| KB ID: | 10009 |
| Last Revision: | November 26, 2006 |
| Version: | 1.0 |
Search: Find the events when any user has logged onto any computers in a specific OU.
The most powerful feature of LogClarity® is the ability to search by location. Whether you manage a single OU or a number of domains, you need to search for your managed area in the domain in an intuitive and efficient way. LogClarity® lets you search for events for an entire location in one search.
The primary logons to a computer are logged as:
- Successful Logon (ID: 528)
- Service Ticket Request (ID: 673)
On top of Successful Logons (ID: 528), logons to remote machines might be logged as a Service Ticket Request (ID: 673). Service Ticket Requests are more accurate when using Log Fidelity's solution because domain controllers log multiple identical Service Ticket Requests during the entire session when the user is logged on, but Log Fidelity's solution filters out all the multiple Service Ticket Requests and only logs one Service Ticket Request when the logon actually happens. The only difference between Successful Logons and Service Ticket Requests is that the IP logged by a Successful Logon sometimes contains the IP address of the remote computer if the user is logging in remotely via Terminal Service (aka Remote Desktop) whereas the IP logged in the Service Ticket Request is always the IP Address of the computer being logged onto.
PREREQUISITES
The name (aka sAMAccountName) of the computer.
ESTIMATED QUERY TIME
2-5 seconds.
METHOD 1 (Advanced Search)
1. Find the Distinguished Name
of the OU where the computers are located by typing the OU name in the
Distinguished Name Search Field and click Search.
2. Enter the correct Distinguished Name of the OU in the Target DN
field.
3. Select Logon Events only.
4. Select "Success" in the Type field.
5. Click Submit.
LIKELY SCENARIOS IT APPLIES TO
- You want the usage information of an entire office/lab/department that are organized by OUs.
FINE TUNE YOUR SEARCH
If you know the time scope, domain of the computers, or want to restrict your searches to users in a specific domain you can fine tune your search.

