F ferrethouse Beta member Messages 4 Oct 11, 2006 #1 I want to give one of our developers access to the production database server but only so that he can restart Oracle services. Is this possible?
I want to give one of our developers access to the production database server but only so that he can restart Oracle services. Is this possible?
B bilbus In Runtime Messages 190 Oct 19, 2006 #2 http://www.windowsitpro.com/Article/ArticleID/49514/49514.html I dont think you can do this in local security policy. so you need AD for this to work, but it works
http://www.windowsitpro.com/Article/ArticleID/49514/49514.html I dont think you can do this in local security policy. so you need AD for this to work, but it works
dude_se Proper Legend Messages 8,634 Location UK Oct 21, 2006 #4 john123 said: microsoft shared user toolkit Click to expand... you beat me to it .... then again im not sure if this has the option you want as i dont remember seeing anything like it when i used to use the program but worth a try anyway
john123 said: microsoft shared user toolkit Click to expand... you beat me to it .... then again im not sure if this has the option you want as i dont remember seeing anything like it when i used to use the program but worth a try anyway
root Site Team Staff member Messages 8,185 Location UK Oct 23, 2006 #5 ferrethouse said: I want to give one of our developers access to the production database server but only so that he can restart Oracle services. Is this possible? Click to expand... Yes, you can allow access to any or no services... you need to use the service access control list to specify who can access what services. (it's called svcacls.exe from the windows resource Kit). the trouble is that you're going to have to deny access to all services to that user, excpt for the Oracle service, so it may take a while to set up.
ferrethouse said: I want to give one of our developers access to the production database server but only so that he can restart Oracle services. Is this possible? Click to expand... Yes, you can allow access to any or no services... you need to use the service access control list to specify who can access what services. (it's called svcacls.exe from the windows resource Kit). the trouble is that you're going to have to deny access to all services to that user, excpt for the Oracle service, so it may take a while to set up.