Getting Data In

AD Base Filter syntax

twgtech
New Member

I am using the "Map users directly" config from here -

http://www.splunk.com/base/Documentation/4.1.5/Admin/SetupuserauthenticationwithLDAP#Test_your_LDAP_...

in order to get around referrals in an AD forest with multiple child domains.

Everything is working well, in fact, too well. It is returning all objects, even though my (objectclass=user) is set (I tried people as well. no change).

My question is how can I filter out the computer objects that get returned? Ideally, I'd like to remove everything with a $ in the name. I've tried piping !objectclass=computer into it with no success.

Tags (2)
0 Karma

ziegfried
Influencer

One option is to use the userAccountControl flag to query user accounts:

(&(objectclass=user)(userAccountControl:1.2.840.113556.1.4.803:=512))

(the UAC flag 512 means NORMAL_ACCOUNT)

Your suggestion of filtering accounts with $ in its name would work as well:

(&(!(sAMAccountName=*$*))(objectclass=user))

twgtech
New Member

Thanks, gkanapathy. That works as well. now if I can only get it to distiguish between the same sAMAccountName from different domains. I'll be creating a new question for that one.

0 Karma

gkanapathy
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

Usually in AD, you want (&(ObjectCategory=Person)(objectclass=user)).

0 Karma

twgtech
New Member

DOH! No wonder my query wasn't working. I didn't correctly paren it. Thanks for the examples. A quick shuffle and it's doing exactly what I need.

Thanks much, ziegfried.

0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Feel the Splunk Love: Real Stories from Real Customers

Hello Splunk Community,    What’s the best part of hearing how our customers use Splunk? Easy: the positive ...

Data Management Digest – November 2025

  Welcome to the inaugural edition of Data Management Digest! As your trusted partner in data innovation, the ...

Splunk Mobile: Your Brand-New Home Screen

Meet Your New Mobile Hub  Hello Splunk Community!  Staying connected to your data—no matter where you are—is ...