Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 User Manual

Page 15

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7

Windows NT 4.0 and

Windows 95

User Profile Differences

Windows 95

Profiles are very similar in behavior to Windows NT 4.0 Profiles, but

there are some differences.

Unlike Windows NT 4.0,

Windows 95

downloads and writes User Profiles to

the user’s home directory. When the

Windows 95

user first logs on, the UNC

path specified in the user account’s home directory path is checked for the

Windows 95

User Profile. You can modify this behavior, however. See the Win-

dows 95 Resource Kit for more information.

Windows 95 and Windows NT 4.0 User Profiles have the following addi-

tional functional differences:

Windows 95 does not support common groups.

Windows 95 can be configured to copy only the shortcut (.lnk) and Pro-

gram Information Files (.pif) when the User Profile is downloaded,

whereas Windows NT downloads all file, shortcut, and directory objects.

Windows 95 User Profiles do not support a centrally stored Default User

Profile.

Windows 95 uses different files for the registry portion of User Profiles.

(Refer to the following table.) Windows 95 and Windows NT 4.0 profiles

are not interchangeable, primarily because the registry hive, which is a key

component of the User Profile, is incompatible between operating system

versions.

Windows NT 4.0 file

Equivalent Windows 95 file

NTuser.dat

User.dat

NTuser.dat.log

User.da0

NTuser.man

User.man

NOTE: The Windows 95 User.da0 and Windows NT 4.0 Ntuser.dat.log, while equivalent, provide
slightly different functionality. Windows 95 writes a copy of User.dat to User.da0 each time the user
logs off. Windows NT uses the Ntuser.dat.log file as a transaction log file. This allows for fault toler-
ance in the event that a User Profile must be recovered.

Windows 95 and Windows NT 4.0 file structures are identical with the ex-

ception of the Application Data directory. Windows 95 does not support

this directory.

Windows 95 User Profiles can be stored on NetWare servers. For more in-

formation on configuring a client with a Primary Network Logon of Client for

NetWare Networks, see the chapter “Windows 95 on NetWare Networks” in

the Windows 95 Resource Kit. For more information on configuring a client that

uses Microsoft Service for NetWare Directory Services, see the online Help

that accompanies the service.

How User Profiles Are Handled in Windows 95

When a user logs on to a Windows 95 machine, the local profile path,

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Profile

List

, is checked for an existing entry for that user:

If the user has an entry in this registry location, Windows 95 checks for a lo-

cally cached version of the user’s profile. Windows 95 also checks the user’s

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