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Showing results for tags 'Trusts'.
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I successfully installed SCOM clients onto computers belonging to an external but trusted domain, but ran into authentication problems along the way. I had to change one trust relationship setting to make it work. Here's what I found I had to do to make cross-domain installation and monitoring work: * Changed my trust relationship from "External" to "Forest," to enable Kerberos authentication * Open needed network firewall ports, as the external domain's network is separated by a firewall router deliberately * Create an action account that matched a domain account in the external domain * Changed the trust relationship to permit forest-wide authentication, as it was originally selective authentication I'm comfortable with all of these except the last one. When I had selective authentication enabled, I would see event ID 20057 on the external domain PCs, indicating an error 0xC000413 (Authentication firewall); the external domain PCs were not permitted to log on to the SCOM management server. Usually if I want to grant cross-domain logon permission I would go to the computer account and grant the "Allowed to Authenticate" permission to the external domain's account, but that alone didn't work. I granted that permission to the action account first, and when that didn't work I tried granting it to an external PC's computer account. Only after permitting forest-wide authentication did clients start reporting in by themselves. If I want to restore selective authentication to this domain trust, what permissions do I need to grant to what accounts so SCOM clients can report in? --
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Hi, I have been looking for a definitive answer to the following: Can a single SCCM Primary site server be used to manage clients across multiple domains with no trusts in place? If so what are the prerequisites, limitations/issues? Any information would be appreciated.