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[MS-ADTS]: Active Directory Technical Specification Intellectual Property Rights Notice for Open Specifications Documentation § Technical Documentation. Microsoft publishes Open Specifications documentation for protocols, file formats, languages, standards as well as overviews of the interaction among each of these technologies. § Copyrights. This documentation is covered by Microsoft copyrights. Regardless of any other terms that are contained in the terms of use for the Microsoft website that hosts this documentation, you may make copies of it in order to develop implementations of the technologies described in the Open Specifications and may distribute portions of it in your implementations using these technologies or your documentation as necessary to properly document the implementation. You may also distribute in your implementation, with or without modification, any schema, IDL's, or code samples that are included in the documentation. This permission also applies to any documents that are referenced in the Open Specifications. § No Trade Secrets. Microsoft does not claim any trade secret rights in this documentation. § Patents. Microsoft has patents that may cover your implementations of the technologies described in the Open Specifications. Neither this notice nor Microsoft's delivery of the documentation grants any licenses under those or any other Microsoft patents. However, a given Open Specification may be covered by Microsoft Open Specification Promise or the Community Promise . If you would prefer a written license, or if the technologies described in the Open Specifications are not covered by the Open Specifications Promise or Community Promise, as applicable, patent licenses are available by contacting [email protected] . § Trademarks. The names of companies and products contained in this documentation may be covered by trademarks or similar intellectual property rights. This notice does not grant any licenses under those rights. For a list of Microsoft trademarks, visit www.microsoft.com/trademarks . § Fictitious Names. The example companies, organizations, products, domain names, e- mail addresses, logos, people, places, and events depicted in this documentation are fictitious. No association with any real company, organization, product, domain name, email address, logo, person, place, or event is intended or should be inferred. Reservation of Rights. All other rights are reserved, and this notice does not grant any rights other than specifically described above, whether by implication, estoppel, or otherwise. Tools. The Open Specifications do not require the use of Microsoft programming tools or programming environments in order for you to develop an implementation. If you have access to Microsoft programming tools and environments you are free to take advantage 1 / 726 [MS-ADTS] - v20150630 Active Directory Technical Specification Copyright © 2015 Microsoft Corporation Release: June 30, 2015
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[MS-ADTS]:

Active Directory Technical Specification

Intellectual Property Rights Notice for Open Specifications Documentation

Technical Documentation. Microsoft publishes Open Specifications documentation for protocols, file formats, languages, standards as well as overviews of the interaction among each of these technologies.

Copyrights. This documentation is covered by Microsoft copyrights. Regardless of any other terms that are contained in the terms of use for the Microsoft website that hosts this documentation, you may make copies of it in order to develop implementations of the technologies described in the Open Specifications and may distribute portions of it in your implementations using these technologies or your documentation as necessary to properly document the implementation. You may also distribute in your implementation, with or without modification, any schema, IDL's, or code samples that are included in the documentation. This permission also applies to any documents that are referenced in the Open Specifications.

No Trade Secrets. Microsoft does not claim any trade secret rights in this documentation.

Patents. Microsoft has patents that may cover your implementations of the technologies described in the Open Specifications. Neither this notice nor Microsoft's delivery of the documentation grants any licenses under those or any other Microsoft patents. However, a given Open Specification may be covered by Microsoft Open Specification Promise or the Community Promise. If you would prefer a written license, or if the technologies described in the Open Specifications are not covered by the Open Specifications Promise or Community Promise, as applicable, patent licenses are available by contacting [email protected].

Trademarks. The names of companies and products contained in this documentation may be covered by trademarks or similar intellectual property rights. This notice does not grant any licenses under those rights. For a list of Microsoft trademarks, visit www.microsoft.com/trademarks.

Fictitious Names. The example companies, organizations, products, domain names, e-mail addresses, logos, people, places, and events depicted in this documentation are fictitious. No association with any real company, organization, product, domain name, email address, logo, person, place, or event is intended or should be inferred.

Reservation of Rights. All other rights are reserved, and this notice does not grant any rights other than specifically described above, whether by implication, estoppel, or otherwise.

Tools. The Open Specifications do not require the use of Microsoft programming tools or programming environments in order for you to develop an implementation. If you have access to Microsoft programming tools and environments you are free to take advantage of them. Certain Open Specifications are intended for use in conjunction with publicly available standard specifications and network programming art, and assumes that the reader either is familiar with the aforementioned material or has immediate access to it.

Revision Summary

Date

Revision History

Revision Class

Comments

2/22/2007

0.01

Version 0.01 release

6/1/2007

1.0

Major

Included non-native content.

7/3/2007

1.0.1

Editorial

Changed language and formatting in the technical content.

7/20/2007

1.0.2

Editorial

Changed language and formatting in the technical content.

8/10/2007

1.0.3

Editorial

Changed language and formatting in the technical content.

9/28/2007

2.0

Major

Adjusted bitfield diagrams for byte ordering; added bitflags.

10/23/2007

2.1

Minor

Clarified the meaning of the technical content.

11/30/2007

2.2

Minor

Clarified the meaning of the technical content.

1/25/2008

3.0

Major

Updated and revised the technical content.

3/14/2008

3.1

Minor

Deleted hexadecimal representations of little-endian bit flags.

5/16/2008

4.0

Major

Updated and revised the technical content.

6/20/2008

5.0

Major

Updated and revised the technical content.

7/25/2008

6.0

Major

Updated and revised the technical content.

8/29/2008

7.0

Major

Updated and revised the technical content.

10/24/2008

8.0

Major

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12/5/2008

9.0

Major

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1/16/2009

10.0

Major

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2/27/2009

11.0

Major

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4/10/2009

12.0

Major

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5/22/2009

13.0

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7/2/2009

14.0

Major

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8/14/2009

15.0

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9/25/2009

16.0

Major

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11/6/2009

17.0

Major

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12/18/2009

18.0

Major

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1/29/2010

19.0

Major

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3/12/2010

20.0

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4/23/2010

21.0

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6/4/2010

22.0

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7/16/2010

23.0

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8/27/2010

24.0

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10/8/2010

25.0

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11/19/2010

26.0

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1/7/2011

27.0

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2/11/2011

28.0

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3/25/2011

29.0

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5/6/2011

30.0

Major

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6/17/2011

30.1

Minor

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9/23/2011

31.0

Major

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12/16/2011

32.0

Major

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3/30/2012

33.0

Major

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7/12/2012

34.0

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10/25/2012

35.0

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1/31/2013

36.0

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8/8/2013

37.0

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11/14/2013

38.0

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2/13/2014

39.0

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5/15/2014

40.0

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6/30/2015

41.0

Major

Significantly changed the technical content.

Table of Contents

1Introduction21

1.1Glossary23

1.2References41

1.2.1Normative References41

1.2.2Informative References45

1.3Overview46

1.4Relationship to Other Protocols47

1.5Prerequisites/Preconditions48

1.6Applicability Statement48

1.7Versioning and Capability Negotiation48

1.8Vendor-Extensible Fields48

1.9Standards Assignments48

2Messages49

2.1Transport49

2.2Message Syntax49

2.2.1LCID-Locale Mapping Table49

2.2.2DS_REPL_NEIGHBORW_BLOB55

2.2.3DS_REPL_KCC_DSA_FAILUREW_BLOB58

2.2.4DS_REPL_OPW_BLOB59

2.2.5DS_REPL_QUEUE_STATISTICSW_BLOB61

2.2.6DS_REPL_CURSOR_BLOB62

2.2.7DS_REPL_ATTR_META_DATA_BLOB63

2.2.8DS_REPL_VALUE_META_DATA_BLOB64

2.2.9Search Flags66

2.2.10System Flags67

2.2.11schemaFlagsEx Flags68

2.2.12Group Type Flags68

2.2.13Group Security Flags69

2.2.14Security Privilege Flags69

2.2.15Domain RID Values70

2.2.16userAccountControl Bits71

2.2.17Optional Feature Values72

2.2.18Claims Wire Structures73

2.2.18.1CLAIM_ID74

2.2.18.2CLAIM_TYPE74

2.2.18.3CLAIMS_SOURCE_TYPE75

2.2.18.4CLAIMS_COMPRESSION_FORMAT75

2.2.18.5CLAIM_ENTRY75

2.2.18.6CLAIMS_ARRAY76

2.2.18.7CLAIMS_SET77

2.2.18.8CLAIMS_SET_METADATA77

2.2.18.9CLAIMS_BLOB78

2.2.19MSDS-MANAGEDPASSWORD_BLOB78

2.2.20Key Credential Link Structures79

2.2.20.1Key Credential Link Constants79

2.2.20.2KEYCREDENTIALLINK_BLOB80

2.2.20.3KEYCREDENTIALLINK_ENTRY81

2.2.20.4CUSTOM_KEY_INFORMATION81

2.2.20.5KEYCREDENTIALLINK_ENTRY Identifiers81

3Details83

3.1Common Details84

3.1.1Abstract Data Model84

3.1.1.1State Model84

3.1.1.1.1Scope84

3.1.1.1.2State Modeling Primitives and Notational Conventions85

3.1.1.1.3Basics, objectGUID, and Special Attribute Behavior86

3.1.1.1.4objectClass, RDN, DN, Constructed Attributes, Secret Attributes87

3.1.1.1.5NC, NC Replica90

3.1.1.1.5.1Tombstone Lifetime and Deleted-Object Lifetime92

3.1.1.1.6Attribute Syntaxes, Object References, Referential Integrity, and Well-Known Objects93

