Microsoft KB Archive/157234

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HOWTO: Deal with Localized and Renamed User and Group Names

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Q157234

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The information in this article applies to:


 * Microsoft Win32 Software Development Kit (SDK), used with:
 * the operating system: Microsoft Windows NT, versions 3.51, 4.0
 * the operating system: Microsoft Windows 2000

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SUMMARY
This article illustrates how to obtain localized and renamed account names associated with accounts on arbitrary machines.

The approach illustrated below is necessary due to localization of Windows NT user and group names, and also to allow for arbitrary account renaming by system administrators. This approach works by building a Sid (security identifier) value that contains a relative ID value specifying the user or group of interest. The resultant Sid is then looked up on the machine of interest and results in a name string that is relevant on the machine where the lookup took place. This is done because the same Sid value may have different associated text on different machines, as mentioned above.

Sample Code
  /*++

Copyright (c) 1996 Microsoft Corporation

Module Name:

acctname.c

Abstract:

This module illustrates how to obtain user and group names Associated with accounts that have been renamed or localized. This sample works by building a Sid value and then looking up the name associated with that Sid value.

For example, in a default English install of Windows NT, the local administrators group is called "Administrators." In a default German install of Windows NT, the local administrators group is called "Administratoren." This can lead to problems when managing users and groups if the proper steps are not taken.

The following relative ID values are an index into an account database that represents a specific user or group. In DOMAIN_USER_ and DOMAIN_GROUP_ cases, the relative ID is appended to the account domain Sid from the machine of interest. In the DOMAIN_ALIAS_ case, the relative ID is appended to a well-known Sid representing the BUILTIN domain that is consistent across machines.

// Well-known users and groups...

#define DOMAIN_USER_RID_ADMIN         (0x000001F4L) #define DOMAIN_USER_RID_GUEST         (0x000001F5L)

#define DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_ADMINS       (0x00000200L) #define DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_USERS        (0x00000201L) #define DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_GUESTS       (0x00000202L)

// well-known aliases ...

#define DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_ADMINS       (0x00000220L) #define DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_USERS        (0x00000221L) #define DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_GUESTS       (0x00000222L) #define DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_POWER_USERS  (0x00000223L) #define DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_ACCOUNT_OPS  (0x00000224L) #define DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_SYSTEM_OPS   (0x00000225L) #define DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_PRINT_OPS    (0x00000226L) #define DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_BACKUP_OPS   (0x00000227L) #define DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_REPLICATOR   (0x00000228L)

The following section is for informational purposes and is useful for visualizing Sid values:

// Universal well-known SIDs: //       //     Null SID                     S-1-0-0 //    World                        S-1-1-0 //    Local                        S-1-2-0 //    Creator Owner ID             S-1-3-0 //    Creator Group ID             S-1-3-1 //    Creator Owner Server ID      S-1-3-2 //    Creator Group Server ID      S-1-3-3 //       //     (Non-unique IDs)             S-1-4

#define SECURITY_NULL_SID_AUTHORITY      {0,0,0,0,0,0} #define SECURITY_WORLD_SID_AUTHORITY     {0,0,0,0,0,1} #define SECURITY_LOCAL_SID_AUTHORITY     {0,0,0,0,0,2} #define SECURITY_CREATOR_SID_AUTHORITY   {0,0,0,0,0,3} #define SECURITY_NON_UNIQUE_AUTHORITY    {0,0,0,0,0,4}

#define SECURITY_NULL_RID                (0x00000000L) #define SECURITY_WORLD_RID               (0x00000000L) #define SECURITY_LOCAL_RID               (0X00000000L)

#define SECURITY_CREATOR_OWNER_RID       (0x00000000L) #define SECURITY_CREATOR_GROUP_RID       (0x00000001L)

#define SECURITY_CREATOR_OWNER_SERVER_RID (0x00000002L) #define SECURITY_CREATOR_GROUP_SERVER_RID (0x00000003L)

// NT well-known SIDs: //       //     NT Authority          S-1-5 //    Dialup                S-1-5-1 //       //     Network               S-1-5-2 //    Batch                 S-1-5-3 //    Interactive           S-1-5-4 //    Service               S-1-5-6 //    AnonymousLogon        S-1-5-7       (aka null logon session) //    Proxy                 S-1-5-8 //    ServerLogon           S-1-5-8       (aka domain controller       //                                            account) //       //     (Logon IDs)           S-1-5-5-X-Y //       //     (NT non-unique IDs)   S-1-5-0x15-... //       //     (Built-in domain)     S-1-5-0x20

#define SECURITY_NT_AUTHORITY          {0,0,0,0,0,5}   // ntifs

#define SECURITY_DIALUP_RID            (0x00000001L) #define SECURITY_NETWORK_RID           (0x00000002L) #define SECURITY_BATCH_RID             (0x00000003L) #define SECURITY_INTERACTIVE_RID       (0x00000004L) #define SECURITY_SERVICE_RID           (0x00000006L) #define SECURITY_ANONYMOUS_LOGON_RID   (0x00000007L) #define SECURITY_PROXY_RID             (0x00000008L) #define SECURITY_SERVER_LOGON_RID      (0x00000009L)

#define SECURITY_LOGON_IDS_RID         (0x00000005L) #define SECURITY_LOGON_IDS_RID_COUNT   (3L)

#define SECURITY_LOCAL_SYSTEM_RID      (0x00000012L)

#define SECURITY_NT_NON_UNIQUE         (0x00000015L)

#define SECURITY_BUILTIN_DOMAIN_RID    (0x00000020L)

If no Command line arguments are specified, names are looked up      on the local machine. If argv[1] is present, the lookup occurs on the specified machine.

