Microsoft Knowledge Base Article
This article contents is Microsoft Copyrighted material.
©2005-©2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Terms
of Use |
Trademarks
Article ID: 162325 - Last Review: January 19, 2007 - Revision: 1.2
Err Msg: You Must Provide a Password to Make This Connection
This article was previously published under Q162325
When you are using Dial-Up Networking, you may experience the following
symptoms:
- When you use Dial-Up Networking to connect from a Windows 95-based
computer to a Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 Workstation-based computer,
you connect but you may receive the following message when you attempt
to browse the Windows NT-based computer:
Enter network password. You must provide a password to make this
connection.
Resource: \\<computername>\ipc$
- When you use Dial-Up Networking to connect from a Windows 95-based
computer to a Windows 95-based computer, you connect but you may
receive the following message when you attempt to browse the host
computer:
Enter network password. You must provide a password to make this
connection.
Resource: \\<computername>\ipc$
This behavior can occur for any of the following reasons:
- The Windows 95-based computer is not a client of a domain environment
but the Log On To Windows NT Domain option is enabled.
- The user name and password you are using to log in to the Windows
95-based computer are not contained in the local user accounts database
of the Windows NT-based computer you are attempting to browse.
- The Windows 95-based host is configured with user-level authentication
to an NT domain.
To resolve this issue, use the appropriate method:
Disable the Log On To Windows NT Domain Option
Disable the Log On To Windows NT Domain option on the Windows 95 client
computer. To do so, follow these steps:
- Click Start, point to Settings, click Control Panel, and then double-
click Network.
- On the Configuration tab, click Client For Microsoft Networks, and
then click Properties.
- In the Logon Validation section, click the Log On To Windows NT Domain
check box to clear it.
- Click OK.
Log on to Windows 95 with a Valid Windows NT User Account
Log on to the Windows 95-based computer using a user name and password
that is contained in the local user accounts database of the Windows NT-
based computer you are attempting to browse. To do so, follow these steps:
Windows 95 without Internet Explorer 4.0 installed:
- Save and close any open work on your computer.
- Click Start, and then click Shut Down.
- Click the "Close all programs and log on as a different user", and then
click OK.
- Click Yes.
- When you are prompted, log on to the Windows 95-based computer with a
user name and password contained in the local user accounts database of
the Windows NT-based computer you are attempting to browse.
Windows 95/98 with Internet Explorer 4.0 installed:
- Save and close any open work on your computer.
- Click Start, and then click Log Off <username>, where <username> is the
name of the user currently logged on to the computer.
- Click Yes.
- When you are prompted, log on to the Windows 95-based computer with a
user name and password contained in the local user accounts database of
the Windows NT-based computer you are attempting to browse.
Set Up User Accounts in the Local Accounts Database
Use the User Manager tool to set up user accounts in the local accounts
database of the Windows NT-based computer that you are attempting to
browse. These user accounts need to contain the same logon information
(user name and password) that is used when a user logs on to his or her
computer.
Disable User-level Authentication on the Windows 95-based Host
- Save and close any open work on your computer.
- Open the Network control panel on the Windows 95-based host.
- Select the "Access Control" tab.
- Select the "Share-level Access Control" radio button and click OK.
- Restart the computer as prompted.
This behavior can occur when the workgroup name is entered for the domain
name. When Windows 95 Dial-Up Networking initially makes the connection,
it prompts you for the domain name and caches this information. The error
message occurs because the Windows NT computer cannot validate you.
When you connect to a Windows NT Remote Access Service (RAS) Server, you
are prompted to provide a user name and password to make the RAS
connection. When the connection is successful, the user name and password
you used to log in to Windows 95 is used to determine if you have
permission to access the Windows NT computer you are attempting to browse.
If the user name and password does not exist in the local user accounts
database of the Windows NT computer, you are unable to browse or access
resources on that computer.
APPLIES TO
- Microsoft Windows 95
- Microsoft Windows 98 Standard Edition
- Microsoft Windows NT Server 4.0 Standard Edition
- Microsoft Windows NT Workstation 4.0 Developer Edition
| kberrmsg kbnetwork kbprb KB162325 |
Community Feedback System
Very often, it takes hours to solve a problem. Very often, you've looked high
and low, and have tried a lot of solutions. When you finally found it, chances
are, it was because someone else helped you. Here's your chance to give back.
Use our community feedback tool to let others know what worked for you and what
didn't.
Please also understand that the community feedback system is not warranted to be
correct, it's simply a system that we've built to let people try and help each
other. If something in a feedback response doesn't make sense to you, or you're
not comfortable making changes that the feedback talks about (like registry
edits), please consult a professional.
Thank you for using kbAlertz.com Feedback System.
-- Scott Cate