#[non_exhaustive]pub struct SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration {
pub domain_name: Option<String>,
pub organizational_unit_distinguished_name: Option<String>,
pub file_system_administrators_group: Option<String>,
pub user_name: Option<String>,
pub password: Option<String>,
pub dns_ips: Option<Vec<String>>,
pub domain_join_service_account_secret: Option<String>,
}Expand description
The configuration that Amazon FSx uses to join a FSx for Windows File Server file system or an FSx for ONTAP storage virtual machine (SVM) to a self-managed (including on-premises) Microsoft Active Directory (AD) directory. For more information, see Using Amazon FSx for Windows with your self-managed Microsoft Active Directory or Managing FSx for ONTAP SVMs.
Fields (Non-exhaustive)§
This struct is marked as non-exhaustive
Struct { .. } syntax; cannot be matched against without a wildcard ..; and struct update syntax will not work.domain_name: Option<String>The fully qualified domain name of the self-managed AD directory, such as corp.example.com.
organizational_unit_distinguished_name: Option<String>(Optional) The fully qualified distinguished name of the organizational unit within your self-managed AD directory. Amazon FSx only accepts OU as the direct parent of the file system. An example is OU=FSx,DC=yourdomain,DC=corp,DC=com. To learn more, see RFC 2253. If none is provided, the FSx file system is created in the default location of your self-managed AD directory.
Only Organizational Unit (OU) objects can be the direct parent of the file system that you're creating.
file_system_administrators_group: Option<String>(Optional) The name of the domain group whose members are granted administrative privileges for the file system. Administrative privileges include taking ownership of files and folders, setting audit controls (audit ACLs) on files and folders, and administering the file system remotely by using the FSx Remote PowerShell. The group that you specify must already exist in your domain. If you don't provide one, your AD domain's Domain Admins group is used.
user_name: Option<String>The user name for the service account on your self-managed AD domain that Amazon FSx will use to join to your AD domain. This account must have the permission to join computers to the domain in the organizational unit provided in OrganizationalUnitDistinguishedName, or in the default location of your AD domain.
password: Option<String>The password for the service account on your self-managed AD domain that Amazon FSx will use to join to your AD domain.
dns_ips: Option<Vec<String>>A list of up to three IP addresses of DNS servers or domain controllers in the self-managed AD directory.
domain_join_service_account_secret: Option<String>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager secret containing the self-managed Active Directory domain join service account credentials. When provided, Amazon FSx uses the credentials stored in this secret to join the file system to your self-managed Active Directory domain.
The secret must contain two key-value pairs:
-
CUSTOMER_MANAGED_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_USERNAME- The username for the service account -
CUSTOMER_MANAGED_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_PASSWORD- The password for the service account
For more information, see Using Amazon FSx for Windows with your self-managed Microsoft Active Directory or Using Amazon FSx for ONTAP with your self-managed Microsoft Active Directory.
Implementations§
Source§impl SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
impl SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
Sourcepub fn domain_name(&self) -> Option<&str>
pub fn domain_name(&self) -> Option<&str>
The fully qualified domain name of the self-managed AD directory, such as corp.example.com.
Sourcepub fn organizational_unit_distinguished_name(&self) -> Option<&str>
pub fn organizational_unit_distinguished_name(&self) -> Option<&str>
(Optional) The fully qualified distinguished name of the organizational unit within your self-managed AD directory. Amazon FSx only accepts OU as the direct parent of the file system. An example is OU=FSx,DC=yourdomain,DC=corp,DC=com. To learn more, see RFC 2253. If none is provided, the FSx file system is created in the default location of your self-managed AD directory.
Only Organizational Unit (OU) objects can be the direct parent of the file system that you're creating.
Sourcepub fn file_system_administrators_group(&self) -> Option<&str>
pub fn file_system_administrators_group(&self) -> Option<&str>
(Optional) The name of the domain group whose members are granted administrative privileges for the file system. Administrative privileges include taking ownership of files and folders, setting audit controls (audit ACLs) on files and folders, and administering the file system remotely by using the FSx Remote PowerShell. The group that you specify must already exist in your domain. If you don't provide one, your AD domain's Domain Admins group is used.
Sourcepub fn user_name(&self) -> Option<&str>
pub fn user_name(&self) -> Option<&str>
The user name for the service account on your self-managed AD domain that Amazon FSx will use to join to your AD domain. This account must have the permission to join computers to the domain in the organizational unit provided in OrganizationalUnitDistinguishedName, or in the default location of your AD domain.
Sourcepub fn password(&self) -> Option<&str>
pub fn password(&self) -> Option<&str>
The password for the service account on your self-managed AD domain that Amazon FSx will use to join to your AD domain.
Sourcepub fn dns_ips(&self) -> &[String]
pub fn dns_ips(&self) -> &[String]
A list of up to three IP addresses of DNS servers or domain controllers in the self-managed AD directory.
If no value was sent for this field, a default will be set. If you want to determine if no value was sent, use .dns_ips.is_none().
Sourcepub fn domain_join_service_account_secret(&self) -> Option<&str>
pub fn domain_join_service_account_secret(&self) -> Option<&str>
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager secret containing the self-managed Active Directory domain join service account credentials. When provided, Amazon FSx uses the credentials stored in this secret to join the file system to your self-managed Active Directory domain.
The secret must contain two key-value pairs:
-
CUSTOMER_MANAGED_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_USERNAME- The username for the service account -
CUSTOMER_MANAGED_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY_PASSWORD- The password for the service account
For more information, see Using Amazon FSx for Windows with your self-managed Microsoft Active Directory or Using Amazon FSx for ONTAP with your self-managed Microsoft Active Directory.
Source§impl SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
impl SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
Sourcepub fn builder() -> SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfigurationBuilder
pub fn builder() -> SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfigurationBuilder
Creates a new builder-style object to manufacture SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration.
Trait Implementations§
Source§impl Clone for SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
impl Clone for SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
Source§fn clone(&self) -> SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
fn clone(&self) -> SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
1.0.0 · Source§fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
source. Read moreSource§impl PartialEq for SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
impl PartialEq for SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
Source§fn eq(&self, other: &SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration) -> bool
fn eq(&self, other: &SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration) -> bool
self and other values to be equal, and is used by ==.impl StructuralPartialEq for SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
Auto Trait Implementations§
impl Freeze for SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
impl RefUnwindSafe for SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
impl Send for SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
impl Sync for SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
impl Unpin for SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
impl UnwindSafe for SelfManagedActiveDirectoryConfiguration
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