Re: Switches for Cmd files
From: Matt Hickman (hemo_jr_at_space.com)
Date: 05/15/04
- Next message: Peter Wang: "window 2000"
- Previous message: Matt Hickman: "Re: RemoteAssistance XP"
- In reply to: Susie: "Switches for Cmd files"
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ]
Date: 15 May 2004 07:26:42 -0700
"Susie" <anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:<ca5f01c43900$0e665ff0$a001280a@phx.gbl>...
> Hi
> I am pushing an AT Scheduler job to use an administrator
> account through the login script.
> The script executes but the dialog box comes up that shows
> where it's pointing to along with the admin user and
> password.
> I don't want want the information in the dialog box
> displayed.
> does anyone know what the switch would be to hide all the
> information?
> I have used /q
> Thank you for your input!!
> Susie
If you use a startup script rather than a logon script,
it will run under the context of the local system account.
If you are accessing the network, you may need to put
the computer account into a group with permissions to the
share and files that need to be accessed. Or you could
loosen up permissions somehow to allow the local system
ID access.
--
Matt Hickman
Despite the crepehangers, romaniticists, and anti-intellectuals,
the world steadily grows better because the human mind, applying
itself to environment, makes it better.
Robert A. Heinlein (1907 - 1988)
_The Door Into Summer_ 1956
- Next message: Peter Wang: "window 2000"
- Previous message: Matt Hickman: "Re: RemoteAssistance XP"
- In reply to: Susie: "Switches for Cmd files"
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ]
Relevant Pages
|