User Properties - Account Tab
Applies To: Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2012
Control | Details | ||
---|---|---|---|
User logon name |
The text box on the left provides a space for you to type the account name for this user. This is the name that the user will use to log on to an Active Directory domain. The drop-down list on the right lists the available user principal name (UPN) suffixes that may be used to create the user logon name. The list contains the full Domain Name System (DNS) name of the current domain, the full DNS name of the root domain of the current forest, and any alternative UPN suffixes that are created with Active Directory Domains and Trusts. |
||
User logon name (pre–Windows 2000) |
The read-only text box on the left displays the domain name that is used by computers running pre–Windows 2000 operating systems. This name will also be used in the pre–Windows 2000 syntax for domainname \ username user logon. The text box on the right provides a space for you to type the user's pre–Windows 2000 logon name. This user name is in the pre–Windows 2000 format, which is domainname \ username . |
||
Logon Hours |
Click to change the hours that this selected object can log on to the domain. By default, domain logon is allowed 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Note that this control does not affect the user's ability to log on locally to a computer using a local computer account instead of a domain account. |
||
Log On To |
Click to specify workstation logon restrictions that will allow this user to log on only to specified computers in the domain. By default, a user is able to log on at any workstation computer that is joined to the domain. Note that this control does not affect the user's ability to log on locally to a computer using a local computer account instead of a domain account. |
||
Unlock account |
Allows you to unlock user accounts that become locked because of too many failed logon attempts.
|
||
Account options |
The following are the Active Directory user account options:
Note The Kerberos AES encryption options (both the 128-bit option and the 256-bit option) are available only when the domain functional level is set to Windows Server 2003 or higher. Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) is a new encryption algorithm that has been standardized by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). It is expected to be widely used in the next several years. For more information about Kerberos authentication, see Kerberos Explained (https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=85494).
|
||
Account expires |
Sets the account expiration policy for this user. You can select between the following options:
|