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| Dock icon for a user's (AD) network home folder missing.. http://www.macwindows.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=20 |
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| Author: | augwell [ Thu Jun 03, 2010 4:10 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Dock icon for a user's (AD) network home folder missing.. |
I recently had a problem with an iMac (21.5-inch, Late 2009), running 10.6.3 fully updated and bound to AD. The fans would come on full blast and not stop until the machine was shut down or restarted. After troubleshooting the problem to no avail, I decided to image the disk and start over. I re-installed OS X 10.6 and fully updated the machine. I then bound the machine to AD. Then I migrated the accounts from the old system image. The fan issue has not come back since. The problem is that I can't seem to get the user's network home folder to come back to the dock. I have tried everything I know of including unbinding and rebinding the computer, changing settings for "force local user home folder" etc. I have a feeling that a simple plist file controls the automount and dock folder icon, but I can't find any information to lead me in the right direction. The AD setup we use has network home folders for every user, and, normally, SL automatically mounts the drive and inserts the user's network home folder onto the right side of the dock, near the applications, documents, and downloads folders. Could someone please help? |
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| Author: | ktappe [ Fri Jun 04, 2010 9:45 am ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Dock icon for a user's (AD) network home folder missing. |
Have you made sure the path to the user's network home is fully qualified in AD? Also, try reapplying the permissions to the user's network home, ensuring they have full rights. We have issues with these permissions reverting to where the user doesn't have enough rights. |
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| Author: | gudrun [ Wed Jun 23, 2010 7:25 am ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Dock icon for a user's (AD) network home folder missing. |
I seem to have the same issue related to the network home folder. I have an AD - OD integration. I would like to have a single sign-on, for this I need to bind the mac client to AD using AFP. However when doing this, it doesn't even allow my client to log on just tells me an error occured. Deleting the home folder path from the users profile on AD seems to resolve this problem and let the user login. However if I bind the client using SMB, the home drive specified in the AD user profiles mounts fine but the users need to re-enter his/her password when mounting any afp drives after that. I currently on OS 10.6.3, in the process of updating to 10.6.4 and see if that might solve the problem. -g |
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| Author: | gordonf [ Wed Jul 28, 2010 8:14 am ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Dock icon for a user's (AD) network home folder missing. |
Is the icon missing completely, or is it showing up as a question mark labeled, "[username]'s network home"? If it's a question mark, I found a possible solution. It seems Windows doesn't care about the permissions in the root of whatever your home folder share is, but Snow Leopard does. SL needs to see the folders inside your root home folder share. For instance if it's: \\servername\home$ ...then MacOS needs at least "list folder contents" permissions. Grant this permission to the "Authenticated Users" special group. Don't grant it to "Everyone" because "Everyone" is everyone, even unauthenticated users. Where I've seen this problem they further break home folders down by department such as: \\servername\home$\marketing\%username% In this case, granting "list folder contents" to the beginning (home$) and then again to the departmental folder (marketing) was enough. I uncovered this when I realized the IT department could have their home folders appear in the dock but not any other department. IT has Create Folders access to the root of the share and beyond. MacOS did create a ".TemporaryItems" folder in the root of the share when we in IT would log on, and only IT owned the resulting folder. First I granted Modify to Authenticated Users to see if that helped, which it didn't, then I added the List Folder Contents to the root. When that worked, I took away .TemporaryItems and it still worked. Also, in general I don't set permissions on the network shares themselves, instead setting them on the file systems. I have all shares have "Everyone, Full Control," but the NTFS permissions underneath will dictate who really gets access to what. This simplifies administering networks shares considerably, while granting you finer control over permissions. |
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| Author: | BarCharts [ Wed Feb 02, 2011 1:12 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Dock icon for a user's (AD) network home folder missing. |
gordonf wrote: ...then MacOS needs at least "list folder contents" permissions. Grant this permission to the "Authenticated Users" special group. Don't grant it to "Everyone" because "Everyone" is everyone, even unauthenticated users. Where I've seen this problem they further break home folders down by department such as: \\servername\home$\marketing\%username% In this case, granting "list folder contents" to the beginning (home$) and then again to the departmental folder (marketing) was enough. Setting the NTFS folder security permission for Authenticated Users to the Allow "List Folder Contents" worked. So long as your UNC paths are set correctly. Thanks |
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| Author: | jeremyts [ Thu Jan 12, 2012 8:32 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Dock icon for a user's (AD) network home folder missing. |
Hi Guys, I know that this thread was from about a year ago, but has anyone tried this with 10.7.x? We've tested this with 10.7.2 and have found that the home folder cannot be more than one subfolder deep, no matter what the permissions are. ie. \\server\share$\homefolder works as expected \\server\share$\department\homefolder does not work and leaves the Dock icon as a question mark. We've even tested this with the user having Full Control all the way through the structure. We've also tested this by shorting the path and setting the home folder to: \\server\share$\1\1 This also takes care of case sensitivity of folders, which I've read can also be an issue. We're about to log a support call with Apple, so will report back on our findings. Cheers, Jeremy. |
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| Author: | MacWindows [ Mon Jan 30, 2012 2:01 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Dock icon for a user's (AD) network home folder missing. |
jeremyts wrote: We've tested this with 10.7.2 and have found that the home folder cannot be more than one subfolder deep, no matter what the permissions are. Is it possible that you are using ACLs and are propagating permissions in a way that is not evident? ACL propagation can have some unexpected consequences if you're using really granular settings. Just a thought. |
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| Author: | jeremyts [ Wed Feb 01, 2012 4:28 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Dock icon for a user's (AD) network home folder missing. |
With help from Apple Support we proved that it's a 10.7.x issue, but fixed with the 10.7.3 update, which is now publicly available: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5048 We're hoping to roll this out across the fleet ASAP. Cheers, Jeremy. |
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| Author: | bigail [ Sun May 27, 2012 8:42 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Dock icon for a user's (AD) network home folder missing. |
Allow this authorization to the "Authenticated Users" unique team. |
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