pub struct Win32_Group {
pub Caption: Option<String>,
pub Description: Option<String>,
pub InstallDate: Option<WMIDateTime>,
pub Status: Option<String>,
pub LocalAccount: Option<bool>,
pub SID: Option<String>,
pub SIDType: Option<u8>,
pub Domain: Option<String>,
pub Name: Option<String>,
}Expand description
The Win32_Group WMI class represents data about a group account.
A group account allows access privileges to be changed for a list of users.
Example: Marketing2.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/cimwin32prov/win32-group
Fields§
§Caption: Option<String>A short textual description of the object.
Description: Option<String>A textual description of the object.
InstallDate: Option<WMIDateTime>Indicates when the object was installed. Lack of a value does not indicate that the object is not installed.
Status: Option<String>String that indicates the current status of the object. Operational and non-operational status can be defined. Operational status can include “OK”, “Degraded”, and “Pred Fail”. “Pred Fail” indicates that an element is functioning properly, but is predicting a failure (for example, a SMART-enabled hard disk drive).
Non-operational status can include “Error”, “Starting”, “Stopping”, and “Service”. “Service” can apply during disk mirror-re-silvering, reloading a user permissions list, or other administrative work. Not all such work is online, but the managed element is neither “OK” nor in one of the other states.
Values include the following:
- OK (“OK”)
- Error (“Error”)
- Degraded (“Degraded”)
- Unknown (“Unknown”)
- Pred Fail (“Pred Fail”)
- Starting (“Starting”)
- Stopping (“Stopping”)
- Service (“Service”)
- Stressed (“Stressed”)
- NonRecover (“NonRecover”)
- No Contact (“No Contact”)
- Lost Comm (“Lost Comm”)
LocalAccount: Option<bool>If TRUE, the account is defined on the local machine. To retrieve only accounts defined on the local machine, design a query that includes the condition “LocalAccount=TRUE”.
SID: Option<String>Security identifier (SID) for this account. A SID is a string value of variable length used to identify a trustee. Each account has a unique SID issued by an authority (such as a Windows domain), stored in a security database. When a user logs on, the system retrieves the user’s SID from the database and places it in the user’s access token. The system uses the SID in the user’s access token to identify the user in all subsequent interactions with Windows security. When a SID has been used as the unique identifier for a user or group, it cannot be used again to identify another user or group.
SIDType: Option<u8>Enumerated values that specify the type of security identifier (SID).
- SidTypeUser (1)
- SidTypeGroup (2)
- SidTypeDomain (3)
- SidTypeAlias (4)
- SidTypeWellKnownGroup (5)
- SidTypeDeletedAccount (6)
- SidTypeInvalid (7)
- SidTypeUnknown (8)
- SidTypeComputer (9)
Domain: Option<String>Name of the Windows domain to which the group account belongs.
Example: “NA-SALES”
Name: Option<String>Name of the Windows group account on the domain specified by the Domain property of this class.
Trait Implementations§
Source§impl Clone for Win32_Group
impl Clone for Win32_Group
Source§fn clone(&self) -> Win32_Group
fn clone(&self) -> Win32_Group
1.0.0 · Source§fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
source. Read more