getent doesn't show all domain users

Brian Inglis Brian.Inglis@SystematicSw.ab.ca
Tue May 28 15:15:00 GMT 2019


On 2019-05-28 02:36, Maayan Apelboim wrote:
>> Systems may have tens to hundreds of local user accounts, and domains may
>> have hundreds to hundreds of thousands of user accounts.
>> The system probably caches only active users, and getent enumerates those 
>> if no /etc/passwd file exists, as it was designed to enumerate only a few
>> entries from local files.
>> As it is, getent will not even enumerate hosts from the local hosts files
>> or resolver.
>> It appears that mkpasswd enumerates all local and system accounts in the 
>> Security Accounts Manager file at $SYSTEMROOT/System32/config/SAM loaded 
>> into /proc/registry/HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE/SAM/, so it probably does the same
>> for domain accounts from Active Directory Domain Service.

> Ok, I understand why it won't display all users, but even when I query for 
> this specific user that exists in the domain - it returns nothing.
> It only works when I have /etc/passwd file in place (generated by mkpasswd 
> -d), but I was told in a previous thread that I should not use mkpasswd -d 
> anymore, and use getent instead.
> Is there something I need to do with getent to get access for all my domain
> users?
> Should I keep my previous passwd file generated by mkpasswd -d?

Does "getent passwd" display any active domain+accounts on your system?
If someone is logged on to that system from a domain+account?

Check your domain membership:

	$ echo $USERDOMAIN $USERDOMAIN_ROAMINGPROFILE

and any other DOMAIN environment variables you have, and explicitly specify a
known account in that domain before the userid using a plus sign "+" separator:

	$ getent passwd domain+account

similar to Trusted Installer:

	$ getent passwd nt\ service+trustedinstaller
	NT SERVICE+TrustedInstaller:*:328384:328384:U-NT
 	SERVICE\TrustedInstaller,S-1-5-80-...:/:/sbin/nologin

If the account doesn't display, check you are using the correct domain
membership using AD DS tools or e.g a PowerShell script.

-- 
Take care. Thanks, Brian Inglis, Calgary, Alberta, Canada

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