On 1/25/07, Steve Rowley wrote:
>Date: Tue, 23 Jan 2007 16:23:19 -0000
>From: "Dave Korn" <dave dot korn at artimi dot com>
>
>Seems like you don't have a valid /etc/groups file. You should fix that first.
My /etc/group file was made by:
>$ mkgroup -lc >/etc/group
Here are its current contents; if you can spot anything wrong, I'd be
pleased to hear it. Perhaps I suffer from myopia due to staring at
this all too long:
>SYSTEM:S-1-5-18:18:
>None:S-1-5-21-473916646-3257906905-3362627345-513:513:
>Administrators:S-1-5-32-544:544:
>Backup Operators:S-1-5-32-551:551:
>Guests:S-1-5-32-546:546:
>Network Configuration Operators:S-1-5-32-556:556:
>Power Users:S-1-5-32-547:547:
>Remote Desktop Users:S-1-5-32-555:555:
>Replicator:S-1-5-32-552:552:
>Users:S-1-5-32-545:545:
>Debugger Users:S-1-5-21-473916646-3257906905-3362627345-1004:1004:
>HelpServicesGroup:S-1-5-21-473916646-3257906905-3362627345-1001:1001:
>mkgroup_l_d:S-1-5-32-545:10545:
mkgroup_l_d:S-1-5-32-545:10545:
A Google search for
GID 10545
implies that this is 'Domain Users'.
Not that it should make a big difference, but you might want to edit
your /etc/group and change
mkgroup_l_d:S-1-5-32-545:10545:
to
Domain Users:S-1-5-32-545:10545:
or however you prefer
dusers:S-1-5-32-545:10545:
domain_users:S-1-5-32-545:10545:
Just something other than mkgroup_l_d
-Jason
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