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Preface
About This Guide
This guide tells you how to use Workgroup Manager to
set up and manage home directories, accounts,
preferences, and settings for clients.
Whats New in Version 10.4
Portable Home Directories. Users with portable computers can now enjoy
synchronized versions of home directory folders locally and on the network. Portable
Home Directories synchronize selected content across local and network home
directories based on the most recent version of a file.
Trusted directory binding. Users with portable computers can use trusted binding to
make sure that servers accessed as they move around are trustworthy. Trusted
binding offers a way for a client computer to authenticate to an LDAP server and for
the LDAP server to authenticate to the client. For more information, see Chapter 3,
“User Management for Mobile Clients,” on page 49.
Managed network views. You can now control what users see when they select the
Network icon in the sidebar of a Finder window (or choose Go > Network). A
managed network view is one or more network neighborhoods, which appear in the
Finder as folders. Each folder contains a list of resources the server administrator has
associated with the folder. Managed network views offer a meaningful way to
present network resources. You can create multiple views for different client
computers. And because the views are stored using Open Directory, a computer’s
network neighborhood is automatically available when a user logs in. For more
information, see Chapter 10, “Managing Network Views,” on page 185.
Preference manifests and preference editor. If you want fine-grain control of
preference settings, you can work with Workgroup Manager’s new preference editor
which can utilize preference manifests where they exist. Preference manifests are files
that describe the structure and values of an applications or utilitys preferences. The
preference editor can create or edit any PLIST (Preference File) and incorporates
preference manifests to thoroughly describe preference settings which customize
the behavior of applications and utilities. For more information, see “Using the
Preference Editor With Preference Manifests” on page 181.
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