Group Policy is used to Change and Configuration Management features of the Microsoft Windows operating system. Group Policy specifies settings for groups of users and of computers, including registry-based policy settings, security settings, software installation, scripts (computer startup and shutdown, and log on and log off), and folder redirection. It is the most important and essential way, for an organization to enforce the setting in their computer systems. When the group policy is created there will be reduction of costs and it keeps the productive active and it maintains security.
The group policies usually allow the administrator to be able to define the options for what the users can be able to do on a network. This includes what
…show more content…
A non-local group policy can be applied to all users and computers in a domain or to a OU depending on where the group policy is linked.
Group policy settings:
Computer Configuration: In computer configuration policies are applied to computer, regardless of who logs on to the computers.
User Configuration: In User Configuration policies are applied to users regardless of which computers they log on. Both the configurations contain sub-items for software settings, windows settings, and administrative templates.
To change the default processing order of GPOs:
Group Policy Objects are prepared in the accompanying request
Local: the computers local policy settings, it’s traditionally one per system but after windows vista there are multiple settings as per user accounts.
Site - Any Group Policies related with the Active Directory site in which the PC dwells. (An Active Directory site is a legitimate gathering of PCs, expected to encourage administration of those PCs considering their physical nearness.) If different approaches are connected to a site, they are handled in the request set by the