tailieunhanh - Active Directory Cookbook for windows server 2003- P52

Active Directory Cookbook for windows server 2003- P52:If you are familiar with the O'Reilly Cookbook format that can be seen in other popular books, such as the Perl Cookbook, Java Cookbook, and DNS and BIND Cookbook, then the layout of this book will not be anything new to you. The book is composed of 18 chapters, each containing 10-30 recipes for performing a specific Active Directory task. Within each recipe are four sections: problem, solution, discussion, and see also. | 23. For Attribute enter ManadatoryAttribute . 24. For Values enter MandatoryAttributeValue . 25. For Operation select Add. 26. Check the box beside Extended. 27. Click Run. 28. The results will be displayed in the right pane. Discussion Windows Server 2003 supports restoring tombstone deleted objects which have not expired. This is an alternative to performing an authoritative restore for an object that was accidentally deleted. The downside to this approach is that since most attributes that you care about excluding those in Table 16-1 are not populated on tombstone objects the restored deleted object will only be a shadow of its former self. Here are the basic steps to restore a deleted object 1. Enable the Return Deleted Objects control . 2. Remove the isDeieted attribute of the object do not simply set to FALSE . 3. Replace the distinguishedName attribute with its new location in the tree. 4. Restore any mandatory attributes. This should all be done in a single LDAP operation. After the object has been restored you can repopulate any optional attributes that were set previously. By default only members of the administrator groups can restore deleted objects. You can delegate control over restoring deleted objects by granting the Reanimate Tombstone extended right to a user or group. The user or group will also need rights to modify attributes of the restored object including the ability to create child objects in the container the object is restored to. Granting the privilege to restore objects should be done with caution. A user could restore a user object and after setting the password login with the account. This could give the user access to resources he was not suppose to have. See Also Recipe for searching for deleted objects and MSDN Restoring Deleted Objects 521 Recipe Modifying the Tombstone Lifetime for a Domain Problem You want to change the default tombstone lifetime for a domain. .

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