Accounting options 11.. MMiisscc 11..11.. PPaasssswwoorrdd hhaannddlliinngg ooff DDOOSS cclliieennttss 11..11..11.. EEnnffoorrccee eennccrryyppttiioonn ooff aallll ppaasssswwoorrddss 11..11..22.. EEnnffoorrccee eennccrryyppttiioonn bbuutt aallllooww nnoonn--eennccrryypptteedd 11..11..33.. AAllllooww nnoonn--eennccrryypptteedd ssttuuffff bbuutt nnoo eemmppttyy ppaasssswwoorrddss 11..11..44.. AAllllooww nnoonn--eennccrryypptteedd ssttuuffff aanndd eemmppttyy ppaasssswwoorrddss 11..11..55.. FFoorrccee cclliieenntt ttoo uussee oolldd eennccrryypptteedd ccaallllss 11..22.. IIggnnoorree ssttaattiioonn//ttiimmee rreessttrriiccttiioonnss ffoorr ssuuppeerrvviissoorr 11..33.. GGiivvee eemmppttyy llooggiinn ssccrriipptt iiff uusseerr hhaassnn''tt oonnee Give all users empty login scripts if they do not already have one. It's interpreted by the test routines. 22.. MMiinniimmaall rriigghhttss When loading the netware-drivers in the "autoexec.bat" of your DOS- client, you automatically "attach" to a netware-server. As a result, a new drive-letter is accessible under DOS, usually containing the programs "login.exe" and "slist.exe". Because you haven't logged in, nothing else of the netware-server will be visible to you. All actions requested from the DOS-client will be done with the following UID and GID on the Linux-side in this case. To achieve some level of security, the user/group asscociated with the UID and GID should only have _read_ rights on the files visible, nothing else. 22..11.. GGrroouupp IIDD 22..22.. UUsseerr IIDD 33.. UUsseerrss'' aauuttoommaapp NOTE: Users' automapping is absolutely optional! If you have a large number of accounts on your Linux-machine, you may want to map all Linux-logins automatically to "mars_nwe"-logins. WARNING: as there is no algorithm to convert the encrypted "Linux- passwords" into the encrypted format used by the DOS-clients (and therefore "mars_nwe"), you have to supply a common password for all automatically mapped users. This is a big security concern and you should never make this common password public (and, of course you should choose a sufficient "secure" (read: difficult) password). 33..11.. DDoo uusseerrss'' aauuttoommaappppiinngg 33..11..11.. NNoo 33..11..22.. YYeess Do the automatic mapping. 33..11..33.. YYeess aanndd oovveewwrriittee eexxiissttiinngg oonneess Re-read the logins from /etc/passwd and overwrite even the already existing logins from the bindery. 33..22.. DDeeffaauulltt ppaasssswwoorrdd The common password to be used by the automapped users.