Although I've been using Samba with Linux and Windows 9x for some time, now I need to deal with integrating Windows 2000 workstations into the mix and I'm having a lot of aggravation with user profiles. I don't know if this trouble is specific to Samba or whether it's another "This behavior is by design" "feature" of Win2000. Windows 2000 has no apparent problem joining the domain and creating the machine account, allowing users on that machine to subsequently log onto the domain. But what happens is that when logging onto the Samba domain, even using a pre-existing Win2000 user name, you wind up with a completely new user profile that is lacking all of the desktop items and settings previously configured. In addition, even if the user is "Administrator" or member of the Administrator group (Samba superuser and the local system's Administrator group), he or she no longer has privileges to modify anything substantive on the local machine. In order to make any changes in something like, say, dialup networking for an ADSL connection, you have to log onto the local machine rather than the Samba domain to do the modifications -- then when you log back onto Samba under the same name, all the changes are gone! Is this the way this is supposed to work? Is there a way I can have a Win2000 user log onto the Samba domain and still retain his/her configuration as well as any administrative rights on the local system? The server is Samba 2.2.5 running on RedHat Linux 7.3 with a 2.4.19 generic kernel. The workstation(s) in question are running Windows 2000 Professional, Service Pack 2, with local rather than roaming profiles specified. (So far I've only been experimenting with one Win2000 system for fear of screwing several machines up!) Thanks in advance for any help with this! ----------------------------------------------- Carter Braxton - cbraxton@libertyworksradio.com -----------------------------------------------