Michael Tokarev
2023-Sep-14 11:22 UTC
[Samba] samba ad, windows machines, roaming profiles: empty Start menu at first login?
Hi! For quite a while I wanted to ask this question, so here it goes. We've a samba-based AD (installed on samba 4.13, now running on 4.17, but this does not seem to matter), with AD-DC and a separate File Server (FS). The FS holed user roaming profiles which gets syncronized to/from windows computers upon user login/logout the usual way. When there's no (old) user profile copy stored on a windows computer, after user logs in (which is somewhat slow since the profile is being copied from FS), their start menu is completely empty, - there's nothing in there besides the "Settings" link. No installed programs are shown up. After logout and on the next login (so when the login happens when this user profile already exists on the computer, it only needs to be updated), the start menu is shown as it should be, complete with all installed programs. I haven't seen something similar on a windows-based DC. Unfortunately I can't tell if it is samba-DC-related or samba-fileserver-related, - don't have partial environment to test. Maybe I should try creating a test AD with 3 computers to experiment. Windows currently is 10 22H2 (ltsc), the same behavior has been observed with previous ltsc (1801 iirc), and - I *think* - win7 behaved the same way too, but I'm not sure about this. Has anyone seen this? How user profiles work on your samba-based AD? Thanks, /mjt
Achim Gottinger
2023-Sep-15 13:20 UTC
[Samba] samba ad, windows machines, roaming profiles: empty Start menu at first login?
Am 14.09.2023 um 13:22 schrieb Michael Tokarev via samba:> Hi! > > For quite a while I wanted to ask this question, so here it goes. > > We've a samba-based AD (installed on samba 4.13, now running on 4.17, > but this does not seem to matter), with AD-DC and a separate File Server > (FS). The FS holed user roaming profiles which gets syncronized to/from > windows computers upon user login/logout the usual way. > > When there's no (old) user profile copy stored on a windows computer, > after user logs in (which is somewhat slow since the profile is being > copied from FS), their start menu is completely empty, - there's nothing > in there besides the "Settings" link.? No installed programs are shown > up. > > After logout and on the next login (so when the login happens when this > user profile already exists on the computer, it only needs to be updated), > the start menu is shown as it should be, complete with all installed > programs. > > I haven't seen something similar on a windows-based DC.? Unfortunately > I can't tell if it is samba-DC-related or samba-fileserver-related, - > don't have partial environment to test.? Maybe I should try creating > a test AD with 3 computers to experiment. > > Windows currently is 10 22H2 (ltsc), the same behavior has been observed > with previous ltsc (1801 iirc), and - I *think* - win7 behaved the same > way too, but I'm not sure about this. > > Has anyone seen this?? How user profiles work on your samba-based AD?I'm not seeing your issue. But we use an default domain user profile and openshell as an menu replacement. achim~> > Thanks, > > /mjt >
Marco Gaiarin
2023-Sep-15 14:58 UTC
[Samba] samba ad, windows machines, roaming profiles: empty Start menu at first login?
Mandi! Michael Tokarev via samba In chel di` si favelave...> When there's no (old) user profile copy stored on a windows computer, > after user logs in (which is somewhat slow since the profile is being > copied from FS), their start menu is completely empty, - there's nothing > in there besides the "Settings" link. No installed programs are shown > up. > After logout and on the next login (so when the login happens when this > user profile already exists on the computer, it only needs to be updated), > the start menu is shown as it should be, complete with all installed > programs.Happen also here, and i've no memory of this behaviour in XP or Win7. Catalogued as 'Win10 strangeness' and instructed users to relogon... -- Nobody expects the Bavarian inquisition! (Anonimo, 19/4/2005)