3.1.1.1.7Forest, Canonical Name96

3.1.1.1.8GC98

3.1.1.1.9DCs, usn Counters, and the Originating Update Stamp98

3.1.1.1.10GC Server105

3.1.1.1.11FSMO Roles105

3.1.1.1.12Cross-NC Object References106

3.1.1.1.13NC Replica Graph106

3.1.1.1.14Scheduled and Event-Driven Replication108

3.1.1.1.15Replication Latency and Tombstone Lifetime109

3.1.1.1.16Delayed Link Processing109

3.1.1.2Active Directory Schema110

3.1.1.2.1Schema NC110

3.1.1.2.2Syntaxes111

3.1.1.2.2.1Introduction111

3.1.1.2.2.2LDAP Representations111

3.1.1.2.2.2.1Object(DN-String)114

3.1.1.2.2.2.2Object(Access-Point)114

3.1.1.2.2.2.3Object(DN-Binary)114

3.1.1.2.2.2.4Object(OR-Name)114

3.1.1.2.2.2.5String(Case)115

3.1.1.2.2.2.6String(NT-Sec-Desc)115

3.1.1.2.2.2.7String(Sid)115

3.1.1.2.2.2.8String(Teletex)115

3.1.1.2.2.3Referential Integrity115

3.1.1.2.2.4Supported Comparison Operations115

3.1.1.2.2.4.1Bool Comparison Rule118

3.1.1.2.2.4.2Integer Comparison Rule118

3.1.1.2.2.4.3DN-String Comparison Rule118

3.1.1.2.2.4.4DN-Binary Comparison Rule118

3.1.1.2.2.4.5DN Comparison Rule119

3.1.1.2.2.4.6PresentationAddress Comparison Rule119

3.1.1.2.2.4.7Octet Comparison Rule119

3.1.1.2.2.4.8CaseString Comparison Rule119

3.1.1.2.2.4.9SecDesc Comparison Rule119

3.1.1.2.2.4.10OID Comparison Rule119

3.1.1.2.2.4.11Sid Comparison Rule119

3.1.1.2.2.4.12NoCaseString Comparison Rule120

3.1.1.2.2.4.13UnicodeString Comparison Rule120

3.1.1.2.2.4.14Time Comparison Rule120

3.1.1.2.3Attributes120

3.1.1.2.3.1Auto-Generated linkID123

3.1.1.2.3.2Auto-Generated mAPIID123

3.1.1.2.3.3Property Set124

3.1.1.2.3.4ldapDisplayName Generation125

3.1.1.2.3.5Flag fRODCFilteredAttribute in Attribute searchFlags125

3.1.1.2.4Classes126

3.1.1.2.4.1Class Categories126

3.1.1.2.4.2Inheritance126

3.1.1.2.4.3objectClass127

3.1.1.2.4.4Structure Rules127

3.1.1.2.4.5Content Rules127

3.1.1.2.4.6Auxiliary Class127

3.1.1.2.4.7RDN Attribute of a Class128

3.1.1.2.4.8Class classSchema128

3.1.1.2.5Schema Modifications130

3.1.1.2.5.1Consistency and Safety Checks130

3.1.1.2.5.1.1Consistency Checks130

3.1.1.2.5.1.2Safety Checks131

3.1.1.2.5.2Auto-Generated Attributes132

3.1.1.2.5.3Defunct132

3.1.1.2.5.3.1Forest Functional Level Less Than WIN2003133

3.1.1.2.5.3.2Forest Functional Level WIN2003 or Greater133

3.1.1.2.6ATTRTYP134

3.1.1.3LDAP135

3.1.1.3.1LDAP Conformance135

3.1.1.3.1.1Schema135

3.1.1.3.1.1.1subSchema135

3.1.1.3.1.1.2Syntaxes138

3.1.1.3.1.1.3Attributes138

3.1.1.3.1.1.4Classes145

3.1.1.3.1.1.5Auxiliary Classes148

3.1.1.3.1.2Object Naming149

3.1.1.3.1.2.1Naming Attributes149

3.1.1.3.1.2.2NC Naming150

3.1.1.3.1.2.3Multivalued and Multiple-Attribute RDNs150

3.1.1.3.1.2.4Alternative Forms of DNs150

3.1.1.3.1.2.5Alternative Form of SIDs152

3.1.1.3.1.3Search Operations152

3.1.1.3.1.3.1Search Filters152

3.1.1.3.1.3.2Selection Filters153

3.1.1.3.1.3.3Range Retrieval of Attribute Values153

3.1.1.3.1.3.4Ambiguous Name Resolution154

3.1.1.3.1.3.5Searches Using the objectCategory Attribute156

3.1.1.3.1.3.6Restrictions on rootDSE Searches156

3.1.1.3.1.4Referrals in LDAPv2 and LDAPv3156

3.1.1.3.1.5Password Modify Operations156

3.1.1.3.1.5.1unicodePwd157

3.1.1.3.1.5.2userPassword158

3.1.1.3.1.6Dynamic Objects159

3.1.1.3.1.7Modify DN Operations159

3.1.1.3.1.8Aliases159

3.1.1.3.1.9Error Message Strings159

3.1.1.3.1.10Ports159

3.1.1.3.1.11LDAP Search Over UDP160

3.1.1.3.1.12Unbind Operation160

3.1.1.3.2rootDSE Attributes160

3.1.1.3.2.1configurationNamingContext164

3.1.1.3.2.2currentTime164

3.1.1.3.2.3defaultNamingContext164

3.1.1.3.2.4dNSHostName164

3.1.1.3.2.5dsSchemaAttrCount164

3.1.1.3.2.6dsSchemaClassCount164

3.1.1.3.2.7dsSchemaPrefixCount164

3.1.1.3.2.8dsServiceName164

3.1.1.3.2.9highestCommittedUSN164

3.1.1.3.2.10isGlobalCatalogReady164

3.1.1.3.2.11isSynchronized164

3.1.1.3.2.12ldapServiceName164

3.1.1.3.2.13namingContexts165

3.1.1.3.2.14netlogon165

3.1.1.3.2.15pendingPropagations165

3.1.1.3.2.16rootDomainNamingContext165

3.1.1.3.2.17schemaNamingContext165

3.1.1.3.2.18serverName165

3.1.1.3.2.19subschemaSubentry165

3.1.1.3.2.20supportedCapabilities165

3.1.1.3.2.21supportedControl165

3.1.1.3.2.22supportedLDAPPolicies165

3.1.1.3.2.23supportedLDAPVersion165

3.1.1.3.2.24supportedSASLMechanisms166

3.1.1.3.2.25domainControllerFunctionality166

3.1.1.3.2.26domainFunctionality166

3.1.1.3.2.27forestFunctionality167

3.1.1.3.2.28msDS-ReplAllInboundNeighbors, msDS-ReplConnectionFailures, msDS-ReplLinkFailures, and msDS-ReplPendingOps167

3.1.1.3.2.29msDS-ReplAllOutboundNeighbors168

3.1.1.3.2.30msDS-ReplQueueStatistics168

3.1.1.3.2.31msDS-TopQuotaUsage170

3.1.1.3.2.32supportedConfigurableSettings170

3.1.1.3.2.33supportedExtension170

3.1.1.3.2.34validFSMOs170

3.1.1.3.2.35dsaVersionString171

3.1.1.3.2.36msDS-PortLDAP171

3.1.1.3.2.37msDS-PortSSL171

3.1.1.3.2.38msDS-PrincipalName172

3.1.1.3.2.39serviceAccountInfo172

3.1.1.3.2.40spnRegistrationResult172

3.1.1.3.2.41tokenGroups172

3.1.1.3.2.42usnAtRifm173

3.1.1.3.3rootDSE Modify Operations173

3.1.1.3.3.1becomeDomainMaster175

3.1.1.3.3.2becomeInfrastructureMaster175

3.1.1.3.3.3becomePdc175

3.1.1.3.3.4becomePdcWithCheckPoint176

3.1.1.3.3.5becomeRidMaster176

3.1.1.3.3.6becomeSchemaMaster176

3.1.1.3.3.7checkPhantoms177

3.1.1.3.3.8doGarbageCollection177

3.1.1.3.3.9dumpDatabase178

3.1.1.3.3.10fixupInheritance178

3.1.1.3.3.11invalidateRidPool179

3.1.1.3.3.12recalcHierarchy179

3.1.1.3.3.13schemaUpdateNow179

3.1.1.3.3.14schemaUpgradeInProgress180

3.1.1.3.3.15removeLingeringObject180

3.1.1.3.3.16doLinkCleanup181

3.1.1.3.3.17doOnlineDefrag181

3.1.1.3.3.18replicateSingleObject182

3.1.1.3.3.19updateCachedMemberships182

3.1.1.3.3.20doGarbageCollectionPhantomsNow183

3.1.1.3.3.21invalidateGCConnection183

3.1.1.3.3.22renewServerCertificate183

3.1.1.3.3.23rODCPurgeAccount184

3.1.1.3.3.24runSamUpgradeTasks184

3.1.1.3.3.25sqmRunOnce185

3.1.1.3.3.26runProtectAdminGroupsTask185

3.1.1.3.3.27disableOptionalFeature185

3.1.1.3.3.28enableOptionalFeature186

3.1.1.3.3.29dumpReferences187

3.1.1.3.3.30dumpLinks187

3.1.1.3.3.31schemaUpdateIndicesNow187

3.1.1.3.3.32null188

3.1.1.3.4LDAP Extensions188

3.1.1.3.4.1LDAP Extended Controls188

3.1.1.3.4.1.1LDAP_PAGED_RESULT_OID_STRING194

3.1.1.3.4.1.2LDAP_SERVER_CROSSDOM_MOVE_TARGET_OID194

3.1.1.3.4.1.3LDAP_SERVER_DIRSYNC_OID195

3.1.1.3.4.1.4LDAP_SERVER_DOMAIN_SCOPE_OID197

3.1.1.3.4.1.5LDAP_SERVER_EXTENDED_DN_OID197

3.1.1.3.4.1.6LDAP_SERVER_GET_STATS_OID198

3.1.1.3.4.1.7LDAP_SERVER_LAZY_COMMIT_OID201

3.1.1.3.4.1.8LDAP_SERVER_PERMISSIVE_MODIFY_OID201

3.1.1.3.4.1.9LDAP_SERVER_NOTIFICATION_OID201

3.1.1.3.4.1.10LDAP_SERVER_RANGE_OPTION_OID202

3.1.1.3.4.1.11LDAP_SERVER_SD_FLAGS_OID202

3.1.1.3.4.1.12LDAP_SERVER_SEARCH_OPTIONS_OID203

3.1.1.3.4.1.13LDAP_SERVER_SORT_OID and LDAP_SERVER_RESP_SORT_OID204

3.1.1.3.4.1.14LDAP_SERVER_SHOW_DELETED_OID210

3.1.1.3.4.1.15LDAP_SERVER_TREE_DELETE_OID210

3.1.1.3.4.1.16LDAP_SERVER_VERIFY_NAME_OID211

3.1.1.3.4.1.17LDAP_CONTROL_VLVREQUEST and LDAP_CONTROL_VLVRESPONSE211

3.1.1.3.4.1.18LDAP_SERVER_ASQ_OID213

3.1.1.3.4.1.19LDAP_SERVER_QUOTA_CONTROL_OID214

3.1.1.3.4.1.20LDAP_SERVER_SHUTDOWN_NOTIFY_OID214

3.1.1.3.4.1.21LDAP_SERVER_FORCE_UPDATE_OID215

3.1.1.3.4.1.22LDAP_SERVER_RANGE_RETRIEVAL_NOERR_OID215

3.1.1.3.4.1.23LDAP_SERVER_RODC_DCPROMO_OID215

3.1.1.3.4.1.24LDAP_SERVER_DN_INPUT_OID216

3.1.1.3.4.1.25LDAP_SERVER_SHOW_DEACTIVATED_LINK_OID216

3.1.1.3.4.1.26LDAP_SERVER_SHOW_RECYCLED_OID217

3.1.1.3.4.1.27LDAP_SERVER_POLICY_HINTS_OID217

3.1.1.3.4.1.28LDAP_SERVER_POLICY_HINTS_DEPRECATED_OID217

3.1.1.3.4.1.29LDAP_SERVER_DIRSYNC_EX_OID218

3.1.1.3.4.1.30LDAP_SERVER_UPDATE_STATS_OID218

3.1.1.3.4.1.30.1Highest USN Allocated218

3.1.1.3.4.1.30.2Invocation ID Of Server219

3.1.1.3.4.1.31LDAP_SERVER_TREE_DELETE_EX_OID219

3.1.1.3.4.1.32LDAP_SERVER_SEARCH_HINTS_OID219

3.1.1.3.4.1.32.1Require Sort Index220

3.1.1.3.4.1.32.2Soft Size Limit220

3.1.1.3.4.1.33LDAP_SERVER_EXPECTED_ENTRY_COUNT_OID220

3.1.1.3.4.1.34LDAP_SERVER_SET_OWNER_OID221

3.1.1.3.4.1.35LDAP_SERVER_BYPASS_QUOTA_OID221

3.1.1.3.4.1.36LDAP_SERVER_LINK_TTL_OID221

3.1.1.3.4.2LDAP Extended Operations221

3.1.1.3.4.2.1LDAP_SERVER_FAST_BIND_OID222

3.1.1.3.4.2.2LDAP_SERVER_START_TLS_OID223

3.1.1.3.4.2.3LDAP_TTL_REFRESH_OID223

3.1.1.3.4.2.4LDAP_SERVER_WHO_AM_I_OID223

3.1.1.3.4.2.5LDAP_SERVER_BATCH_REQUEST_OID224

3.1.1.3.4.3LDAP Capabilities225

3.1.1.3.4.3.1LDAP_CAP_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_OID227