For example, acctname.exe \\winbase will look up names from the machine named \\winbase. If \\winbase is a default German install of Windows NT, names will appear in German locale.

Author:

Scott Field (sfield)   02-Oct-96

--*/

#define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN #include   #include 

BOOL LookupAliasFromRid(      LPWSTR TargetComputer,       DWORD Rid,       LPWSTR Name,       PDWORD cchName       );

BOOL LookupUserGroupFromRid(      LPWSTR TargetComputer,       DWORD Rid,       LPWSTR Name,       PDWORD cchName       );

#define RTN_OK 0 #define RTN_USAGE 1 #define RTN_ERROR 13

int __cdecl wmain(      int argc,       wchar_t *argv[]       ) {      LPWSTR TargetComputer; WCHAR Name[UNLEN+1]; DWORD cchName = UNLEN;

if(argc == 2) TargetComputer = argv[1];  // target specified machine else TargetComputer = NULL;     // target local machine

if(!LookupUserGroupFromRid( TargetComputer, DOMAIN_USER_RID_ADMIN, Name, &cchName )) {

printf("LookupUserFromRid error! (rc=%lu)\n", GetLastError); return RTN_ERROR; }

printf("'Administrator' user name = %ls\n", Name);

cchName = UNLEN; // reset buffer size

if(!LookupAliasFromRid( TargetComputer, DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_ADMINS, Name, &cchName )) {

printf("LookupAliasFromRid error! (rc=%lu)\n", GetLastError); return RTN_ERROR; }

printf("'Administrators' local group/alias name = %ls\n", Name);

return RTN_OK; }

BOOL LookupAliasFromRid(      LPWSTR TargetComputer,       DWORD Rid,       LPWSTR Name,       PDWORD cchName       ) {      SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY sia = SECURITY_NT_AUTHORITY; SID_NAME_USE snu; PSID pSid; WCHAR DomainName[DNLEN+1]; DWORD cchDomainName = DNLEN; BOOL bSuccess = FALSE;

//       // Sid is the same regardless of machine, since the well-known // BUILTIN domain is referenced. //

if(AllocateAndInitializeSid( &sia, 2,              SECURITY_BUILTIN_DOMAIN_RID, Rid, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,              &pSid )) {

bSuccess = LookupAccountSidW(                  TargetComputer,                   pSid,                   Name,                   cchName,                   DomainName,                   &cchDomainName,                   &snu                   );

FreeSid(pSid); }

return bSuccess; }

BOOL LookupUserGroupFromRid(      LPWSTR TargetComputer,       DWORD Rid,       LPWSTR Name,       PDWORD cchName       ) {      PUSER_MODALS_INFO_2 umi2; NET_API_STATUS nas;

UCHAR SubAuthorityCount; PSID pSid; SID_NAME_USE snu;

WCHAR DomainName[DNLEN+1]; DWORD cchDomainName = DNLEN; BOOL bSuccess = FALSE; // assume failure

//       // get the account domain Sid on the target machine // note: if you were looking up multiple sids based on the same // account domain, only need to call this once. //

nas = NetUserModalsGet(TargetComputer, 2, (LPBYTE *)&umi2);

if(nas != NERR_Success) { SetLastError(nas); return FALSE; }

SubAuthorityCount = *GetSidSubAuthorityCount (umi2->usrmod2_domain_id);

//       // allocate storage for new Sid. account domain Sid + account Rid //

pSid = (PSID)HeapAlloc(GetProcessHeap, 0,              GetSidLengthRequired((UCHAR)(SubAuthorityCount + 1)));

if(pSid != NULL) {

if(InitializeSid( pSid, GetSidIdentifierAuthority(umi2->usrmod2_domain_id), (BYTE)(SubAuthorityCount+1) )) {

DWORD SubAuthIndex = 0;

//               // copy existing subauthorities from account domain Sid into // new Sid //

for(SubAuthIndex < SubAuthorityCount ; SubAuthIndex++) { *GetSidSubAuthority(pSid, SubAuthIndex) = *GetSidSubAuthority(umi2->usrmod2_domain_id,                                      SubAuthIndex); }

//               // append Rid to new Sid //

*GetSidSubAuthority(pSid, SubAuthorityCount) = Rid;

bSuccess = LookupAccountSidW(                      TargetComputer,                       pSid,                       Name,                       cchName,                       DomainName,                       &cchDomainName,                       &snu                       ); }

HeapFree(GetProcessHeap, 0, pSid); }

NetApiBufferFree(umi2);

return bSuccess; } Additional query words: rename user group usrmgr

Keywords : kbnetwork kbKernBase kbOSWinNT351 kbOSWinNT400 kbOSWin2000 kbSDKPlatform kbSecurity kbNetAPI kbDSupport kbCodeSam kbGrpDSNet kbGrpDSKernBase

Issue type : kbhowto

Technology : kbWin32SDKSearch kbAudDeveloper kbSDKSearch kbWin32sSearch