>That's has nothing to do (DHCP)
Sorry! My mistake! I thought ident only returned a complete 
"username@hostname" type id, and that Squid compared on 
hostname/IP-address, rather than username...
>I think any computer in your compary logon to network (for e.g. Mapping 
>net drives) in logon script you insert start (form the net) identd daemon 
>(for Windows).
That's correct. The logon script uses Kixtart, so we can do all sorts of 
stuff from the logon script.
So you keep a list of all allowed users somewhere? We would like to avoid 
having to update users two different places. Meaning, we only want to keep 
users in the NT database. And the best way to do that, for us at least, is 
to use an NT group and put the allowed users in there.
I guess we could also check that a user is member of the allowed users 
group before starting the ident daemon from the logon script, but users 
could easily get around that by starting their own ident daemon manually. 
Most of our users aren't really up to the task of cheating the system like 
that, but some are, and these are the ones that we want to stop :-)
The second problem has to do mostly with company policy as "we only want 
stable/solid applications running on the PCs, which is why we usually only 
go for Microsoft products". :-) Anyway, if Microsoft made such a thing as 
an ident daemon and it costs lots of money, I'm sure I could get it 
approved with no problems at all. (The fact that it probably would be ten 
times more unstable than the freeware identd from Made in the Basement 
Productions, is irrelevant)
Which identd is considered to be the most stable, and least 
resource-hogging  one (Windows98)?
Espen Lyngaas, IT Consultant, Color Group ASA
Espen.Lyngaas@colorline.no Espen.Lyngaas@c2i.net
http://www.team17.com/~elyngaas/
Phone: +47-95063143 +47-22944315 ICQ: 43241796
Received on Wed Oct 27 1999 - 06:05:16 MDT
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