- Are you installing WebSphere® MQ on a
network where the domain controller is on a Windows® 2000 or Windows 2003 server? If so, you probably
need to obtain a special domain account from your domain administrator. For
further information, and the details that the domain administrator needs to
set up this special account, refer to Configuring WebSphere MQ accounts.
- You must have local administrator authority at the time then you
are installing . Define this authority through the Windows facilities.
- Your user ID must belong to the local mqm or Administrators group
in order to administer any queue manager on that system, or to run any of
the WebSphere MQ control commands. If the
local mqm group does not already exist on the local computer,
it is created automatically when WebSphere MQ is
installed. The user ID can either belong to the local mqm group
directly, or belong indirectly through the inclusion of global groups in the
local mqm group.
- If you intend to administer queue managers on a remote system, your user
ID must be authorized on the target system. The information on protecting WebSphere MQ resources in the WebSphere MQ System
Administration Guide includes
more information on this topic.
- A user account that is used to run the IBM® WebSphere MQ Services COM server is set up by
default during the installation process, typically with the user ID MUSR_MQADMIN.
This account is reserved for use by WebSphere MQ.
Refer to Configuring WebSphere MQ accounts.
For further information about WebSphere MQ user
IDs on Windows systems and the WebSphere MQ Object
Authority Manager (OAM), see the WebSphere MQ System
Administration Guide.