)
I have been asked to add a client computer to the domain PC running 2003 server.
I am new at this, I have never been in a server Domain environment before.
We have abut 7 computers connected to the 2003 server, each has a user name in the
server, we sign into the domain with what appear to be the usernames in the server,
those same names are I believe in each compuer also.
Here is what I did:
I Created a User name in the 2003 server, and a password, then I created the same
username and password in the XP Pro macine.
when I log on I cannot "see anything on the domain.
the other computers are set to use automatc Ip address. I can access the web through
the new xp computer so I am sure the network is working.
I am having problem finding good information It seems that most say "set up a user
and sign on" well I am missing something, mabe many things.
any help would be great!
David
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re: Adding a client to the domain
Monday, February 18, 2008 at 8:31 am Posted by JD HOG
(46 messages posted)
when you created the user on the XP computer, did you go to properties of My Computer
/ Computer Name / Click on Change button / Domain button clicked / domain name in
box - your domain name.local. Make sure name inside Computer name box has a computer
object with this same name in the correct O.U. on the server.
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re: Adding a client to the domain
Monday, February 18, 2008 at 9:39 am Posted by David
(3 messages posted)
Yes I believe that I did that ok, the Domain name is rmtire.com and that is exactly
how I typed it in, I used the other xp computers as an example of what to put in.
however you mentioned "domain name.local" I did not type .local after "rmtire.com"
is this a problem
next question is same name in the correct O.U. on the server (where do I find the
O.U. in the server) Note I have not looked for it on the server and what does O.U.
stan for?
David
On Sunday, February 17, 2008 at 7:16 pm, David wrote:
>I have been asked to add a client computer to the domain PC running 2003 server.
>
>I am new at this, I have never been in a server Domain environment before.
>
>We have abut 7 computers connected to the 2003 server, each has a user name in the
>server, we sign into the domain with what appear to be the usernames in the server,
>those same names are I believe in each compuer also.
>
>Here is what I did:
>I Created a User name in the 2003 server, and a password, then I created the same
>username and password in the XP Pro macine.
>when I log on I cannot "see anything on the domain.
>the other computers are set to use automatc Ip address. I can access the web through
>the new xp computer so I am sure the network is working.
>
>I am having problem finding good information It seems that most say "set up a user
>and sign on" well I am missing something, mabe many things.
>
>any help would be great!
>David
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re: Adding a client to the domain
Monday, February 25, 2008 at 8:18 pm Posted by appleoddity
(1346 messages posted)
OU stands for "Organizational Unit", it is a container object in server 2003. You
will find various OUs, such as "Computers", or "Users." OUs are the only thing you
can apply group policy to. Your "Computers" OU will contain the computer accounts
of every computer that has joined the domain. You should see the computer name you
are having trouble with, listed in the "Computers" OU. If you have joined the domain
successfully, then I am sure you will see the PC listed in the OU.
The .local extension is just a default that Microsoft recommends for internal domain
names. You are using a public domain name it sounds like and so you will not have
a .local after your domain name.
You do not have to setup user accounts on the XP machine. This is the whole purpose
for a server, all authentication is done on the server and user accounts are all
managed from the server. Someone didn't configure it properly if they are having
to have local user accounts with the same name and password.
If you have joined the domain properly, then (and if you wouldn't have created that
local user account with the same name and password, you would not have this confusion)
make sure you click the "options" button when the login screen pops up. This will
expand the "Log on to" field, that will now list your domain name, and the local
name of the PC. Make sure you are logging on to the domain and not to the local
PC.
At this point, you are able to access any resources on the server that the user you
created has permissions to access. Look in my network places. I would suggest,
copying an existing user account (right-click the user account on the server) and
just changing the name and login name. This way, the new user account you created
will have the same permissions as the user account you copied. Otherwise, you will
need to add the new user account to the proper security groups in order to access
certain resources. Very complicated stuff in deed and hard to explain in a few short
paragraphs.. :)
By explaining what you "can't see" on the server, you may help me to lead you in
the right direction.
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re: Adding a client to the domain
Monday, February 25, 2008 at 9:07 pm Posted by David
(3 messages posted)
FIXed
I found the problem!
I had set up the domain correctly, What was causing no communication was an old outdated
"Norton antivirus" still running.
I deleted Norton then signed back on (works fine)
Thanks for the help
David
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