3.1.1.3.4.3.2LDAP_CAP_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_LDAP_INTEG_OID227

3.1.1.3.4.3.3LDAP_CAP_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_V51_OID227

3.1.1.3.4.3.4LDAP_CAP_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_ADAM_DIGEST_OID227

3.1.1.3.4.3.5LDAP_CAP_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_ADAM_OID227

3.1.1.3.4.3.6LDAP_CAP_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_PARTIAL_SECRETS_OID227

3.1.1.3.4.3.7LDAP_CAP_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_V60_OID228

3.1.1.3.4.3.8LDAP_CAP_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_V61_R2_OID228

3.1.1.3.4.3.9LDAP_CAP_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_W8_OID228

3.1.1.3.4.4LDAP Matching Rules (extensibleMatch)228

3.1.1.3.4.4.1LDAP_MATCHING_RULE_BIT_AND228

3.1.1.3.4.4.2LDAP_MATCHING_RULE_BIT_OR228

3.1.1.3.4.4.3LDAP_MATCHING_RULE_TRANSITIVE_EVAL228

3.1.1.3.4.4.4LDAP_MATCHING_RULE_DN_WITH_DATA229

3.1.1.3.4.5LDAP SASL Mechanisms230

3.1.1.3.4.5.1GSSAPI230

3.1.1.3.4.5.2GSS-SPNEGO230

3.1.1.3.4.5.3EXTERNAL230

3.1.1.3.4.5.4DIGEST-MD5230

3.1.1.3.4.6LDAP Policies231

3.1.1.3.4.7LDAP Configurable Settings233

3.1.1.3.4.8LDAP IP-Deny List236

3.1.1.4Reads236

3.1.1.4.1Introduction237

3.1.1.4.2Definitions237

3.1.1.4.3Access Checks238

3.1.1.4.4Extended Access Checks238

3.1.1.4.5Constructed Attributes240

3.1.1.4.5.1subSchemaSubEntry240

3.1.1.4.5.2canonicalName240

3.1.1.4.5.3allowedChildClasses240

3.1.1.4.5.4sDRightsEffective241

3.1.1.4.5.5allowedChildClassesEffective241

3.1.1.4.5.6allowedAttributes242

3.1.1.4.5.7allowedAttributesEffective242

3.1.1.4.5.8fromEntry242

3.1.1.4.5.9createTimeStamp242

3.1.1.4.5.10modifyTimeStamp242

3.1.1.4.5.11primaryGroupToken242

3.1.1.4.5.12entryTTL243

3.1.1.4.5.13msDS-NCReplInboundNeighbors, msDS-NCReplCursors, msDS-ReplAttributeMetaData, msDS-ReplValueMetaData243

