- Open the Terminal Application
- Type in
sudo -i
and type in your Mac Administrator account password.sudo
gives you root level or administrator level privileges.
dsconfigad -show
dsconfigad -f -r -u
Note: <username>
needs to be replaced with domain administrator who has binding/unbinding rights.
<computer-name>
--> replace this with the computer name you want to bind to Active Directory
<username>
--> needs to be replaced with domain administrator who has binding/unbinding rights.
<domain>
--> replace with domain you want to join.
dsconfigad -a <computer-name> -u <username> -ou "CN=Computers,DC=network,DC=pcpc,DC=org" -domain <domain> -mobile enable -mobileconfirm enable -localhome enable -useuncpath enable -groups "Domain Admins,Enterprise Admins" -alldomains enable
<computer-name>
--> replace this with the computer name you want to bind to Active Directory
<username>
--> needs to be replaced with domain administrator who has binding/unbinding rights.
<domain>
--> replace with domain you want to join.
dsconfigad -a <computer-name> -u <username> -ou "CN=Computers,DC=network,DC=pcpc,DC=org" -domain <domain> -localhome enable -useuncpath enable -groups "Domain Admins,Enterprise Admins" -alldomains enable
Does binding the Mac to the domain force the user to login with their AD credentials? or can they still use their local account and just bind the computer?