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Article ID: 272594 - Last Review: November 4, 2007 - Revision: 2.6
Problems logging on to a Windows 2000-based server or a Windows 2003-based server
This article was previously published under Q272594
When you try to log on to a Microsoft Windows
2000-based or
a Microsoft Windows Server 2003-based domain, you may
receive the following error message:
Microsoft
Networking
The domain password you supplied is not correct, or access
to your logon server has been denied.
Also, event ID 681 (account
logon failure) and event ID 529 (unknown user name or bad password) may be
logged in the Security log on the server.
You must restart your
computer before a successful logon can occur.
This problem occurs because the Windows 2000-based server
rejects your logon password when the client computer does not correctly
de-allocate an internal structure that is used to track the logon session. The
client attempts to reuse the expired encryption key that is passed to it by the
server during the original logon.
This problem does not occur in
conjunction with Microsoft Windows NT-based clients because the client does not
attempt to use Distributed File System (DFS) because the session that is reused
is against a DFS referral from the Windows 95-based or Windows 98-based client.
To work around this problem, perform the following steps:
- Restart the client.
- Start Winipcfg.exe and release the Dynamic Host
Configuration Protocol (DHCP) information and renew it.
- Open the share in Network Neighborhood.
- Use the net use command at a command
prompt on the original Windows 2000-based server. - or -
- Click Start, click Run, and then type
\\servername, where
servername is the name of your server.
For additional information about how to control the local
area network (LAN) Autodisconnect feature in Windows 2000, click the article
number below to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
138365Â
(http://kbalertz.com/Feedback.aspx?kbNumber=138365/EN-US/
)
How the Autodisconnect Works in Windows NT
Microsoft
has confirmed that this is a problem in the Microsoft products that are listed
at the beginning of this article.
APPLIES TO
- Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition
- Microsoft Windows 98 Second Edition
- Microsoft Windows 98 Standard Edition
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Server
- Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Standard Edition (32-bit x86)
- Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Datacenter Edition (32-bit x86)
- Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Enterprise Edition (32-bit x86)
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