3.1.1.4.5.14msDS-NCReplOutboundNeighbors244

3.1.1.4.5.15msDS-Approx-Immed-Subordinates244

3.1.1.4.5.16msDS-KeyVersionNumber244

3.1.1.4.5.17msDS-User-Account-Control-Computed244

3.1.1.4.5.18msDS-Auxiliary-Classes245

3.1.1.4.5.19tokenGroups, tokenGroupsNoGCAcceptable245

3.1.1.4.5.20tokenGroupsGlobalAndUniversal246

3.1.1.4.5.21possibleInferiors246

3.1.1.4.5.22msDS-QuotaEffective247

3.1.1.4.5.23msDS-QuotaUsed247

3.1.1.4.5.24msDS-TopQuotaUsage248

3.1.1.4.5.25ms-DS-UserAccountAutoLocked248

3.1.1.4.5.26msDS-UserPasswordExpired249

3.1.1.4.5.27msDS-PrincipalName249

3.1.1.4.5.28parentGUID249

3.1.1.4.5.29msDS-SiteName250

3.1.1.4.5.30msDS-isRODC250

3.1.1.4.5.31msDS-isGC250

3.1.1.4.5.32msDS-isUserCachableAtRodc251

3.1.1.4.5.33msDS-UserPasswordExpiryTimeComputed251

3.1.1.4.5.34msDS-RevealedList252

3.1.1.4.5.35msDS-RevealedListBL252

3.1.1.4.5.36msDS-ResultantPSO252

3.1.1.4.5.37msDS-LocalEffectiveDeletionTime253

3.1.1.4.5.38msDS-LocalEffectiveRecycleTime254

3.1.1.4.5.39msDS-ManagedPassword254

3.1.1.4.6Referrals260

3.1.1.4.7Continuations262

3.1.1.4.8Effects of Defunct Attributes and Classes262

3.1.1.5Updates263

3.1.1.5.1General263

3.1.1.5.1.1Enforce Schema Constraints263

3.1.1.5.1.2Naming Constraints264

3.1.1.5.1.3Uniqueness Constraints264

3.1.1.5.1.4Transactional Semantics264

3.1.1.5.1.5Stamp Construction265

3.1.1.5.1.6Replication Notification265

3.1.1.5.1.7Urgent Replication266

3.1.1.5.1.8Updates Performed Only on FSMOs266

3.1.1.5.1.9Allow Updates Only When They Are Enabled269

3.1.1.5.1.10Originating Updates Attempted on an RODC269

3.1.1.5.1.11Constraints and Processing Specifics Defined Elsewhere269

3.1.1.5.2Add Operation269

3.1.1.5.2.1Security Considerations270

3.1.1.5.2.2Constraints270

3.1.1.5.2.3Special Classes and Attributes275

3.1.1.5.2.4Processing Specifics276

3.1.1.5.2.5Quota Calculation279

3.1.1.5.2.6NC Requirements279

3.1.1.5.2.7crossRef Requirements280

3.1.1.5.2.8NC-Add Operation280

3.1.1.5.2.8.1Constraints281

3.1.1.5.2.8.2Security Considerations281

3.1.1.5.2.8.3Processing Specifics281

3.1.1.5.3Modify Operation282

3.1.1.5.3.1Security Considerations282

3.1.1.5.3.1.1Validated Writes283

3.1.1.5.3.1.1.1Member283

3.1.1.5.3.1.1.2dNSHostName283

3.1.1.5.3.1.1.3msDS-AdditionalDnsHostName283

3.1.1.5.3.1.1.4servicePrincipalName284

3.1.1.5.3.1.1.5msDS-Behavior-Version284

3.1.1.5.3.1.1.6msDS-KeyCredentialLink284

3.1.1.5.3.1.2FSMO Changes285

3.1.1.5.3.2Constraints285

3.1.1.5.3.3Processing Specifics290

3.1.1.5.3.4BehaviorVersion Updates291

3.1.1.5.3.5ObjectClass Updates293

3.1.1.5.3.6wellKnownObjects Updates293

3.1.1.5.3.7Undelete Operation294

3.1.1.5.3.7.1Undelete Security Considerations295

3.1.1.5.3.7.2Undelete Constraints295

3.1.1.5.3.7.3Undelete Processing Specifics296

3.1.1.5.4Modify DN296

3.1.1.5.4.1Intra Domain Modify DN297

3.1.1.5.4.1.1Security Considerations297

3.1.1.5.4.1.2Constraints298

3.1.1.5.4.1.3Processing Specifics299

3.1.1.5.4.2Cross Domain Move299

3.1.1.5.4.2.1Security Considerations299

3.1.1.5.4.2.2Constraints300

3.1.1.5.4.2.3Processing Specifics302

3.1.1.5.5Delete Operation304

3.1.1.5.5.1Resultant Object Requirements306

3.1.1.5.5.1.1Tombstone Requirements306

3.1.1.5.5.1.2Deleted-Object Requirements307

3.1.1.5.5.1.3Recycled-Object Requirements308

3.1.1.5.5.2dynamicObject Requirements309

3.1.1.5.5.3Protected Objects309

3.1.1.5.5.4Security Considerations309

3.1.1.5.5.5Constraints310

3.1.1.5.5.6Processing Specifics311

3.1.1.5.5.6.1Transformation into a Tombstone311

3.1.1.5.5.6.2Transformation into a Deleted-Object312

3.1.1.5.5.6.3Transformation into a Recycled-Object312

3.1.1.5.5.7Tree-delete Operation313

3.1.1.5.5.7.1Tree-delete Security Considerations313

3.1.1.5.5.7.2Tree-delete Constraints313

3.1.1.5.5.7.3Tree-delete Processing Specifics313

3.1.1.6Background Tasks314

3.1.1.6.1AdminSDHolder314

3.1.1.6.1.1Authoritative Security Descriptor314

3.1.1.6.1.2Protected Objects314

3.1.1.6.1.3Protection Operation315

3.1.1.6.1.4Configurable State315

3.1.1.6.2Reference Update316

3.1.1.6.3Security Descriptor Propagator Update317

3.1.1.7NT4 Replication Support318

3.1.1.7.1Format of nt4ReplicationState and pdcChangeLog318

3.1.1.7.1.1nt4ReplicationState318

3.1.1.7.1.2pdcChangeLog319

3.1.1.7.2State Changes319

3.1.1.7.2.1Initialization319

3.1.1.7.2.2Directory Updates319

3.1.1.7.2.3Acquiring the PDC Role323

3.1.1.7.2.4Resetting the pdcChangeLog323

3.1.1.7.3Format of the Referent of pmsgOut.V1.pLog323

3.1.1.8AD LDS Special Objects324

3.1.1.8.1AD LDS Users324

3.1.1.8.2Bind Proxies325

3.1.1.9Optional Features325

3.1.1.9.1Recycle Bin Optional Feature327

3.1.1.9.2Privileged Access Management Optional Feature328

3.1.1.10Revisions328

3.1.1.10.1Forest Revision328

3.1.1.10.2RODC Revision329

3.1.1.10.3Domain Revision330

3.1.1.11Claims331

3.1.1.11.1Informative Overview331

3.1.1.11.1.1Claim331

3.1.1.11.1.2Claims Dictionary331

3.1.1.11.1.3Claim Source331

3.1.1.11.1.4Claims Issuance331

3.1.1.11.1.5Claims Transformation Rules331

3.1.1.11.1.6Claims Transformation332

3.1.1.11.2Claims Procedures332

3.1.1.11.2.1GetClaimsForPrincipal332

3.1.1.11.2.2GetADSourcedClaims333

3.1.1.11.2.3GetCertificateSourcedClaims334

3.1.1.11.2.4GetConstructedClaims335

3.1.1.11.2.5EncodeClaimsSet336

3.1.1.11.2.6FillClaimsSetMetadata337

3.1.1.11.2.7RunCompressionAlgorithm338

3.1.1.11.2.8NdrEncode339

3.1.1.11.2.9NdrDecode339

3.1.1.11.2.10DecodeClaimsSet339

3.1.1.11.2.11TransformClaimsOnTrustTraversal340

3.1.1.11.2.12GetClaimsTransformationRulesXml342

3.1.1.11.2.13GetTransformationRulesText343

3.1.1.11.2.14GetCTAClaims343

3.1.1.11.2.15CollapseMultiValuedClaims344

3.1.1.11.2.16FilterAndPackOutputClaims345

3.1.1.11.2.17ValidateClaimDefinition346

3.1.1.11.2.18GetAuthSiloClaim347

3.1.1.12NC Rename348

3.1.1.12.1Abstract Data Types349

3.1.1.12.1.1FlatName349

3.1.1.12.1.2SPNValue349

3.1.1.12.1.3ServerDescription349

3.1.1.12.1.4InterdomainTrustAccountDescription350

3.1.1.12.1.5TrustedDomainObjectDescription350

3.1.1.12.1.6NCDescription351

3.1.1.12.1.7DomainDescriptionElements351

3.1.1.12.1.8DomainDescription352

3.1.1.12.1.9NewTrustParentElements352

3.1.1.12.1.10DomainWithNewTrustParentDescription353

3.1.1.12.1.11NCRenameDescription353

3.1.1.12.2Encoding/Decoding Rules354

3.1.1.12.2.1EBNF-M354

3.1.1.12.2.1.1Tuples as Parameters to Production Rules354

3.1.1.12.2.1.2Parameter Fields as Terminal Values355

3.1.1.12.2.1.3Formatting of Non-String Parameter Fields as Terminal Values355

3.1.1.12.2.1.4Parameter Fields as Iterators355

3.1.1.12.2.1.5Reversed Production Rules356

3.1.1.12.2.2CodedNCRenameDescription358

3.1.1.12.2.2.1Expression358

3.1.1.12.2.2.2Common358

3.1.1.12.2.2.3Tests359

3.1.1.12.2.2.3.1TestConfigurationNC360

3.1.1.12.2.2.3.2TestReplicationEpoch360

3.1.1.12.2.2.3.3TestAppNCs360

3.1.1.12.2.2.3.4TestDomains361

3.1.1.12.2.2.3.4.1TestCrossRef361

3.1.1.12.2.2.3.4.2TestServersInstantiated362

3.1.1.12.2.2.3.4.3TestTrustCount363

3.1.1.12.2.2.3.4.4TestTrustedDomainObjectDescriptions363

3.1.1.12.2.2.3.4.5TestInterdomainTrustAccountDescriptions364

3.1.1.12.2.2.3.4.6TestServerDescriptions365

3.1.1.12.2.2.3.5TestPartitionCounts366

3.1.1.12.2.2.4Flatten367

3.1.1.12.2.2.5Rebuild367

3.1.1.12.2.2.6Trusts368

3.1.1.12.2.2.6.1DomainTrustSpecifications369

3.1.1.12.2.2.6.2DomainTrustAccounts370

3.1.1.12.2.2.7CrossRefs372

3.1.1.12.2.2.7.1ConfigurationCrossRef372

3.1.1.12.2.2.7.2SchemaCrossRef372

3.1.1.12.2.2.7.3AppNCsCrossRefs373

3.1.1.12.2.2.7.4NCRenameDescriptionRootCrossRef373

3.1.1.12.2.2.7.5TrustTreeNonRootDomainCrossRefs375

3.1.1.12.2.2.7.6TrustTreeRootDomainCrossRefs376

3.1.1.12.2.2.8ReplicationEpoch378

3.1.1.12.3Decode Operation379

3.1.1.12.4Verify Conditions379

3.1.1.12.5Process Changes380

3.1.1.13Authentication Information Retrieval382

3.1.1.13.1Informative Overview382

3.1.1.13.2ExpandMemberships383

3.1.1.13.3GetUserLogonInfo383

3.1.1.13.4GetResourceDomainInfo384

3.1.1.13.5ExpandShadowPrincipal385

4Protocol Examples387

5Security388

5.1LDAP Security388

5.1.1Authentication388

5.1.1.1Supported Authentication Methods388

5.1.1.1.1Simple Authentication389

5.1.1.1.2SASL Authentication390

5.1.1.1.3Sicily Authentication391

5.1.1.2Using SSL/TLS393

5.1.1.3Using Fast Bind393

5.1.1.4Mutual Authentication394

5.1.1.5Supported Types of Security Principals394

5.1.2Message Security396

5.1.2.1Using SASL396

5.1.2.2Using SSL/TLS396

5.1.3Authorization396

5.1.3.1Background397

5.1.3.2Access Rights397

5.1.3.2.1Control Access Rights399

5.1.3.2.2Validated Writes403

5.1.3.3Checking Access405

5.1.3.3.1Null vs. Empty DACLs405

5.1.3.3.2Checking Simple Access405

5.1.3.3.3Checking Object-Specific Access406

5.1.3.3.4Checking Control Access Right-Based Access408

5.1.3.3.5Checking Validated Write-Based Access409

5.1.3.3.6Checking Object Visibility409

5.1.3.4AD LDS Security Context Construction410

6Additional Information412

6.1Special Objects and Forest Requirements412

6.1.1Special Objects412

6.1.1.1Naming Contexts412

6.1.1.1.1Any NC Root412

6.1.1.1.2Config NC Root413

6.1.1.1.3Schema NC Root414

6.1.1.1.4Domain NC Root414

6.1.1.1.5Application NC Root415

6.1.1.2Configuration Objects416

6.1.1.2.1Cross-Ref-Container Container417

6.1.1.2.1.1Cross-Ref Objects417

6.1.1.2.1.1.1Foreign crossRef Objects418

6.1.1.2.1.1.2Configuration crossRef Object418

6.1.1.2.1.1.3Schema crossRef Object418

6.1.1.2.1.1.4Domain crossRef Object418

6.1.1.2.1.1.5Application NC crossRef Object419

6.1.1.2.2Sites Container419

6.1.1.2.2.1Site Object419

6.1.1.2.2.1.1NTDS Site Settings Object420

6.1.1.2.2.1.2Servers Container421

6.1.1.2.2.1.2.1Server Object421

6.1.1.2.2.1.2.1.1nTDSDSA Object421

6.1.1.2.2.1.2.1.2Connection Object423

6.1.1.2.2.1.2.1.3RODC NTFRS Connection Object425

6.1.1.2.2.2Subnets Container426

6.1.1.2.2.2.1Subnet Object426

6.1.1.2.2.3Inter-Site Transports Container427

6.1.1.2.2.3.1IP Transport Container427

6.1.1.2.2.3.2SMTP Transport Container428

6.1.1.2.2.3.3Site Link Object428

6.1.1.2.2.3.4Site Link Bridge Object429

6.1.1.2.3Display Specifiers Container429

6.1.1.2.3.1Display Specifier Object429

6.1.1.2.4Services431

6.1.1.2.4.1Windows NT431

6.1.1.2.4.1.1Directory Service431

6.1.1.2.4.1.2dSHeuristics432

6.1.1.2.4.1.3Optional Features Container437

6.1.1.2.4.1.3.1Recycle Bin Feature Object437

6.1.1.2.4.1.3.2Privileged Access Management Feature Object437

6.1.1.2.4.1.4Query-Policies438

6.1.1.2.4.1.4.1Default Query Policy438

6.1.1.2.4.1.5SCP Publication Service Object438

6.1.1.2.5Physical Locations438

6.1.1.2.6WellKnown Security Principals439

6.1.1.2.6.1Anonymous Logon439

6.1.1.2.6.2Authenticated Users439

6.1.1.2.6.3Batch439

6.1.1.2.6.4Console Logon439

6.1.1.2.6.5Creator Group439

6.1.1.2.6.6Creator Owner440

6.1.1.2.6.7Dialup440

6.1.1.2.6.8Digest Authentication440

6.1.1.2.6.9Enterprise Domain Controllers440

6.1.1.2.6.10Everyone440

6.1.1.2.6.11Interactive440

6.1.1.2.6.12IUSR440

6.1.1.2.6.13Local Service440

6.1.1.2.6.14Network441

6.1.1.2.6.15Network Service441

6.1.1.2.6.16NTLM Authentication441

6.1.1.2.6.17Other Organization441

6.1.1.2.6.18Owner Rights441

6.1.1.2.6.19Proxy441

6.1.1.2.6.20Remote Interactive Logon441

6.1.1.2.6.21Restricted442

6.1.1.2.6.22SChannel Authentication442

6.1.1.2.6.23Self442

6.1.1.2.6.24Service442

6.1.1.2.6.25System442

6.1.1.2.6.26Terminal Server User442

6.1.1.2.6.27This Organization442

6.1.1.2.7Extended Rights442

6.1.1.2.7.1controlAccessRight objects443

6.1.1.2.7.2Change-Rid-Master443

6.1.1.2.7.3Do-Garbage-Collection443

6.1.1.2.7.4Recalculate-Hierarchy443

6.1.1.2.7.5Allocate-Rids443

6.1.1.2.7.6Change-PDC444

6.1.1.2.7.7Add-GUID444

6.1.1.2.7.8Change-Domain-Master444

6.1.1.2.7.9Public-Information444

6.1.1.2.7.10msmq-Receive-Dead-Letter444

