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Forum>Netzwerke>Active Directory + Panther + Anmeldung

Active Directory + Panther + Anmeldung

StevesBaby09.08.0518:22
ch und der Admin probieren gerade die Macs mit Active Directory zu verheirten. Nur will das zum verrecken nicht klappen.

Folgende Fehlermeldung erscheint jedesmal:

Die angegebene Kombination von Domäne und Gesamtstruktur ist ungültig


Wir haben schon jede Kombination ausprobiert. Was zum Teufel kann es sein?

Jemand Erfahrung damit?

Danke
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Kommentare

wutzywutz
wutzywutz10.08.0510:47
Bei uns gab's auch mal Probleme bei der Einbindung der Macs in Active-Directory. Scheint daran zu liegen, dass der Mac keine Domain-Aliase auflösen kann; also den Original-Domain-Namen jeweils angeben. Ein anderes Mal lag's daran, dass der DNS-Server Probleme mit der Namensauflösung hatte - also auch mal überprüfen, ob da alles glatt läuft.
Ansonsten klappt's mit OSX 10.39 oder 10.42 am Windows-Server einwandfrei (Servervolumes auch als Startobjekte, etc.)...
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StevesBaby10.08.0512:46
Hier die Lösung . Aber Danke!

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Mac OS X 10.3, 10.4: How to look up ".local" hostnames via both Rendezvous and standard DNS
Mac OS X 10.3 or later normally treats hostnames ending in ".local" only as Rendezvous hosts. However, some network administrators also assign .local hostnames. This document explains how to look up .local names using Rendezvous and standard DNS.

The Multicast DNS feature of Rendezvous technology allows devices on a local network to connect to each other by name without a separate DNS server. See technical document 107174, "Mac OS X 10.2: About Multicast DNS" for details. By default, any hostname ending in .local is treated as a Rendezvous host rather than by querying the DNS server entries in Network preferences.

Though the .local domain is not defined as a valid top-level domain on the Internet, some private networks have DNS servers that assign hostnames in the .local domain. In its default state, Mac OS X 10.3 does not use the DNS server to resolve these names. This may result in unexpected failures to connect to .local hostnames defined by your server. If .local names are assigned by a DNS server on your network, use the solution below to configure Mac OS X 10 to look up .local names in both ways. If the host is not available via Rendezvous, the query will be tried using unicast DNS to contact the DNS server.

Mac OS X 10.4 and later:

Open the Network preference pane in System Preferences. Select the desired network interface and click Configure. Add "local" to the Search Domains field. If you have multiple entries in this field, be sure that "local" is first, and separate them with commas. For example:

local, apple.com
Mac OS X 10.3 - 10.3.9:

To create the script, execute each of these commands in Terminal (/Applications/Utilities/). Each command is preceded by the dollar sign ($), which represents the Terminal prompt. You must be logged with an administrator account to perform these steps. After the first command (sudo), you will be prompted to enter your administrator password. After typing each command, press Return to execute it. After entering the "cat" command, you will not see a prompt ($) for the next four lines, though you must still press Return after each. For the line that says "[Control-D]", you will hold down the Control key, then press D.

The commands:

$ sudo su
$ cd /usr/sbin
$ cat > EnableUnicastDotLocal
#!/bin/tcsh
echo domain local > /etc/resolver/local.1
grep -v domain /etc/resolv.conf | grep -v search >> /etc/resolver/local.1
echo search_order 2 >> /etc/resolver/local.1
[Control-D]
$ chmod +x EnableUnicastDotLocal
$ exit
These steps create an executable shell script named "EnableUnicastDotLocal" that will create and populate the necessary configuration files to enable dual lookups of .local hostnames.<

To run the script, execute this command:

$ sudo /usr/sbin/EnableUnicastDotLocal

Important: The address of the DNS server configured by this script for .local name lookups will not change automatically if your default DNS server address changes. (Your DNS server address may change if you change network locations, if a change is made by your DHCP server administrator, or if you change it manually in Network preferences.) To change the DNS server used for lookups in the .local domain, you must run this script again. To disable unicast DNS lookups entirely after running this script, delete the file /etc/resolver/local.1.

Note: For the Active Directory plug-in to work with .local domains, you must update to Mac OS X 10.3.3 or later.
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