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Local users and groups concepts

Contributors netapp-aherbin

You should know what local users and groups are, and some basic information about them, before determining whether to configure and use local users and groups in your environment.

  • Local user

    A user account with a unique security identifier (SID) that has visibility only on the storage virtual machine (SVM) on which it is created. Local user accounts have a set of attributes, including user name and SID. A local user account authenticates locally on the CIFS server using NTLM authentication.

    User accounts have several uses:

    • Used to grant User Rights Management privileges to a user.

    • Used to control share-level and file-level access to file and folder resources that the SVM owns.

  • Local group

    A group with a unique SID has visibility only on the SVM on which it is created. Groups contain a set of members. Members can be local users, domain users, domain groups, and domain machine accounts. Groups can be created, modified, or deleted.

    Groups have several uses:

    • Used to grant User Rights Management privileges to its members.

    • Used to control share-level and file-level access to file and folder resources that the SVM owns.

  • Local domain

    A domain that has local scope, which is bounded by the SVM. The local domain's name is the CIFS server name. Local users and groups are contained within the local domain.

  • Security identifier (SID)

    A SID is a variable-length numeric value that identifies Windows-style security principals. For example, a typical SID takes the following form: S-1-5-21-3139654847-1303905135-2517279418-123456.

  • NTLM authentication

    A Microsoft Windows security method used to authenticate users on a CIFS server.

  • Cluster replicated database (RDB)

    A replicated database with an instance on each node in a cluster. Local user and group objects are stored in the RDB.