6.1.1.2.7.11msmq-Peek-Dead-Letter445

6.1.1.2.7.12msmq-Receive-computer-Journal445

6.1.1.2.7.13msmq-Peek-computer-Journal445

6.1.1.2.7.14msmq-Receive445

6.1.1.2.7.15msmq-Peek445

6.1.1.2.7.16msmq-Send445

6.1.1.2.7.17msmq-Receive-journal446

6.1.1.2.7.18msmq-Open-Connector446

6.1.1.2.7.19Apply-Group-Policy446

6.1.1.2.7.20RAS-Information446

6.1.1.2.7.21DS-Install-Replica446

6.1.1.2.7.22Change-Infrastructure-Master446

6.1.1.2.7.23Update-Schema-Cache447

6.1.1.2.7.24Recalculate-Security-Inheritance447

6.1.1.2.7.25DS-Check-Stale-Phantoms447

6.1.1.2.7.26Certificate-Enrollment447

6.1.1.2.7.27Self-Membership447

6.1.1.2.7.28Validated-DNS-Host-Name447

6.1.1.2.7.29Validated-SPN448

6.1.1.2.7.30Generate-RSoP-Planning448

6.1.1.2.7.31Refresh-Group-Cache448

6.1.1.2.7.32Reload-SSL-Certificate448

6.1.1.2.7.33SAM-Enumerate-Entire-Domain448

6.1.1.2.7.34Generate-RSoP-Logging449

6.1.1.2.7.35Domain-Other-Parameters449

6.1.1.2.7.36DNS-Host-Name-Attributes449

6.1.1.2.7.37Create-Inbound-Forest-Trust449

6.1.1.2.7.38DS-Replication-Get-Changes-All449

6.1.1.2.7.39Migrate-SID-History450

6.1.1.2.7.40Reanimate-Tombstones450

6.1.1.2.7.41Allowed-To-Authenticate450

6.1.1.2.7.42DS-Execute-Intentions-Script450

6.1.1.2.7.43DS-Replication-Monitor-Topology451

6.1.1.2.7.44Update-Password-Not-Required-Bit451

6.1.1.2.7.45Unexpire-Password451

6.1.1.2.7.46Enable-Per-User-Reversibly-Encrypted-Password451

6.1.1.2.7.47DS-Query-Self-Quota451

6.1.1.2.7.48Private-Information451

6.1.1.2.7.49MS-TS-GatewayAccess452

6.1.1.2.7.50Terminal-Server-License-Server452

6.1.1.2.7.51Domain-Administer-Server452

6.1.1.2.7.52User-Change-Password452

6.1.1.2.7.53User-Force-Change-Password453

6.1.1.2.7.54Send-As453

6.1.1.2.7.55Receive-As453

6.1.1.2.7.56Send-To453

6.1.1.2.7.57Domain-Password454

6.1.1.2.7.58General-Information454

6.1.1.2.7.59User-Account-Restrictions454

6.1.1.2.7.60User-Logon454

6.1.1.2.7.61Membership455

6.1.1.2.7.62Open-Address-Book455

6.1.1.2.7.63Personal-Information455

6.1.1.2.7.64Email-Information455

6.1.1.2.7.65Web-Information456

6.1.1.2.7.66DS-Replication-Get-Changes456

6.1.1.2.7.67DS-Replication-Synchronize456

6.1.1.2.7.68DS-Replication-Manage-Topology456

6.1.1.2.7.69Change-Schema-Master457

6.1.1.2.7.70DS-Replication-Get-Changes-In-Filtered-Set457

6.1.1.2.7.71Run-Protect-Admin-Groups-Task457

6.1.1.2.7.72Manage-Optional-Features457

6.1.1.2.7.73Read-Only-Replication-Secret-Synchronization457

6.1.1.2.7.74Validated-MS-DS-Additional-DNS-Host-Name458

6.1.1.2.7.75Validated-MS-DS-Behavior-Version458

6.1.1.2.7.76DS-Clone-Domain-Controller458

6.1.1.2.7.77Certificate-AutoEnrollment458

6.1.1.2.7.78DS-Read-Partition-Secrets458

6.1.1.2.7.79DS-Write-Partition-Secrets459

6.1.1.2.7.80DS-Set-Owner459

6.1.1.2.7.81DS-Bypass-Quota459

6.1.1.2.7.82DS-Validated-Write-Computer459

6.1.1.2.8Forest Updates Container459

6.1.1.2.8.1Operations Container460

6.1.1.2.8.2Windows2003Update Container460

6.1.1.2.8.3ActiveDirectoryUpdate Container460

6.1.1.2.8.4ActiveDirectoryRodcUpdate Container461

6.1.1.3Critical Domain Objects461

6.1.1.3.1Domain Controller Object461

6.1.1.3.2Read-Only Domain Controller Object462

6.1.1.4Well-Known Objects463

6.1.1.4.1Lost and Found Container466

6.1.1.4.2Deleted Objects Container466

6.1.1.4.3NTDS Quotas Container466

6.1.1.4.4Infrastructure Object466

6.1.1.4.5Domain Controllers OU467

6.1.1.4.6Users Container467

6.1.1.4.7Computers Container467

6.1.1.4.8Program Data Container467

6.1.1.4.9Managed Service Accounts Container468

6.1.1.4.10Foreign Security Principals Container468

6.1.1.4.11System Container468

6.1.1.4.11.1Password Settings Container468

6.1.1.4.12Builtin Container469

6.1.1.4.12.1Account Operators Group Object469

6.1.1.4.12.2Administrators Group Object469

6.1.1.4.12.3Backup Operators Group Object469

6.1.1.4.12.4Certificate Service DCOM Access Group Object470

6.1.1.4.12.5Cryptographic Operators Group Object470

6.1.1.4.12.6Distributed COM Users Group Object470

6.1.1.4.12.7Event Log Readers Group Object470

6.1.1.4.12.8Guests Group Object470

6.1.1.4.12.9IIS_IUSRS Group Object470

6.1.1.4.12.10Incoming Forest Trust Builders Group Object470

6.1.1.4.12.11Network Configuration Operators Group Object470

6.1.1.4.12.12Performance Log Users Group Object470

6.1.1.4.12.13Performance Monitor Users Group Object471

6.1.1.4.12.14Pre-Windows 2000 Compatible Access Group Object471

6.1.1.4.12.15Print Operators Group Object471

6.1.1.4.12.16Remote Desktop Users Group Object471

6.1.1.4.12.17Replicator Group Object471

6.1.1.4.12.18Server Operators Group Object471

6.1.1.4.12.19Terminal Server License Servers Group Object471

6.1.1.4.12.20Users Group Object471

6.1.1.4.12.21Windows Authorization Access Group Group Object472

6.1.1.4.13Roles Container472

6.1.1.4.13.1Administrators Group Object472

6.1.1.4.13.2Readers Group Object472

6.1.1.4.13.3Users Group Object472

6.1.1.4.13.4Instances Group Object473

6.1.1.5Other System Objects473

6.1.1.5.1AdminSDHolder Object473

6.1.1.5.2Default Domain Policy Container474

6.1.1.5.3Sam Server Object474

6.1.1.5.4Domain Updates Container474

6.1.1.5.4.1Operations Container475

6.1.1.5.4.2Windows2003Update Container475

6.1.1.5.4.3ActiveDirectoryUpdate Container475

6.1.1.6Well-Known Domain-Relative Security Principals476

6.1.1.6.1Administrator476

6.1.1.6.2Guest476

6.1.1.6.3Key Distribution Center Service Account476

6.1.1.6.4Cert Publishers476

6.1.1.6.5Domain Administrators477

6.1.1.6.6Domain Computers477

6.1.1.6.7Domain Controllers477

6.1.1.6.8Domain Guests477

6.1.1.6.9Domain Users477

6.1.1.6.10Enterprise Administrators477

6.1.1.6.11Group Policy Creator Owners478

6.1.1.6.12RAS and IAS Servers478

6.1.1.6.13Read-Only Domain Controllers478

6.1.1.6.14Enterprise Read-Only Domain Controllers478

6.1.1.6.15Schema Admins478

6.1.1.6.16Allowed RODC Password Replication Group479

6.1.1.6.17Denied RODC Password Replication Group479

6.1.2Forest Requirements479

6.1.2.1DC Existence479

6.1.2.2NC Existence480

6.1.2.3Hosting Requirements480

6.1.2.3.1DC and Application NC Replica480

6.1.2.3.2DC and Regular Domain NC Replica480

6.1.2.3.3DC and Schema/Config NC Replicas481

6.1.2.3.4DC and Partial Replica NCs Replicas481

6.1.3Security Descriptor Requirements481

6.1.3.1ACE Ordering Rules483

6.1.3.2SD Flags Control483

6.1.3.3Processing Specifics484

6.1.3.4Security Considerations485

6.1.3.5SD Defaulting Rules486

6.1.3.6Owner and Group Defaulting Rules486

6.1.3.7Default Administrators Group486

6.1.4Special Attributes487

6.1.4.1ntMixedDomain487

6.1.4.2msDS-Behavior-Version: DC Functional Level488

6.1.4.3msDS-Behavior-Version: Domain NC Functional Level488

6.1.4.4msDS-Behavior-Version: Forest Functional Level490

6.1.4.5Replication Schedule Structures491

6.1.4.5.1SCHEDULE_HEADER Structure491

6.1.4.5.2SCHEDULE Structure491

6.1.4.5.3REPS_FROM492

6.1.4.5.4REPS_TO492

6.1.4.5.5MTX_ADDR Structure492

6.1.4.5.6REPLTIMES Structure492

6.1.4.5.7PAS_DATA Structure492

6.1.4.6msDS-AuthenticatedAtDC492

6.1.5FSMO Roles492

6.1.5.1Schema Master FSMO Role493

6.1.5.2Domain Naming Master FSMO Role493

6.1.5.3RID Master FSMO Role493

6.1.5.4PDC Emulator FSMO Role494

6.1.5.5Infrastructure FSMO Role494

6.1.6Trust Objects494

6.1.6.1Overview (Synopsis)494

6.1.6.2Relationship to Other Protocols495

6.1.6.2.1TDO Replication over DRS495

6.1.6.2.2TDO Roles in Authentication Protocols over Domain Boundaries495

6.1.6.2.3TDO Roles in Authorization over Domain Boundaries495

6.1.6.3Prerequisites/Preconditions496

6.1.6.4Versioning and Capability Negotiation496

6.1.6.5Vendor-Extensible Fields496

6.1.6.6Transport496

6.1.6.7Essential Attributes of a Trusted Domain Object496

6.1.6.7.1flatName497

6.1.6.7.2isCriticalSystemObject497

6.1.6.7.3msDs-supportedEncryptionTypes497

6.1.6.7.4msDS-TrustForestTrustInfo497

6.1.6.7.5nTSecurityDescriptor497

6.1.6.7.6objectCategory498

6.1.6.7.7objectClass498

6.1.6.7.8securityIdentifier498

6.1.6.7.9trustAttributes498

6.1.6.7.10trustAuthIncoming501

6.1.6.7.11trustAuthOutgoing501

6.1.6.7.12trustDirection501

6.1.6.7.13trustPartner501

6.1.6.7.14trustPosixOffset502

6.1.6.7.15trustType502

6.1.6.8Essential Attributes of Interdomain Trust Accounts502

6.1.6.8.1cn (RDN)503

6.1.6.8.2objectClass503

6.1.6.8.3sAMAccountName503

6.1.6.8.4sAMAccountType503

6.1.6.8.5userAccountControl503

6.1.6.9Details503

6.1.6.9.1trustAuthInfo Attributes503

6.1.6.9.1.1LSAPR_AUTH_INFORMATION504

6.1.6.9.1.2Kerberos Usages of trustAuthInfo Attributes505

6.1.6.9.2Netlogon Usages of Trust Objects506

6.1.6.9.3msDS-TrustForestTrustInfo Attribute506

6.1.6.9.3.1Record507

6.1.6.9.3.2Building Well-Formed msDS-TrustForestTrustInfo Messages509

6.1.6.9.4Computation of trustPosixOffset512

6.1.6.9.5Mapping Logon SIDs to POSIX Identifiers512

6.1.6.9.6Timers512

6.1.6.9.6.1Trust Secret Cycling512

6.1.6.9.7Initialization512

6.1.6.10Security Considerations for Implementers513

6.1.7DynamicObject Requirements513

6.2Knowledge Consistency Checker514

6.2.1References514

6.2.2Overview515

6.2.2.1Refresh kCCFailedLinks and kCCFailedConnections516

6.2.2.2Intrasite Connection Creation517

6.2.2.3Intersite Connection Creation519

6.2.2.3.1ISTG Selection520

6.2.2.3.2Merge of kCCFailedLinks and kCCFailedLinks from Bridgeheads521

6.2.2.3.3Site Graph Concepts521

6.2.2.3.4Connection Creation522

6.2.2.3.4.1Types523

6.2.2.3.4.2Main Entry Point524

6.2.2.3.4.3Site Graph Construction525

6.2.2.3.4.4Spanning Tree Computation528

6.2.2.3.4.5nTDSConnection Creation538

6.2.2.4Removing Unnecessary Connections542

6.2.2.5Connection Translation543

6.2.2.6Remove Unneeded kCCFailedLinks and kCCFailedConnections Tuples544

6.2.2.7Updating the RODC NTFRS Connection Object545

6.3Publishing and Locating a Domain Controller545

6.3.1Structures and Constants546

6.3.1.1NETLOGON_NT_VERSION Options Bits546

6.3.1.2DS_FLAG Options Bits547

6.3.1.3Operation Code548

6.3.1.4NETLOGON_LOGON_QUERY548

6.3.1.5NETLOGON_PRIMARY_RESPONSE549

6.3.1.6NETLOGON_SAM_LOGON_REQUEST550

6.3.1.7NETLOGON_SAM_LOGON_RESPONSE_NT40551

6.3.1.8NETLOGON_SAM_LOGON_RESPONSE552

6.3.1.9NETLOGON_SAM_LOGON_RESPONSE_EX553

6.3.1.10DNSRegistrationSettings556

6.3.2DNS Record Registrations558

6.3.2.1Timers559

6.3.2.1.1Register DNS Records Timer559

6.3.2.2Non-Timer Events559

6.3.2.2.1Force Register DNS Records Non-Timer Event559

6.3.2.3SRV Records559

6.3.2.4Non-SRV Records562

6.3.3LDAP Ping564

6.3.3.1Syntactic Validation of the Filter564

6.3.3.2Domain Controller Response to an LDAP Ping565

6.3.3.3Response to Invalid Filter570

6.3.4NetBIOS Broadcast and NBNS Background570

6.3.5Mailslot Ping570

6.3.6Locating a Domain Controller573

6.3.6.1DNS-Based Discovery573

6.3.6.2NetBIOS-Based Discovery574

6.3.7Name Compression and Decompression575

6.3.8AD LDS DC Publication576

6.4Domain Join577

6.4.1State of a Machine Joined to a Domain578

6.4.2State in an Active Directory Domain578

6.4.3Relationship to Protocols579

6.5Unicode String Comparison579

6.5.1String Comparison by Using Sort Keys579

6.6Claims.idl580

7Communication Details for Active Directory Connections582

7.1Connection Resolution of LDAP Clients582

7.2ADConnection Overview582

7.3ADConnection Abstract Data Model585

7.4Handling Network Errors587

7.5ICMP Pings588

7.6Tasks and Events588

7.6.1Tasks589

7.6.1.1Initializing an ADConnection589

7.6.1.2Setting an LDAP Option on an ADConnection590

7.6.1.3Establishing an ADConnection591

7.6.1.4Performing an LDAP Bind on an ADConnection591

7.6.1.5Performing an LDAP Unbind on an ADConnection592

7.6.1.6Performing an LDAP Operation on an ADConnection592

7.6.2Internal Tasks593

7.6.2.1Initializing a Connection to a Directory Server593

7.6.2.2Connecting to a Directory Server594

