Trust Relationships

Windows NT Server directory services provide security across multiple domains through trust relationships. A trust relationship is a link that combines two domains into one administrative unit that can authorize access to resources on both domains.

There are two types of trust relationships:

Note

Using resources located on any domain, trusting or otherwise, is always subject to permissions associated with the resources.

Through File Manager, users from the trusted domain can be given rights and permissions to objects in the trusting domain, as if they were members of the trusting domain. Users in the trusted domain can browse resources in the trusting domain, subject to account privilege.

For example, suppose the London domain trusts the Topeka domain of a corporate network. User EmilyP, who is a member of the Topeka domain, wants to access Myfile.txt, which is a file located on a computer in the London domain running Windows NT Server. When EmilyP attempts to log on to the server in London, her user account information is not transferred to the London domain's user database. Because London trusts Topeka, the London domain has access to user information in the Topeka domain's user-account database.