<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><title>spn</title><id>https://evotec.xyz/es/tags/spn/index.atom.xml</id><updated>2021-12-07T15:32:01.0000000Z</updated><subtitle>Evotec Main Website</subtitle><link href="https://evotec.xyz/es/tags/spn" /><link href="https://evotec.xyz/es/tags/spn/index.atom.xml" rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" /><entry><title>Finding duplicate SPN with PowerShell</title><id>https://evotec.xyz/es/blog/finding-duplicate-spn-with-powershell</id><link href="https://evotec.xyz/es/blog/finding-duplicate-spn-with-powershell" /><updated>2021-12-07T15:32:01.0000000Z</updated><summary>Duplicate SPNs aren’t very common but can happen in any Active Directory as there’s no built-in way that tracks and prevent duplicate SPN’s. One has to either know all SPN’s in the environment, track them or check each time whether it already exists or not. Things get more complicated with larger Active Directory environments as people change, new apps are added, old apps are forgotten, but SPNs prevail.</summary><category term="active directory" /><category term="ad" /><category term="adessentials" /><category term="forest" /><category term="powershell" /><category term="spn" /><category term="testimo" /></entry></feed>