System information

Remote Servers and Split Boot Servers
119
folder on the left pane. Press the right mouse button over the folder and
select
Copy
.
30.Select the
G:
—>
QIBM
—>
UserData
—>
NetworkStation
—>
Users
folder on the left pane. On the right pane, right-click over a white area and
select
Paste
.
31.Finally you have to copy both user data folders, which are in
F:
—>
QIBM
—>
UserData
—>
NetworkStation
—>
Home
—>
ITSCIDGRPA
and
F:
—>
QIBM
—>
UserData
—>
NetworkStation
—>
Home
—>
TSCIDGRPB
. These subdirectories may not exist. If they do, proceed
through steps 32 through 35.
32.Starting with ITSCIDGRPA. Select the
F:
—>
QIBM
—>
UserData
—>
NetworkStation
—>
Home
—>
I TSCIDGRPA
folder on the left pane.
Press the right mouse button over the folder and select
Copy
.
33.Select the
G:
—>
QIBM
—>
UserData
—>
NetworkStation
—>
Home
folder on the left pane. On the right pane, right-click over a white area and
select
Paste
.
34.Now user ITSCIDGRPB. Select the
F:
—>
QIBM
—>
UserData
—>
NetworkStation
—>
Home
—>
ITSCIDGRPB
folder on the left pane.
Press the right mouse button over the folder and select
Copy
.
35.Select the
G:
—>
QIBM
—>
UserData
—>
NetworkStation
—>
Home
folder on the left pane. On the right pane right-click over a white area and
select
Paste
.
As a result of doing the above tasks, the distributed users in site C can
boot locally from their server, but are managed (for example,
authenticated) from the central server at site A.
Be careful not to overwrite other user’s data that may exist.
For example, let us assume that before doing the migration, you have a
user called
cashier1
defined on AS/400 systems at site A and B. When you
try to migrate
cashier1’s
configuration from site B to site A, you will
overwrite Site A
cashier1’s
configuration because they both sit at
\QIBM\UserData\NetworkStation\users\cashier1 or
\QIBM\UserData\NetworkStation\groups\cashier1. Be sure to plan ahead
and choose your user profile names carefully.
Note