There is an Apple article that describes how to look up. local domains as being Rendezvous/Bonjour hosts and needs to be told what to do. As described in Microsoft knowledge base article 836413, OS X treats. This was despite having disabled digital signing of communications (not required for OS X 10.5) and it turned out that the problem is the internal DNS domain name that I use which uses a.
This told me just about everything I needed to know (with screenshots) but, crucially, when I tried this over a year ago on my OS 10.4 system I could not get the Mac to bind with Active Directory. Thankfully, with OS X 10.4/10.5 (and possibly with later versions of 10.3 – although I haven’t tried), schema changes are no longer necessary.īy far and away the best resource on this subject is Nate Osborne’s Mac OS/Linux/Windows single sign-on article at the Big Nerd Ranch weblog. As explained in a Microsoft TechNet magazine article from 2005, early implementations of OS X required schema changes in Active Directory in order to make things work. I got Active Directory working with Linux – so surely it should be possible to repeat the process on a system with BSD Unix at the core? Yes, as it happens, it is.īefore I explain what was necessary, it’s probably worth mentioning that the process is not the same for every version of OS X.
One of the projects that I’ve been meaning to complete for a while now has been getting my Mac OS X computers to participate in my Active Directory (AD) domain. Please be warned that the information here may be out of date.
I don't routinely update old blog posts as they are only intended to represent a view at a particular point in time.