I am not familiar with this kind of script. What kind of script is it?
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Browse All TopicsI am trying to use xcacls.vbs to set file permissions on the active directory database files:
These commands work ok:
cscript "c:\Program Files\Support Tools\xcacls.vbs" "%systemroot%\ntds\ntds.di
cscript "c:\Program Files\Support Tools\xcacls.vbs" "%systemroot%\ntds\temp.ed
cscript "c:\Program Files\Support Tools\xcacls.vbs" "%systemroot%\ntds\edb.chk
These commands don't work:
cscript "c:\Program Files\Support Tools\xcacls.vbs" "%systemroot%\ntds\edb*.lo
cscript "c:\Program Files\Support Tools\xcacls.vbs" "%systemroot%\ntds\res*.lo
The difference seems to be that wild cards are used in the file names.
Anybody know why?
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I just put your xcacls in a DOS batch. You can put the code in a text file with a .bat extension and just double click it. (Oh, and you need to modify the "\*.log" to "edb*.log". I was not testing on a DC, so I created a ntds folder in my Windows directory and copied a bunch of log files to it for testing. (Here I'll post a corrected script below)
Basically it's a "For" command which is a looping command. (more can be found by typing "for /?" in a command prompt. It says to run the command "dir /b /s %systemroot%\ntds\*.log" capture each result and assign it to variable %%a. Then the next line says run the command (which is your xcacls script) against each of the results. (Note the %%a in the second line will be replaced by the actual result from the "dir /s /b %systemroot%\ntds\*.log"
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by: Ralph_AveryPosted on 2009-10-31 at 18:22:40ID: 25712285
What about looping through them individually and applying the script like...
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