7.6.2.3Performing an LDAP Bind Against a Directory Server596

7.6.2.4Performing an LDAP Unbind Against a Directory Server597

7.6.2.5Performing an LDAP Operation Against a Directory Server597

7.6.2.6Following an LDAP Referral or Continuation Reference598

7.6.2.7Autoreconnecting to a Directory Server600

7.6.3External Triggered Events601

7.6.3.1Processing Network Errors601

7.6.3.2Getting an LDAP Response from a Directory Server602

7.6.4Timer Triggered Events603

7.6.4.1Timer Expiry on RequestTimer603

7.7LDAP Over UDP604

7.7.1ADUDPHandle Overview604

7.7.2ADUDPHandle Abstract Data Model604

7.7.3Tasks605

7.7.3.1Initializing an ADUDPHandle605

7.7.3.2Performing an LDAP Operation on an ADUDPHandle605

7.8Transport Requirements608

7.9Security Elements608

7.10Communications Security608

8Change Tracking610

9Index614

Introduction

Note: Some of the information in this specification is subject to change because it applies to an unreleased, preliminary version of Windows Server operating system, and thus may differ from the final version of the server software when released. All behavior that pertains to the unreleased, preliminary version of Windows Server contains specific references to Windows Server 2016 Technical Preview operating system or DS_BEHAVIOR_WINTHRESHOLD as an aid to the reader.

This is the primary specification for Active Directory, both Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) and Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS). When the specification does not refer specifically to AD DS or AD LDS, it applies to both. The state model for this specification is prerequisite to the other specifications for Active Directory: [MS-DRSR] and [MS-SRPL].

When no operating system version information is specified, information in this document applies to all relevant versions of Windows. Similarly, when no DC functional level is specified, information in this document applies to all DC functional levels.

AD DS first became available as part of Microsoft Windows 2000 operating system and is available as part of Windows 2000 Server operating system products and Windows Server 2003 operating system products; in these products it is called "Active Directory". It is also available as part of Windows Server 2008 operating system, Windows Server 2008 R2 operating system, Windows Server 2012 operating system, Windows Server 2012 R2 operating system, and Windows Server 2016 Technical Preview. AD DS is not present in Windows NT 3.1 operating system, Windows NT 3.51 operating system, Windows NT 4.0 operating system, or Windows XP operating system.

Unless otherwise specified, information in this specification is also applicable to Active Directory Application Mode (ADAM). ADAM is a standalone application that provides AD LDS capabilities on Windows XP and Windows Server 2003. There are two versions of ADAM, ADAM RTW and ADAM SP1; unless otherwise specified, where ADAM is discussed in this document it refers to both versions.

Information that is applicable to AD LDS on Windows Server 2008 is also applicable to Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS) for Windows Vista, except where it is explicitly specified that such information is not applicable to that product. AD LDS for Windows Vista is a standalone application that provides AD LDS capabilities for Windows Vista operating system. Similarly, unless it is explicitly specified otherwise, information that is applicable to AD LDS on Windows Server 2008 R2 is also applicable to the standalone application Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS) for Windows 7, which provides AD LDS capabilities for Windows 7 operating system. Similarly, unless it is explicitly specified otherwise, information that is applicable to AD LDS on Windows Server 2012 is also applicable to the stand-alone application Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS) for Windows 8 operating system, which provides AD LDS capabilities for Windows 8 operating system. Similarly, unless it is explicitly specified otherwise, information that is applicable to AD LDS on Windows Server 2012 R2 is also applicable to the stand-alone application Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS) for Windows 8.1 operating system, which provides AD LDS capabilities for Windows 8.1 operating system. Finally, unless it is explicitly specified otherwise, information that is applicable to AD LDS on Windows Server 2016 Technical Preview is also applicable to the stand-alone application Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS) for Windows 10 operating system, which provides AD LDS capabilities for Windows 10 operating system.

State is included in the state model for this specification only as necessitated by the requirement that a licensee implementation of Windows Server protocols be able to receive messages and respond in the same manner as a Windows Server. Behavior is specified in terms of request message received, processing based on current state, resulting state transformation, and response message sent. Unless otherwise specified in the sections that follow, all of the behaviors are required for interoperability.

The following typographical convention is used to indicate the special meaning of certain names:

Underline, as in instanceType: the name of an attribute or object class whose interpretation is specified in the following documents:

[MS-ADA1] Attribute names whose initial letter is A through L.

[MS-ADA2] Attribute names whose initial letter is M.

[MS-ADA3] Attribute names whose initial letter is N through Z.

[MS-ADSC] Object class names.

[MS-ADLS] Object class names and attribute names for AD LDS.

For clarity, bit flags are sometimes shown as bit field diagrams. In the case of bit flags for Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) attributes, these diagrams take on big-endian characteristics but do not reflect the actual byte ordering of integers over the wire, because LDAP transfers an integer as the UTF-8 string of the decimal representation of that integer, as specified in [RFC2252].

Pervasive Concepts

The following concepts are pervasive throughout this specification.

This specification uses [KNUTH1] section 2.3.4.2 as a reference for the graph-related terms oriented tree, root, vertex, arc, initial vertex, and final vertex.

replica: A variable containing a set of objects.

attribute: An identifier for a value or set of values. See also attribute in the Glossary (section 1.1).

object: A set of attributes, each with its associated values. Two attributes of an object have special significance:

Identifying attribute: A designated single-valued attribute appears on every object. The value of this attribute identifies the object. For the set of objects in a replica, the values of the identifying attribute are distinct.

Parent-identifying attribute: A designated single-valued attribute appears on every object. The value of this attribute identifies the object's parent. That is, this attribute contains the value of the parent's identifying attribute or a reserved value identifying no object (for more information, see section 3.1.1.1.3). For the set of objects in a replica, the values of this parent-identifying attribute define an oriented tree with objects as vertices and child-parent references as directed arcs, with the child as an arc's initial vertex and the parent as an arc's final vertex.

-

Note that an object is a value, not a variable; a replica is a variable. The process of adding, modifying, or deleting an object in a replica replaces the entire value of the replica with a new value.

As the term "replica" suggests, it is often the case that two replicas contain "the same objects". In this usage, objects in two replicas are considered "the same" if they have the same value of the identifying attribute and if there is a process in place (that is, replication) to converge the values of the remaining attributes. When the members of a set of replicas are considered to be the same, it is common to say "an object" as a shorthand way of referring to the set of corresponding objects in the replicas.

object class: A set of restrictions on the construction and update of objects. An object class must be specified when an object is created. An object class specifies a set of must-have attributes (every object of the class must have at least one value of each) and may-have attributes (every object of the class may have a value of each). An object class also specifies a set of possible superiors (the parent object of an object of the class must have one of these classes). An object class is defined by a classSchema object.

parent object: See "object", above.

child object, children: An object that is not the root of its oriented tree. The children of an object O is the set of all objects whose parent object is O.

See section 3.1.1.1.3 for the particular use made of these definitions in this specification.

Glossary

The following terms are specific to this document:

88 object class: An object class as specified in the X.500 directory specification ([X501] section 8.4.3). An 88 object class can be instantiated as a new object, like a structural object class, and on an existing object, like an auxiliary object class.

abstract class: See abstract object class.

abstract object class: An object class whose only function is to be the basis of inheritance by other object classes, thereby simplifying their definition.

access check: A verification to determine whether a specific access type is allowed by checking a security context against a security descriptor.

access control entry (ACE): An entry in an access control list (ACL) that contains a set of user rights and a security identifier (SID) that identifies a principal for whom the rights are allowed, denied, or audited.

access control list (ACL): A list of access control entries (ACEs) that collectively describe the security rules for authorizing access to some resource; for example, an object or set of objects.

access mask: A 32-bit value present in an access control entry (ACE) that specifies the allowed or denied rights to manipulate an object.

account domain: A domain, identified by a security identifier (SID), that is the SID namespace for which a given machine is authoritative. The account domain is the same as the primary domain for a domain controller (DC) and is its default domain. For a Windows machine that is joined to a domain, the account domain is the SID namespace defined by the local Security Accounts Manager [MS-SAMR].

ACID: A term that refers to the four properties that any database system must achieve in order to be considered transactional: Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, and Durability [GRAY].

active: A state of an attributeSchema or classSchema object that represents part of the schema. It is possible to instantiate an active attribute or an active class. The opposite term is defunct.

Active Directory: A general-purpose network directory service. Active Directory also refers to the Windows implementation of a directory service. Active Directory stores information about a variety of objects in the network. Importantly, user accounts, computer accounts, groups, and all related credential information used by the Windows implementation of Kerberos are stored in Active Directory. Active Directory is either deployed as Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) or Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS). [MS-ADTS] describes both forms. For more information, see [MS-AUTHSOD] section 1.1.1.5.2, Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) versions 2 and 3, Kerberos, and DNS.

Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS): A directory service (DS) implemented by a domain controller (DC). The DS provides a data store for objects that is distributed across multiple DCs. The DCs interoperate as peers to ensure that a local change to an object replicates correctly across DCs. For more information, see [MS-AUTHSOD] section 1.1.1.5.2 and [MS-ADTS]. For information about product versions, see [MS-ADTS] section 1. See also Active Directory.

Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS): A directory service (DS) implemented by a domain controller (DC). The most significant difference between AD LDS and Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) is that AD LDS does not host domain naming contexts (domain NCs). A server can host multiple AD LDS DCs. Each DC is an independent AD LDS instance, with its own independent state. AD LDS can be run as an operating system DS or as a directory service provided by a standalone application (ADAM). For more information, see [MS-ADTS]. See also Active Directory.

ambiguous name resolution (ANR): A search algorithm that permits a client to search multiple naming-related attributes on objects by way of a single clause of the form "(anr=value)" in a Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) search filter. This permits a client to query for an object when the client possesses some identifying material related to the object but does not know which attribute of the object contains that identifying material.

application NC: A specific type of naming context (NC), or an instance of that type, that supports only full replicas (no partial replicas). An application NC cannot contain security principal objects. An application NC can contain dynamic objects. A forest can have zero or more application NCs. Application NCs do not appear in the global catalog (GC). The root of a domain NC is an object of class domainDns.

attribute: (A specialization of the previous definition.) An identifier for a single or multivalued data element that is associated with a directory object. An object consists of its attributes and their values. For example, cn (common name), street (street address), and mail (email addresses) can all be attributes of a user object. An attribute's schema, including the syntax of its values, is defined in an attributeSchema object.

attribute syntax: Specifies the format and range of permissible values of an attribute. The syntax of an attribute is defined by several attributes on the attributeSchema object, as specified in [MS-ADTS] section 3.1.1.2. Attribute syntaxes supported by Active Directory include Boolean, Enumeration, Integer, LargeInteger, String(UTC-Time), Object(DS-DN), and String(Unicode).

AttributeStamp: The type of a stamp attached to an attribute.

ATTRTYP: A 32-bit quantity representing an object identifier (OID). See [MS-DRSR] section 5.14.

authentication: The act of proving an identity to a server while providing key material that binds the identity to subsequent communications.

authorization: The secure computation of roles and accesses granted to an identity.

auxiliary object class: An object class that cannot be instantiated in the directory but can be either added to, or removed from, an existing object to make its attributes available for use on that object; or associated with an abstract or structural object class to add its attributes to that abstract or structural object class.

back link attribute: A constructed attribute whose values include object references (for example, an attribute of syntax Object(DS-DN)). The back link values are derived from the values of a related attribute, a forward link attribute, on other objects. If f is the forward link attribute, one back link value exists on object o for each object r that contains a value of o for attribute f. The relationship between the forward link attributes and back link attributes is expressed using the linkId attribute on the attributeSchema objects representing the two attributes. The forward link's linkId is an even number, and the back link's linkId is the forward link's linkId plus one. For more information, see [MS-ADTS] section 3.1.1.1.6.

back link value: The value of a back link attribute.

backup domain controller (BDC): A domain controller (DC) that receives a copy of the domain directory database from the primary domain controller (PDC). This copy is synchronized periodically and automatically with the primary domain controller (PDC). BDCs also authenticate user logons and can be promoted to function as the PDC. There is only one PDC or PDC emulator in a domain, and the rest are backup domain controllers.

Basic Encoding Rules (BER): A set of encoding rules for ASN.1 notation. These encoding schemes allow the identification, extraction, and decoding of data structures. These encoding rules are defined in [ITUX690].

big-endian: Multiple-byte values that are byte-ordered with the most significant byte stored in the memory location with the lowest address.

binary large object (BLOB): A collection of binary data stored as a single entity in a database.

bridgehead domain controller (bridgehead DC): A domain controller (DC) that may replicate updates to or from DCs in sites other than its own.

broadcast: A style of resource location or data transmission in which a client makes a request to all parties on a network simultaneously (a one-to-many communication). Also, a mode of resource location that does not use a name service.

built-in domain: The security identifier (SID) namespace defined by the fixed SID S-1-5-32. Contains groups that define roles on a local machine such as Backup Operators.

built-in domain SID: The fixed SID S-1-5-32.

Business Data Connectivity (BDC): A shared service that stores information about business application data that exists outside a server farm. It can be used to display business data in lists, Web Parts, search results, user profiles, and custom applications. Previously referred to as Business Data Catalog.

canonical name: A syntactic transformation of an Active Directory distinguished name (DN) into something resembling a path that still identifies an object within a forest. DN "cn=Peter Houston, ou=NTDEV, dc=microsoft, dc=com" translates to the canonical name "microsoft.com/NTDEV/Peter Houston", while the DN "dc=microsoft, dc=com" translates to the canonical name "microsoft.com/".

child naming context (child NC): Given naming contexts (NCs) with their corresponding distinguished names (DNs) forming a child and parent relationship, the NC in the child relationship is referred as the child NC. The parent of a child NC must be an NC and is referred to as the parent naming context (parent NC).

child object, children: An object that is not the root of its tree. The children of an object o are the set of all objects whose parent is o. See section 1 of [MS-ADTS] and section 1 of [MS-DRSR].

claim: An assertion about a security principal expressed as an n-tuple containing an {Identifier, ValueType and m-Values of type ValueType} where m > = 1. A claim with only 1 value in the n-tuple is called a single-valued claim and a claim with more than 1 value is called a multi-valued claim.

code page: An ordered set of characters of a specific script in which a numerical index (code-point value) is associated with each character. Code pages are a means of providing support for character sets (1) and keyboard layouts used in different countries. Devices such as the display and keyboard can be configured to use a specific code page and to switch from one code page (such as the United States) to another (such as Portugal) at the user's request.

Component Object Model (COM): An object-oriented programming model that defines how objects interact within a single process or between processes. In COM, clients have access to an object through interfaces implemented on the object. For more information, see [MS-DCOM].

computer object: An object of class computer. A computer object is a security principal object; the principal is the operating system running on the computer. The shared secret allows the operating system running on the computer to authenticate itself independently of any user running on the system. See security principal.

configuration naming context (config NC): A naming context (NC) that contains configuration information. In Active Directory, a single config NC is shared among all domain controllers (DCs) in the forest. A config NC cannot contain security principal objects.

constructed attribute: An attribute whose values are computed from normal attributes (for read) and/or have effects on the values of normal attributes (for write).

container: An object in the directory that can serve as the parent for other objects. In the absence of schema constraints, all objects would be containers. The schema allows only objects of specific classes to be containers.

control access right: An extended access right that can be granted or denied on an access control list (ACL).

Coordinated Universal Time (UTC): A high-precision atomic time standard that approximately tracks Universal Time (UT). It is the basis for legal, civil time all over the Earth. Time zones around the world are expressed as positive and negative offsets from UTC. In this role, it is also referred to as Zulu time (Z) and Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). In these specifications, all references to UTC refer to the time at UTC-0 (or GMT).

cross-forest trust: A relationship between two forests that enables security principals from any domain in one forest to authenticate to computers joined to any domain in the other forest.

crossRef object: An object residing in the partitions container of the config NC that describes the properties of a naming context (NC), such as its domain naming service name, operational settings, and so on.

cycle: A series of one or more replication responses associated with the same invocation ID, concluding with the return of a new up-to-date vector.

DACLs: An access control list (ACL) that is controlled by the owner of an object and that specifies the access that particular users or groups can have to the object.

DC functional level: A specification of functionality available in a domain controller (DC). See [MS-ADTS] section 6.1.4.2 for possible values and a mapping between the possible values and product versions.

default domain naming context (default domain NC): When Active Directory is operating as Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS), this is the default naming context (default NC) of the domain controller (DC). When operating as Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS), this NC is not defined.

default naming context (default NC): When Active Directory is operating as Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS), the default naming context (default NC) is the domain naming context (domain NC) whose full replica is hosted by a domain controller (DC), except when the DC is a read-only domain controller (RODC), in which case the default NC is a filtered partial NC replica. When operating as AD DS, the default NC contains the DC's computer object. When Active Directory is operating as AD LDS, the default NC is the naming context (NC) specified by the msDS-DefaultNamingContext attribute on the nTDSDSA object for the DC. See nTDSDSA object.

default schema: The schema of a given version of Active Directory, as defined by [MS-ADSC], [MS-ADA1], [MS-ADA2], and [MS-ADA3] for AD DS, and as defined by [MS-ADLS] for Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS).

defunct: A state of an attributeSchema or classSchema object that represents part of the schema. It is not possible to instantiate a defunct attribute or a defunct class. The opposite term is active.

deleted-object: An object that has been deleted, but remains in storage until a configured amount of time (the deleted-object lifetime) has passed, after which the object is transformed to a recycled-object. Unlike a recycled-object or a tombstone, a deleted-object maintains virtually all the state of the object before deletion, and may be undeleted without loss of information. Deleted-objects exist only when the Recycle Bin optional feature is enabled.

deleted-object lifetime: The time period that a deleted-object is kept in storage before it is transformed into a recycled-object.

digest: The fixed-length output string from a one-way hash function that takes a variable-length input string and is probabilistically unique for every different input string. Also, a cryptographic checksum of a data (octet) stream.

directory: A forest.

directory object: An Active Directory object, which is a specialization of the "object" concept that is described in [MS-ADTS] section 1 or [MS-DRSR] section 1, Introduction, under Pervasive Concepts. An Active Directory object can be identified by the objectGUID attribute of a dsname according to the matching rules defined in [MS-DRSR] section 5.50, DSNAME. The parent-identifying attribute (not exposed as an LDAP attribute) is parent. Active Directory objects are similar to LDAP entries, as defined in [RFC2251]; the differences are specified in [MS-ADTS] section 3.1.1.3.1.

directory service (DS): A service that stores and organizes information about a computer network's users and network shares, and that allows network administrators to manage users' access to the shares. See also Active Directory.

directory service agent (DSA): A term from the X.500 directory specification [X501] that represents a component that maintains and communicates directory information.

discretionary access control list (DACL): An access control list (ACL) that is controlled by the owner of an object and that specifies the access particular users or groups can have to the object.

distinguished name (DN): In Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), an LDAP Distinguished Name, as described in [RFC2251] section 4.1.3. The DN of an object is the DN of its parent, preceded by the RDN of the object. For example: CN=David Thompson, OU=Users, DC=Microsoft, DC=COM. For definitions of CN and OU, see [RFC2256] sections 5.4 and 5.12, respectively.

