Help for Diverse Directories
Need help managing heterogeneous networks? Perhaps bv-Admin is the answer.
- By Mike Gunderloy
- December 01, 2000
By now, you certainly know that Windows 2000 has introduced
a new model for managing such elements as users, groups,
rights, and Active Directory. And if your horizons are
broad enough, you know that Novell NDS has been offering
similar capabilities on NetWare networks for quite some
time. A few lucky systems administrators are running one
of these enterprise-level directory services on a completely
homogeneous network.
But what do you do if your organization hasn’t enforced
a single standard, and you have a mix of Win2K, Windows
NT 4.0, and NetWare networks, all interconnected and sharing
resources? One thing you can do is install BindView’s
bv-Admin package (formerly known as Entevo DirectAdmin).
Put simply, bv-Admin is a management solution for multiple,
heterogeneous directory services. It can show you NT and
Win2K domains, organizational units (OUs), trees, forests,
Novell NDS directories, and Microsoft Exchange directories
in a single console. All of these directories are condensed
to a single treeview, and commands are uniform across
the full reach of directory services. For example, you
can create or delete users across all directory services
with a single operation.
The bv-Admin application is designed to scale effectively
using a delegation model. Delegation allows the overall
network administrator to identify users or groups who
should be allowed to perform particular management actions,
without turning them loose on your entire directory structure.
For example, you can designate a particular user on your
network to edit computer properties, without giving that
user control over other users. This control is fine-grained,
with 11 predefined roles and more than 50 separate tasks
that can be delegated.
The bv-Admin application also can help you keep track
of your network with a series of management reports. These
track everything from computers through users and groups
down to individual files across all computers in your
network. The reports are interactive as well. For example,
after listing all folders on a network share, you can
inspect and set the attributes, sharing or securing properties
of any of the folders. A whole set of utility programs
supports the main bv-Admin console. These include bv-Admin
Web Server, which provides a browser-based management
solution, and bv-Admin for Windows 2000 Migration, which
handles the tasks involved in converting an existing NT
domain structure for efficient operation under Win2K Active
Directory. In addition, DirectScript supplies a set of
COM objects that gives you the ability to call up bv-Admin’s
capabilities from a COM client program such as Visual
Basic, VBScript, or ASP pages.
|
bv-Admin offers fine-grained
control over administrative privileges. This report
displays some of the rights delegated to a particular
group. (Click image to view larger version.) |
Overall, bv-Admin does an impressive job of simplifying
management for complex heterogeneous networks, as well
as opening up the possibility of delegating the management
job. If you’d like to see for yourself how this works,
you can request an evaluation CD directly from BindView’s
Web site.
About the Author
Mike Gunderloy, MCSE, MCSD, MCDBA, is a former MCP columnist and the author of numerous development books.