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Mac Systems Management

johannacw writes "This story has in-depth info about managing Macs using Apple's Managed Preferences architecture. It covers how to use the 14 built-in systems-management areas, how preferences interact, how to secure workstations, and how to help users access resources including applications and printers. It's a must-read for any systems admin working in a Mac or mixed environment. Written by Ryan Faas, this is a follow-up to his popular Inside Apple's Workgroup Manager."

3 of 75 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Interesting but.... by _merlin · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just as deployable as MS AD Group Policy: you define policy for the domain, and member computers pick it up. Obviously, you need a domain master, and you need to bind the target computers to the domain. But this is no different to any other directory service.

  2. Re:Interesting but.... by rizzo320 · · Score: 4, Informative

    In most cases a "golden triangle" is used where the Mac is bound to both Active Directory and Open Directory. The login credentials for users are managed in Active Directory, where as the managed preferences for the workstations are managed in Open Directory. It's a pretty common setup.

    If you really need to blend in with your Active Directory environment, you can bypass workgroup manager altogether and go with ADmit Mac by Thursby Software. Though on the pricey side, it allows you to do much more from with AD than the standard features of OS X. The last time I checked, it even allowed you to apply certain types of group policies onto the managed Macs... very cool stuff.

  3. Re:system administration by Graff · · Score: 3, Informative

    You mean like:
    Mac OS X Server Command-Line Administration PDF

    Here's a web page with all the manuals for Mac OS X Server, lots of good information there:
    Apple Server Documentation