DNS name: A fully qualified domain name (FQDN).

domain: A set of users and computers sharing a common namespace and management infrastructure. At least one computer member of the set must act as a domain controller (DC) and host a member list that identifies all members of the domain, as well as optionally hosting the Active Directory service. The domain controller provides authentication of members, creating a unit of trust for its members. Each domain has an identifier that is shared among its members. For more information, see [MS-AUTHSOD] section 1.1.1.5 and [MS-ADTS].

domain controller (DC): The service, running on a server, that implements Active Directory, or the server hosting this service. The service hosts the data store for objects and interoperates with other DCs to ensure that a local change to an object replicates correctly across all DCs. When Active Directory is operating as Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS), the DC contains full NC replicas of the configuration naming context (config NC), schema naming context (schema NC), and one of the domain NCs in its forest. If the AD DS DC is a global catalog server (GC server), it contains partial NC replicas of the remaining domain NCs in its forest. For more information, see [MS-AUTHSOD] section 1.1.1.5.2 and [MS-ADTS]. When Active Directory is operating as Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS), several AD LDS DCs can run on one server. When Active Directory is operating as AD DS, only one AD DS DC can run on one server. However, several AD LDS DCs can coexist with one AD DS DC on one server. The AD LDS DC contains full NC replicas of the config NC and the schema NC in its forest.

domain functional level: A specification of functionality available in a domain. Must be less than or equal to the DC functional level of every domain controller (DC) that hosts a replica of the domain's naming context (NC). For information on defined levels, corresponding features, information on how the domain functional level is determined, and supported domain controllers, see [MS-ADTS] sections 6.1.4.3 and 6.1.4.2. When Active Directory is operating as Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS), domain functional level does not exist.

domain joined: A relationship between a machine and some domain naming context (domain NC) in which they share a secret. The shared secret allows the machine to authenticate to a domain controller (DC) for the domain.

domain local group: An Active Directory group that allows user objects, global groups, and universal groups from any domain as members. It may additionally include, and be a member of, other domain local groups from within its domain. A group object g is a domain local group if and only if GROUP_TYPE_RESOURCE_GROUP is present in g!groupType; see [MS-ADTS] section 2.2.12, "Group Type Flags". A security-enabled domain local group is valid for inclusion within access control lists (ACLs) from its own domain. If a domain is in mixed mode, then a security-enabled domain local group in that domain allows only user objects as members.

domain name: A domain name or a NetBIOS name that identifies a domain.

Domain Name System (DNS): A hierarchical, distributed database that contains mappings of domain names to various types of data, such as IP addresses. DNS enables the location of computers and services by user-friendly names, and it also enables the discovery of other information stored in the database.

domain naming context (domain NC): A specific type of naming context (NC) that represents a domain. A domain NC can contain security principal objects; no other type of NC can contain security principal objects. Domain NCs appear in the global catalog (GC). A domain NC is hosted by one or more domain controllers (DCs) operating as AD DS. In AD DS, a forest has one or more domain NCs. The root of a domain NC is an object of class domainDNS; for directory replication [MS-DRSR], see domainDNS. A domain NC cannot exist in AD LDS.

domain prefix: A security identifier (SID) of a domain without the relative identifier (rid) portion. The domain prefix refers to the issuing authority SID. For example, the domain prefix of S-1-5-21-397955417-626881126-188441444-1010 is S-1-5-21-397955417-626881126-188441444.

downlevel trust: A trust in which one of the peers is running Windows NT 4.0.

DSA GUID: The objectGUID of a DSA object.

DSA object: See nTDSDSA object.

dsname: A tuple that contains between one and three identifiers for an object. The term dsname does not stand for anything. The possible identifiers are the object's GUID (attribute objectGuid), security identifier (SID) (attribute objectSid), and distinguished name (DN) (attribute distinguishedName). A dsname can appear in a protocol message and as an attribute value (for example, a value of an attribute with syntax Object(DS-DN)). Given a DSName, an object can be identified within a set of NC replicas according to the matching rules defined in [MS-DRSR] section 5.49.

dynamic object: An object with a time-to-die (attribute msDS-Entry-Time-To-Die). The directory service garbage-collects a dynamic object immediately after its time-to-die has passed. The constructed attribute entryTTL gives a dynamic object's current time-to-live, that is, the difference between the current time and msDS-Entry-Time-To-Die. For more information, see [RFC2589].

entry: In Active Directory, a synonym for object.

existing-object: An object that is not a tombstone, deleted-object, or recycled-object.

expunge: To permanently remove an object from a naming context (NC) replica, without converting it to a tombstone.

Extended-Rights container: A container holding objects that correspond to control access rights. The container is a child of configuration naming context (config NC) and has relative distinguished name (RDN) CN=Extended-Rights.

File Replication Service (FRS): One of the services offered by a domain controller (DC), which is advertised through the Domain Controller Location protocol. The service being offered to clients is a replicated data storage volume that is associated with the default naming context (NC). The running or paused state of the FRS on a DC is available through protocols documented in [MS-ADTS] section 6.3.

filter: In the context of the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), the filter is one of the parameters in a search request. The filter specifies matching constraints for the candidate objects.

filtered attribute set: The subset of attributes that are not replicated to the filtered partial NC replica and the filtered GC partial NC replica. The filtered attribute set is part of the state of the forest and is used to control the attributes that replicate to a read-only domain controller (RODC). The searchFlags schema attribute is used to define this set.

filtered GC partial NC replica: An NC replica that contains a schema-specified subset of attributes for the objects. The attributes consist of the attributes in the GC partial attribute set (PAS), excluding those present in the filtered attribute set. A filtered GC partial NC replica is not writable; that is, it does not accept originating updates.

filtered partial NC replica: An NC replica that contains a schema-specified subset of attributes for the objects it contains. The subset of attributes consists of all the attributes of the objects, excluding those attributes in the filtered attribute set. A filtered partial NC replica is not writable; that is, it does not accept originating updates.

flexible single master operation (FSMO): A read or update operation on a naming context (NC), such that the operation must be performed on the single designated master replica of that NC. The master replica designation is "flexible" because it can be changed without losing the consistency gained from having a single master. This term, pronounced "fizmo", is never used alone; see also FSMO role, FSMO role owner, and FSMO object.

foreign principal object (FPO): A foreignSecurityPrincipal object.

forest: For Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS), a set of naming contexts (NCs) consisting of one schema naming context (schema NC), one configuration naming context (config NC), one or more domain naming contexts (domain NCs), and zero or more application naming contexts (application NCs). Because a set of NCs can be arranged into a tree structure, a forest is also a set containing one or several trees of NCs. For AD LDS, a set of NCs consisting of one schema NC, one config NC, and zero or more application NCs. (In Microsoft documentation, an AD LDS forest is called a "configuration set".)

forest functional level: A specification of functionality available in a forest. It must be less than or equal to the domain controller (DC) functional level of every DC in the forest. See [MS-ADTS] section 6.1.4.4 for information on how the forest functional level is determined.

forest root domain NC: For Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS), the domain naming context (domain NC) within a forest whose child is the forest's configuration naming context (config NC). The fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the forest root domain NC serves as the forest's name.

forward link attribute: An attribute whose values include object references (for example, an attribute of syntax Object(DS-DN)). The forward link values can be used to compute the values of a related attribute, a back link attribute, on other objects. If an object o refers to object r in forward link attribute f, and there exists a back link attribute b corresponding to f, then a back link value referring to o exists in attribute b on object r. The relationship between the forward and back link attributes is expressed using the linkId attribute on the attributeSchema objects representing the two attributes. The forward link's linkId is an even number, and the back link's linkId is the forward link's linkId plus one. A forward link attribute can exist with no corresponding back link attribute, but not vice-versa. For more information, see [MS-ADTS].

forward link value: The value of a forward link attribute.

FSMO role: A set of objects that can be updated in only one naming context (NC) replica (the FSMO role owner's replica) at any given time. For more information, see [MS-ADTS] section 3.1.1.1.11. See also FSMO role owner.

FSMO role object: An object in a directory that represents a specific FSMO role. This object is an element of the FSMO role and contains the fSMORoleOwner attribute.

FSMO role owner: The domain controller (DC) holding the naming context (NC) replica in which the objects of a FSMO role can be updated.

full NC replica: A naming context (NC) replica that contains all the attributes of the objects it contains. A full replica accepts originating updates.

fully qualified domain name (FQDN): (1) An unambiguous domain name that gives an absolute location in the Domain Name System's (DNS) hierarchy tree, as defined in [RFC1035] section 3.1 and [RFC2181] section 11.

(2) In Active Directory, a fully qualified domain name (FQDN) (1) that identifies a domain.

garbage collection: The process of identifying logically deleted objects (also known as tombstones) and link values that have passed their tombstone lifetime, and then permanently removing these objects from a naming context (NC) replica. Garbage collection does not generate replication traffic.

GC partial attribute set (PAS): The subset of attributes that replicate to a GC partial NC replica. A particular GC partial attribute set (PAS) is part of the state of the forest and is used to control the attributes that replicate to global catalog servers (GC servers). The isMemberOfPartialAttributeSet schema attribute is used to define this set.

GC partial NC replica: An NC replica that contains a schema-specified subset of attributes for the objects it contains. The subset of attributes consists of the attributes in the GC partial attribute set (PAS). A GC partial NC replica is not writable; for example, it does not accept originating updates.

GC server: See global catalog server.

global catalog (GC): A unified partial view of multiple naming contexts (NCs) in a distributed partitioned directory. The Active Directory directory service GC is implemented by GC servers. The definition of global catalog is specified in [MS-ADTS] section 3.1.1.1.8.

global catalog server (GC server): A domain controller (DC) that contains a naming context (NC) replica (one full, the rest partial) for each domain naming context in the forest.

global group: An Active Directory group that allows user objects from its own domain and global groups from its own domain as members. Also called domain global group. Universal groups can contain global groups. A group object g is a global group if and only if GROUP_TYPE_ACCOUNT_GROUP is present in g! groupType; see [MS-ADTS] section 2.2.12, "Group Type Flags". A global group that is also a security-enabled group is valid for inclusion within ACLs anywhere in the forest. If a domain is in mixed mode, then a global group in that domain that is also a security-enabled group allows only user object as members. See also domain local group, security-enabled group.

globally unique identifier (GUID): A term used interchangeably with universally unique identifier (UUID) in Microsoft protocol technical documents (TDs). Interchanging the usage of these terms does not imply or require a specific algorithm or mechanism to generate the value. Specifically, the use of this term does not imply or require that the algorithms described in [RFC4122] or [C706] must be used for generating the GUID. See also universally unique identifier (UUID).

group: A collection of objects that can be treated as a whole.

group object: In Active Directory, a group object has an object class group. A group has a forward link attribute member; the values of this attribute either represent elements of the group (for example, objects of class user or computer) or subsets of the group (objects of class group). The representation of group subsets is called "nested group membership". The back link attribute memberOf enables navigation from group members to the groups containing them. Some groups represent groups of security principals and some do not and are, for instance, used to represent email distribution lists.

Group Policy: A mechanism that allows the implementer to specify managed configurations for users and computers in an Active Directory service environment.

GUID-based DNS name: The domain naming service name of a domain controller (DC), constructed by concatenating the dashed string representation of the objectGuid of the DC's nTDSDSA object, the string "._msdcs.", and the syntactic transformation of the root domain's distinguished name (DN) to a domain naming service name. If a DC's DSA GUID is "52f6c43b-99ec-4040-a2b0-e9ebf2ec02b8", and the forest root domain NC's DNS name is "fabrikam.com", then the GUID-based DNS name of the DC is "52f6c43b-99ec-4040-a2b0-e9ebf2ec02b8._msdcs.fabrikam.com".

GUIDString: A GUID in the form of an ASCII or Unicode string, consisting of one group of 8 hexadecimal digits, followed by three groups of 4 hexadecimal digits each, followed by one group of 12 hexadecimal digits. It is the standard representation of a GUID, as described in [RFC4122] section 3. F


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