- Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance Administration Guide, Release OS8.8.x
- Appliance Services
- Configuring Services
- Identity Mapping Configuration
- Viewing a Mapping (BUI)
Viewing a Mapping (BUI)
Use the following procedure to view an existing mapping.
- From the Configuration menu, select Services, then Identity Mapping, then Show Mappings.
- Choose either Windows or UNIX for the platform from which the identity is mapped.
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Enter the Windows or UNIX identity information.
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If you selected Windows, type the Windows domain and name of the user.
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If you selected UNIX, choose either User or Group for the type, and type the entity name.
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- Click SHOW MAPPING.
The identity user or group properties are displayed. The mapping source and backend origin are also displayed:
Source:
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New mapping - The mapping was newly created and was neither retrieved from the cache nor predefined.
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Cached mapping - The mapping was retrieved from the cache, where mappings are stored for 10 minutes after they are requested.
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Hard coded mapping - The mapping is predefined and fixed on the appliance. These mappings were created for default UNIX and Windows identities.
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Algorithmic mapping - A non-ephemeral UNIX UID or GID could not be mapped by name, so it was mapped to an algorithmically generated SID.
Backend:
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AD Directory - This is a directory-based mapping that was created using annotations in the Active Directory.
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Native LDAP Directory - This is a directory-based mapping that was created using annotations in the LDAP directory.
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IDMU - The mapping was created using the Windows feature Identity Management for UNIX.
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Name rule - The mapping was created using a name rule.
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Ephemeral - Since there was no equivalent identity at the time the mapping was created, the system created a temporary one using an ephemeral UID or GID.
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Local SID - A non-ephemeral UNIX UID or GID could not be mapped by name, so it was mapped to an algorithmically generated local SID.
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Well-known mapping - The mapping uses a "well-known SID." These Windows SIDs identify generic users or generic groups. Their values remain constant across all operating systems.
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