There are different types of accounts and services that are a part of the authentication and authorization process on a Mac. Each of these accounts and services originate from the way that macOS works with local user account management. Leverage these best practices for account management on macOS with ̽»¨´óÉñ. Learn how to create an account for macOS, take over existing accounts, and more.
Terminology, Definitions, and Services
Term | Definition & Service |
---|---|
Login Password (or User Password) |
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Bootstrap Token |
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Keychain |
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FileVault (FV) |
|
Creating a Mac Account for the First Time
To set up your macOS account for the first time:
- Verify that the Sleep, Restart and Shutdown buttons are visible on the Login screen.
- The User Account you created during the macOS initial setup is presented to you for login.
- At this point, FileVault is not enabled, so there won't be a login screen for FileVault at this time.
When the first macOS user is created on a new device, the initial account is given the UniqueID of 501. This can be verified by looking at the Directory Utility by going to macOS > Directory Editor > Viewing: Users.
In the latest versions of macOS Big Sur and above, you can verify that the initial user setup on a Mac device is provided with a Secure Token:
To install the ̽»¨´óÉñ agent:
- Install the .
- You can do this through any available method:
- You can do this through any available method:
- When the macOS ̽»¨´óÉñ Agent has been installed, you can verify the agent's service account within Directory Utility. During the macOS ̽»¨´óÉñ Agent installation, the service account user _jumpcloudserviceaccount, will also be granted a Secure Token.
Creating New Accounts on Mac
After you create a new account, you can provision accounts from ̽»¨´óÉñ. New accounts can be made for users that already exist and are active within ̽»¨´óÉñ.To create a new user account on macOS for an active ̽»¨´óÉñ user:
- Bind the user to a device by going to the user's Details panel and clicking Devices.
- Allow up to a few minutes for the synchronization to take place.
- Advise your user to log in using their ̽»¨´óÉñ credentials.
- The user is prompted to go through macOS's one-time menu before accessing their macOS desktop since this a brand new user from the macOS's device's perspective.
- The user will then be presented their macOS desktop and can begin working and using their new Mac device.
Note: User's UniqueID numbers will increase incrementally by one when provisioning new users to macOS. For example, the firstaccount user is given 501. If we were going to provision a new user, i.e. secondaccount, from ̽»¨´óÉñ to this Mac device, the new user, secondaccount, would be assigned the UID 502.
Taking Over an Existing Account
To take over an existing account with ̽»¨´óÉñ, see Take Over an Existing User Account with ̽»¨´óÉñ.
Note: Ensure that only UNIX or POSIX characters are used within usernames in both macOS and ̽»¨´óÉñ. Verify that the macOS username matches the ̽»¨´óÉñ Local User Account attribute.
Enabling FileVault and MacOS
If it's the first time you're enabling FileVault on a Mac, the user enabling FileVault will be required to log out for it to take effect. Whether you manually enforce FileVault through System Settings in macOS, or use ̽»¨´óÉñ's Create a Mac FileVault 2 Policy, both have the same first-time workflow for enabling FileVault.Â
When a device is undergoing first-time FileVault enablement, the user is prompted to enter the password for "firstaccount" to be added to FileVault.
Log back in to confirm FileVault is enabled:
When restarting the Mac to show the FileVault login screen, use these guidelines:
- The FileVault login screen is to unlock the disk, which means the macOS hasn't been loaded yet.
- You won't be able to connect to wifi or networking in this state because macOS isn't loaded.
- All users with Secure Token will be listed.