Jonathan Johnson
2005-Dec-17 20:20 UTC
[Samba] HOW TO: Migrating users' locally-stored profiles from one domain or workgroup to a new domain
Migrating Users Profiles When Changing Domain Affiliation: A Primer I. Introduction NOTE: This applies to Windows NT-based systems with locally-stored user profiles. Windows 9x and Me do not manage user profiles in the same way. Quite often we find the need to change a workstation's affiliation, either from a workgroup (that is, the workstation is not in a domain environment) to a domain, from one domain to another, or perhaps we need to remove a workstation from a domain and have it rely on local user authentication. The problem is that in any of these scenarios, established users finds that they have lost access to their locally stored profiles; a new profile is created for them when they log in to the new domain. They need to re-establish the icons on their desktops, they need to re-establish rights on that computer, and they need to copy their personal files (i.e., My Documents) from the old profile to the new one. This is a recipe for a headache and ill feelings toward the network administrator. The traditional solution has been to use roaming profiles, but this is not always convenient or practical, and sometimes something breaks and that tactic doesn't work. There is another method that I've developed which seems to work pretty well. It involves messing with permissions and the registry, so caveat administrator. II. Active Directory Migration Tool: The Microsoft Way Microsoft provides the Active Directory Migration Tool (ADMT) for migrating user accounts, groups, and machine accounts from one domain to another as an installable tool from the Windows Server 2003 CD. You can also download it from Microsoft; go to http://download.microsoft.com/ and search for ADMT. I have used it on several occasions for migrating accounts between Windows domains (NT to 2003, 2000 to 2003, and even Samba to 2003). I do not believe it would work for migrating from a Windows domain to a Samba domain, but I've never tried it. Perhaps some intrepid administrators would like to try it out with the early versions of Samba 4. One of the significant advantages of using ADMT is that in addition to migrating user, group, and machine accounts, it will dispatch to each workstation during the computer migration phase an agent which translates user profiles. In my observations, ADMT performs the following tasks when migrating a machine account (assuming that user accounts have been first migrated with the "preserve SID history" option): 1. File system rights are translated. This especially applies to user profile folders. 2. File sharing rights are tanslated. 3. Registry hive rights are translated. This especially applies to individual NTUSER.DAT registry hives (the core of the user profile), so that the migrated user has full access to his or her original profile. 4. User rights and groups are translated. If a user was a member of the local administrators group, the user will remain so in the new domain. 5. User is mapped to profle. For machines with numerous user profiles, or for a network with a large number of workstations, ADMT saves the administrator a lot of time, as these tasks are fully automated. Since we are using Samba, we can't use ADMT to translate user rights and migrate these items to the new domain. We must do this manually. III. Manual Migration of Local User Profiles from Domain to Domain or from Workgroup to Domain Before joining the workstation to the new domain, it is helpful to document the location of the profile folder of the user account we wish to migrate. This is easily done from a command shell by typing 'echo %userprofile%'. It is also helpful to note what local groups the user is a member of, such as "administrators." Once you have joined the worstation to the new domain, log in to the new domain as the user you wish to migrate. At this time, a new profile will be created. Make a note of this profile's folder location. The profile folder will be deleted in a later step, but by logging in this way we have created the registry entry that defines the user's profile in the new domain. Log out. Now, log in to the workstation as a local administrator. It is helpful if the account also has domain admin priviledges. Assign rights to the user's "old domain" local profile folder: add the user's new domain account to filesystem security. Be sure to "reset permissions on child objects" so subfolders and contents will have the proper permissions. Similarly, assign rights to any shares on this workstation that have specific permissions applied. Launch the registry editor. In Windows 2000 or NT, you must use regedt32, not regedit. In Windows XP, use regedit. Under HKEY_USERS, load the user's "old domain profile" registry hive. This will be the NTUSER.DAT file located in the profile folder you noted at the beginning of this exercise. Assign permissions to this newly loaded hive such that the user's new domain account has full access. Be sure to apply this to all child objects. You may be presented with an error indicating that some subkey could not be accessed; in this case you must take permissions for hive and all child objects and reapply the permissions. Be sure to unload the hive when you are finished. Navigate to the key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\ProfileList. Under this key will be several subkeys, named for the SIDs of the user accounts that have logged in to this computer. Locate the key associated with the user's new domain SID (you can determine this SID from Samba with 'pdbedit -v user'). Change the value of ProfileImagePath to match the profile path of the user's old domain profile. Close the registry editor, log out, and log in as the user to the new domain. The user's original profile should be loaded. If you get an error indicating that the profile could not be loaded, then you probably did not unload the user's registry hive. Simply restart the workstation and try again. If all is OK, delete the now-unused "new" profile folder that was created when you first logged in to the new domain as the user. It is not needed. IV. Request for 'Samba Domain Migration Tool' Based on the information I have provided, I think that a knowledgeable devoloper could write a tool that performs similarly to the the Active Directory Migration Tool. ADMT is a pretty well-developed utility that you install on a Windows server or workstation and allows you to migrate user, group, and machine accounts from a single administrative location. At the very least, a simple utility that you could run on a workstation to be migrated that takes as input the old domain, the new domain, and the user account to be migrated and performs the steps outlined above. The "new" user profile need not be created; you should be able to create the proper registry entries under "UserProfileList" and just have it work. -Jon Johnson Sutinen Consulting, Inc. www.sutinen.com
Jonathan Johnson
2005-Dec-20 02:50 UTC
[Samba] HOW TO: Migrating users' locally-stored profiles from one domain or workgroup to a new domain
I "read the fine manual" (Samba HOWTO and Reference Guide, ch. 26) and discovered that there's a Windows Resource Kit (2000 and later) tool that does this: moveuser.exe It's amazing what you learn when you stop and read the directions. ;-) --Jon Johnson Sutinen Consulting, Inc. www.sutinen.com Jonathan Johnson wrote:>Migrating Users Profiles When Changing Domain Affiliation: A Primer > ><snip> > >
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