Groups and user authentication on Windows
Users are defined on Windows by
creating user accounts using the Windows administration
tool called the "User Manager". An account containing other accounts,
also called members, is a group.
Trust relationships between domains on Windows
Trust relationships are an administration and communication
link between two domains. A trust relationship between two domains
enables user accounts and global groups to be used in a domain other
than the domain where the accounts are defined.
Using an access token to acquire users' group information (Windows)
An access token is an object that describes the security
context of a process or thread. The information in an access token
includes the identity and privileges of the user account associated
with the process or thread.
Authentication using an ordered domain list
User IDs may be defined more than once in a trusted domain
forest. A trusted domain forest is a collection of domains that are
interrelated through a network.
Domain security support (Windows)
The following example illustrates how the DB2 database management system can support Windows domain security. The
connection works because the user name and local group are on the
same domain.