Analysis of how xp gives the guest remote shutdown permission

  
Everyone knows that in the xp system, only the administrator authority can complete the shutdown operation. Sometimes, for the convenience, we need to use the remote to control the shutdown operation of the computer, but only the guest permission is denied access, so here we Just take a look at how xp gives the guest the right to remotely shut down.
Click the "Start” menu and click the "Control Panel" option.
Double click on “Administrative Tools”-“Local Security Policy”.

Double click on “Local Policies”, the items that appear, click "User Rights Assignment".

Select and double-click to open the "Forced shutdown from remote system" project.

Enter the "Properties" interface, click “Add User & Group> in "Local Security Settings".

In the Select Users and Groups dialog box, click “Advanced"-“ Find Now”, select “Guest”, click all the way > OK”.

From the remote system forced shutdown properties you can see that a "Guest" user has been added.

To remotely shut down the computer, use the “shutdown -s –m \\sunbird -t 30” command on the remote machine. If you want to restart the computer remotely, use the remote machine to "shutdown -r" -t 0” command.

General remote control computer is a guest permission, but compared to the administrator privileges, the guest permissions are quite limited, some operations are not given permission, the guest is inoperable, so in order to satisfy us The need, we have to give the corresponding operation rights to the guest.

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