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Secedit.exe Tutorial

Secedit, originally introduced in Windows 2000, provides a way to manage security templates from a command-line interface. Secedit is especially valuable in batch files, which make automating the configuration and analysis of security templates and creating your own security templates from scratch easier.

Secedit works well in conjunction with Windows's Security Configuration and Analysis tool set, which is a Microsoft Management Console (MMC) snap-in used to work with security templates and databases. For more information on the Security Configuration and Analysis snap-in, see the Windows .NET Server Help and Support Center.

Secedit has four basic command modes:

Secedit enables you to import a security template, compare it to your current configuration, apply it to your computer, or export a security database to a security template. By running Secedit from within a batch file—such as a logon script—you can automate the collection of security information throughout your enterprise. For example, you might use Secedit to automatically compare several computers to a baseline security template and analyze the results to find computers that aren't in compliance with the baseline.

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