[gptalk] Re: local security policy & local group policy

  • From: "Darren Mar-Elia" <darren@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <gptalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 12:25:59 -0800

No, sadly it won't. I don't recall if RSOP.MSC has any kind of export
capability but you might try that.

 

Darren

 

From: gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Dave Clapham
Sent: Friday, January 16, 2009 12:17 PM
To: gptalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [gptalk] Re: local security policy & local group policy

 

Will it still do that for those computers that aren't part of the domain?

 

From: gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Nelson, Jamie
Sent: Friday, January 16, 2009 1:51 PM
To: gptalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [gptalk] Re: local security policy & local group policy

 

Sounds like you want the GP Results Wizard in GPMC. It can run a RSoP
against a remote system and give you a nice HTML report which you can print
and/or save.

 

Jamie Nelson | Operations Consultant | BI&T Infrastructure-Intel | Devon
Energy Corporation | Work: 405.552.8054 | Mobile: 405.200.8088 |
http://www.dvn.com <http://www.dvn.com/> 

 

From: gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Dave Clapham
Sent: Friday, January 16, 2009 1:27 PM
To: gptalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [gptalk] Re: local security policy & local group policy

 

I tried the gpresult /z >gp.txt but it didn't give the me desired results.
Its close but doesn't drill down deep enough to tell me the policy name,
etc..

 

So does anyone make something that will tell me what policies have been set?
I would prefer a free solution but that doesn't look very promising.  So how
about payware??

 

Dave 

 

From: gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Darren Mar-Elia
Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2009 9:36 PM
To: gptalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [gptalk] Re: local security policy & local group policy

 

Daniel-

If you are talking about the Local Security Policy shortcut that you see in
Administrative Tools, then that is simply an MMC snap-in tool focused on the
security portion of the local GPO. So you are essentially looking at a
subset of the Local GPO. That being said, security policy on the local GPO
is made against the live system, instead of being stored in settings files
like it is for other local GPO settings. That makes it somewhat special and
often troublesome to manage.

 

Darren

 

From: gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of daniel
Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2009 7:02 PM
To: gptalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [gptalk] local security policy & local group policy

 

hi all,

 

simple question.

 

what is the difference between the local security policy and the local group
policy?

 

daniel.

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