
Chapter 3 Administering Windows Users, Groups, Computers, and Share Points 37
After creating a home directory for a Windows user, make sure the settings in the
Windows pane are configured correctly. See “Working With Windows Settings for
Users” on page 34 for instructions.
Working With Mail Settings for Users
A Windows user can have a Mac OS X Server mail service account. You create a mail
service account for a user by specifying mail settings for the user in the Mail pane of a
Workgroup Manager user account window. For detailed instructions on the following
tasks, see the chapter on user accounts in the user management guide:
• Disabling a user’s mail service
• Enabling mail service account options
• Forwarding a user’s mail
To use a mail service account, the user simply configures a mail client to identify the
user name, password, mail service, and mail protocol you specify in the Mail pane.
See the mail service administration guide for information about how to set up and
manage Mac OS X Server mail service.
Working With Print Settings for Users
Print settings associated with a user’s account define the ability of a user to print to
accessible Mac OS X Server print queues for which print service enforces print quotas.
The print service administration guide tells you how to set up quota-enforcing print
queues.
You work with a user’s print quotas in the Print pane of a user account window in
Workgroup Manager:
• By default, a user has access to none of the print queues that enforce print quotas.
• You can allow a user access to all print queues that enforce quotas.
• You can let a user print to specific print queues that enforce quotas.
For detailed instructions on working with print settings for users, see the chapter on
user accounts in the user management guide.
Defining a Guest User
You can set up Windows services and some other services to support anonymous
users, who don’t have user accounts. These guest users can’t be authenticated because
they don’t have user names and passwords. You do not have to create a user account
of any kind to support guest users.
The following services can support guest access:
• Windows file, print, browsing, and name resolution services (for setup information,
see “Allowing Guest Access for Windows Services” on page 55)
• Apple file service (for setup information, see the file services administration guide)
• FTP service (for setup information, see the file services administration guide)
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