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Tuesday, December 13, 2011

OPA-Backup is able to backup the product activation of Microsoft Office

OPA-Backup is able to backup the product activation of Microsoft Office XP, 2003, 2007 and 2010. After reinstalling Windows, it restores the backup so that there is no need for activating Office again
To use OPA-Backup, please follow the rules listed below:


  • You must have bought Microsoft Office.
  • Microsoft Office has to be activated.
  • You must fulfill the software license agreement of Microsoft Office.
  • OPA-Backup is not directed against Microsoft.
  • OPA-Backup is no illegal crack.
Requirements: Microsoft Windows, Microsoft .NET Framework 3.0
For More Details:

Sunday, December 11, 2011

How To Create A Samba PDC Administrator User (SAMBA) - Part10


To do both SWAT and user administration with Samba you'll need to create administrator accounts on the Samba PDC Linux server.

Home Environment

By default, the root user is the Samba administrator, and SWAT requires you to use the Linux root password to be used. Fortunately, you can add workstations to the Windows domain by creating a Samba specific root password. This is done using the smbpasswd command.
[root@bigboy tmp]# /usr/bin/smbpasswd -a root password
Note: Remember that regular Linux logins via the console, Telnet or SSH require the Linux passwd command. Samba domain logins use the smbpasswd password. Samba passwords are stored in the /etc/samba/smbpasswd file.

Corporate Environment

In a corporate environment, you may want more than one person to administer Samba, each with their own usernames. Here are the steps to do this:
1. Create a Linux user group, such as sysadmin with the groupadd command.
2. Use SWAT to update your smb.conf file so that the sysadmin group is listed in the [global] parameter settings.
domain admin group = @sysadmin
admin users = @sysadmin
printer admin = @sysadmin
3. Create individual Linux users that are part of this group.
4. Use the smbpasswd command to create Samba passwords for Domain logins for this group. For security reasons this password may be different from the Linux password used to log into the Linux system from the console, via telnet or ssh. (Remember that Linux passwords are changed with the passwd command.)

Samba Passwords (SAMBA) - PART9


You should be aware that your Linux password and Samba passwords are stored in two different locations. This provides the Samba administer the flexibility of allowing only some of the Linux users to have Samba accounts.
Use the passwd command to change Linux passwords, which are stored in the /etc/shadow file. Samba passwords are stored in the /etc/samba/smbpasswd file and can be changed smbpasswd command.
This difference is important.

The [printers] Share Section (SAMBA) - PART8


Samba has special shares just for printers, and these are configured in the [printers] section of SWAT. There is also a share under [printers] called printers which governs common printer settings. Print shares always have the printable parameter set to yes. The default smb.conf [printers] share section looks like this:
[printers]
    comment = All Printers
    path = /var/spool/samba
    printable = Yes
    browseable = No

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

The [netlogon] and [profiles] Share Sections (SAMBA, SWAT) - PART7


The [netlogon] share section contains scripts that the windows clients may use when they log into the domain. The [profiles] share section stores settings related to the look and feel of windows so that the user has the same settings no matter which Windows PC is logged into. The [profiles] share section stores things such as favorites and desktop icons.
Your smb.conf file should look like this when you're finished:
[netlogon]
       path = /home/samba/netlogon
       guest ok = Yes

[profiles]
       path = /home/samba/profiles
       read only = No
       create mask = 0600
       directory mask = 0700
Here's how to do it.
  1. Click the Shares button.
  2. Create a [netlogon] share.
  3. Modify the path and guest ok settings.
  4. Click on the Commit Changes button.
  5. Create a [profiles] share section.
  6. Modify the path, mask and read only settings. The mask settings allow only the owner of the netlogon subdirectory to be able to modify its contents.
  7. Click on the Commit Changes button.
Remember to create these share directories from the command line afterwards.
[root@bigboy tmp]# mkdir -p /home/samba/netlogon
[root@bigboy tmp]# mkdir -p /home/samba/profile
[root@bigboy tmp]# chmod -R 0755 /home/samba