Where is logon script
Answered by:. Archived Forums. Windows Server General Forum. Sign in to vote. Wednesday, August 7, PM. Friday, August 9, AM. I would agree with Meinolf on this point. If the script no longer exist, it makes no sense to keep it as logon script. You need to remove the script entry from the user properties to avoid confusion and false positive alerts that are logged due to that. Friday, August 9, PM. So check with "net share" on the DCs that the 2 shared folders exist. Thursday, August 8, AM.
Sign up using Facebook. Sign up using Email and Password. Post as a guest Name. Email Required, but never shown. The Overflow Blog. Podcast Explaining the semiconductor shortage, and how it might end. Does ES6 make JavaScript frameworks obsolete?
Featured on Meta. Now live: A fully responsive profile. Related Hot Network Questions. Question feed. Stack Overflow works best with JavaScript enabled. On the profile pane of the user dialog of a domain user i can enter the name of a logon-script. If i logon using this user on any Windows machine Server, Terminalserver , where does Windows look for it? This is a replciated folder between all domain controllers if you have many. Found it, thank you so much.
Just another one: Is it possible to have a logon script on just a single server, which gets executed there, regardless of the user who logs on? This way when any user logs in, it will run it, just not before the user signs in. It would run as the desktop loads. I am not sure if there is a more preferred method. But I actually use that for some printer issues on local PCs. I have a few PCs with ghosts that like to change default printers for no reason at random logons.
If you don't want to setup logon script for each user in AD, then setup a Group Policy that runs script for all objects in the relevant container. I want users who logs onto a specific terminalserver to execute a special additional logon-script. Can this be done using GPO? In my opinion you would want a seperate script for the terminal server. Normally what I would do is define a seperate OU just for that Terminal server and create a GPO specific to that container with the additional login script.
0コメント