I have a AD hosted on 2003R2 and 2008R2, I would like to check the membership for the domain computer (e.g. compA) when an user logs on using that computer (e.g. compA) and perform certain operations inside a script. I think WMI could probably be useful but I am unable to find the proper query to get the list of groups of the computer account in question. Any idea?
William's questions
I have installed 2 CA onto 2 Windows 2008R2 VM, one being an offline root CA and the other is intended to be the issuing CA. However I found that a DC (a 2008R2 VM) is requesting 2 certificates, namely Domain Controller Authentication and Directory Email Replication, (they are auto issued with expiration period of one year) on every reboot. I wonder if there is normal and would like to turn this 'feature' off, any idea?
I am looking for advise to set up a Windows 2008R2 based router with NAT functionality. My current network consists of a few subnets (reserved + real ip addresses), e.g. 10.20.30.0/24, 10.20.40.0/24 and 123.123.123.0/24. What I want to do is to connect all subnets so that they can communicate with each other while providing NAT to those reserved ip addresses (10.x.x.x) for Internet surfing. On the other hand, those with real ip addresses (123.123.123.x) should go online without the NAT. What should I do?
I have 2 Dell R710 servers (intended to set up HyperV cluster) and a MD3000i SAN set up:
Server1/Server2:
- NIC 1: connected to company LAN
- NIC 2: crossover to the other server's NIC 2
- NIC 3: crossover to iSCSI port of SAN controller 1
- NIC 4: crossover to iSCSI port of SAN controller 2
I have both servers setup as diskless servers with iSCSI boot from SAN without problem. But how can I access iSCSI from within the VM such that I can set up clustering inbetween the VMs? I can ping from the host to the SAN but found that NIC3/4 cannot be used for virtual network in HyperV? What am I doing wrong?