Manual Installation of the UAM
ID: Q102728
|
The information in this article applies to:
-
Microsoft Windows NT Advanced Server, version 3.1
-
Microsoft Windows NT Server versions 3.51, 4.0
Customers that have installed the Services for Macintosh and have not
yet upgraded their partitions to NTFS will not have the Microsoft User
Authentication Module (UAM) volume. This article explains how to set
up that volume after a NTFS partition has been created.
The Microsoft UAM volume is formed with the following files:
To create this volume and put the correct files in it, do the
following:
- Make sure that you have an NTFS partition.
- If you are running Windows NT 3.x, run the following command from a
command prompt:
SETUP /i OEMNXPSM.INF /c UAMINSTALL
If you are running Windows NT 4.0, run the following command from a
command prompt:
SETUP /i OEMNSVSM.INF /c UAMINSTALL
The OEMNXPSM.INF and OEMNSVSM.INF files are the script information files
for the Services for Macintosh, and UAMINSTALL is the name of the
section that has the necessary commands to modify the registry in order
to add that volume.
- The Windows NT Setup screen appears and returns to the command
prompt if the above step was successful.
There are two things happening at this point. One is the creation of
the volume itself, and the other is the copying and creation of the
files. The SMFUAM.IFO and the SMFUAM.RSC are the two forks for the MS
UAM file, and the SFMUAM.TXT is the ReadMe.UAM file. These files get
stored within a subdirectory called AppleShare Folder, which is also
created by this script file.
- Because the script file modifies the registry, you will not see the
volume if you have the File Services for Macintosh started. If this is
the case, stop and start the File Services for Macintosh.
- Check the newly created volume in File Manager, Server Manager or
the MacFile icon in the Control Panel.
Additional query words:
sfm prodnt Authentication
Keywords : kbinterop ntmac NTSrv
Version : 3.1 4.0
Platform : winnt
Issue type :
|