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Provided by: 123-CBT Computer Based Training CIW Server Administrator Part 2 User Management |
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Course Overview
This is the second course in a five part series that will teach students how to manage users. The essentials of user management are presented, as well as the techniques for managing users in Windows 2000 and managing users in Linux. Students will learn how to deal with the SAM, user rights, policies, and shared folders. In addition, they will learn how to deal with manually and automatically adding users in Linux, linuxconf, password files, and policies.
Learn To
Identify authentication methods.
Identify features of the peer-to-peer network security model.
Identify features of shares in peer-to-peer settings.
Identify features of the Security Accounts Manager (SAM).
Add a user account.
Modify user rights.
Match files for manually adding Unix users with their purposes.
Identify features of automated account creation.
Add a user by using the linuxconf program.
Audience
The audience for this course includes LAN/WAN administrators, system administrators, systems managers, intranet administrators, network engineers, and internetworking engineers. The prerequisite for this course is that students must have CIW Foundations certification or equivalent experience. CIW accepts CompTIA's i-Net+ certification in place of the CIW Foundations course. This course covers exam number 1D0-450. In addition, students should have taken the first part of this series (87001).
Content Emphasis
Conceptual
Deployment Options
Internet / Intranet, Download, LAN, Workstation
Accreditation
NASBA credits: 4 CPE Credits
Language Options
American English
Total Learning Time
7 hours
87002 Objectives
Unit 1: User Management Essentials
3 hours
Identify authentication methods.
Identify features of the peer-to-peer network security model.
Identify features of shares in peer-to-peer settings
Identify features of the user-level access security model
Identify considerations for establishing user-level shares
Create a user name-based network share.
Customize share permissions.
Match universal permissions with their descriptions.
Match Windows 2000 access permissions with their descriptions.
Identify features of Unix permissions.
Match Novell rights with their descriptions.
Identify the key password practices.
Match the key network policies with their descriptions.
Identify the characteristics of a standard operating procedure (SOP).
Identify considerations for creating a logon a
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