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#1
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There are no logon servers available to service the logon request
Right
I have a work laptop that connects to a domain. When I am at home and connect to the domain over the VPN I can access the fileshare on my laptop. When I bring the laptop home and connect to my home network I cannot access the fileshare - I get the error message above. I can see the machine in the Network Neighbourhood - I just cannot see any of the fileshares or connect to them in anyway. (This happens regardless of whether I shutdown the laptop at work or I leave it running when I bring it home). The strangest thing is this used to work (ie. I could do the above and see the fileshare and access it no problems at all). Now it does not. What do I need to investigate to fix this. Many thanks for any help in advance. |
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#2
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There are no logon servers available to service the logon request
You may try this command when you are home network: net use \\computername
/user:username Or this search result may give more details. Please post back with the result. workgroup networking faqs There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request - \\Computername is not accessible ... www.howtonetworking.com/workgroupnet.htm -- Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Mark" wrote in message ... Right I have a work laptop that connects to a domain. When I am at home and connect to the domain over the VPN I can access the fileshare on my laptop. When I bring the laptop home and connect to my home network I cannot access the fileshare - I get the error message above. I can see the machine in the Network Neighbourhood - I just cannot see any of the fileshares or connect to them in anyway. (This happens regardless of whether I shutdown the laptop at work or I leave it running when I bring it home). The strangest thing is this used to work (ie. I could do the above and see the fileshare and access it no problems at all). Now it does not. What do I need to investigate to fix this. Many thanks for any help in advance. |
#3
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There are no logon servers available to service the logon request
Unfortunitely I get this error message :
"System error 1311 has occurred. There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request." "Robert L. (MS-MVP)" wrote in message ... You may try this command when you are home network: net use \\computername /user:username Or this search result may give more details. Please post back with the result. workgroup networking faqs There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request - \\Computername is not accessible ... www.howtonetworking.com/workgroupnet.htm -- Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Mark" wrote in message ... Right I have a work laptop that connects to a domain. When I am at home and connect to the domain over the VPN I can access the fileshare on my laptop. When I bring the laptop home and connect to my home network I cannot access the fileshare - I get the error message above. I can see the machine in the Network Neighbourhood - I just cannot see any of the fileshares or connect to them in anyway. (This happens regardless of whether I shutdown the laptop at work or I leave it running when I bring it home). The strangest thing is this used to work (ie. I could do the above and see the fileshare and access it no problems at all). Now it does not. What do I need to investigate to fix this. Many thanks for any help in advance. |
#4
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There are no logon servers available to service the logon request
On Oct 8, 8:45*am, "No One" wrote:
Unfortunitely I get this error message : "System error 1311 has occurred. There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request." "Robert L. (MS-MVP)" wrote in . .. You may try this command when you are home network: net use \\computername /user:username Or this search result may give more details. Please post back with the result. workgroup networking faqs There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request - \\Computername is not accessible ... www.howtonetworking.com/workgroupnet.htm -- Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Mark" wrote in message ... Right I have a work laptop that connects to a domain. When I am at home and connect to the domain over the VPN I can access the fileshare on my laptop. When I bring the laptop home and connect to my home network I cannot access the fileshare - I get the error message above. I can see the machine in the Network Neighbourhood - I just cannot see any of the fileshares or connect to them in anyway. (This happens regardless of whether I shutdown the laptop at work or I leave it running when I bring it home). The strangest thing is this used to work (ie. I could do the above and see the fileshare and access it no problems at all). *Now it does not. What do I need to investigate to fix this. Many thanks for any help in advance. There are two possible cause: 1) VPN does not normally send / resolve the computer's name, VPN normally sends only traffic via the IP addresses. 2) Anti-virus softwares that block the NetBIOS name resolution protocol. Several anti-virus (especially Norton) blocks the NetBIOS name resolution as part of the Internet worm blocking module. Locate the PC's IP address and then try to access this via the IP address (\\192.168.1.1) instead of the name (\\Computer.) |
#5
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There are no logon servers available to service the logon requ
I dont believe this is the problem...
I can connect from the Home PC to the Work Laptop File Share when the Home PC is connected to the Work Network via VPN (the Laptop is still at work connected to the Work Network - an NT Domain) I cannot connect to the Work Laptop File Share from the Home PC when the Laptop is at home and only connected to the Home Network (although it is still logged into the Domain using cached credentials) Note when the Work Laptop is at Home connected to the Home Network I can still Remote Desktop to it and I can still see it in the Network Neighbourhood. Note that there is a user on the Work Laptop with the same User ID and Password as exists on my Home PC. Every User is an Administrator. "smlunatick" wrote: On Oct 8, 8:45 am, "No One" wrote: Unfortunitely I get this error message : "System error 1311 has occurred. There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request." "Robert L. (MS-MVP)" wrote in . .. You may try this command when you are home network: net use \\computername /user:username Or this search result may give more details. Please post back with the result. workgroup networking faqs There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request - \\Computername is not accessible ... www.howtonetworking.com/workgroupnet.htm -- Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Mark" wrote in message ... Right I have a work laptop that connects to a domain. When I am at home and connect to the domain over the VPN I can access the fileshare on my laptop. When I bring the laptop home and connect to my home network I cannot access the fileshare - I get the error message above. I can see the machine in the Network Neighbourhood - I just cannot see any of the fileshares or connect to them in anyway. (This happens regardless of whether I shutdown the laptop at work or I leave it running when I bring it home). The strangest thing is this used to work (ie. I could do the above and see the fileshare and access it no problems at all). Now it does not. What do I need to investigate to fix this. Many thanks for any help in advance. There are two possible cause: 1) VPN does not normally send / resolve the computer's name, VPN normally sends only traffic via the IP addresses. 2) Anti-virus softwares that block the NetBIOS name resolution protocol. Several anti-virus (especially Norton) blocks the NetBIOS name resolution as part of the Internet worm blocking module. Locate the PC's IP address and then try to access this via the IP address (\\192.168.1.1) instead of the name (\\Computer.) |
#6
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There are no logon servers available to service the logon requ
Mark,
I've been working on this problem for several months now. I first saw it in June and have had absolutely no luck with responses on the forum. What Service Pack are you running? -Harrier "Mark" wrote: I dont believe this is the problem... I can connect from the Home PC to the Work Laptop File Share when the Home PC is connected to the Work Network via VPN (the Laptop is still at work connected to the Work Network - an NT Domain) I cannot connect to the Work Laptop File Share from the Home PC when the Laptop is at home and only connected to the Home Network (although it is still logged into the Domain using cached credentials) Note when the Work Laptop is at Home connected to the Home Network I can still Remote Desktop to it and I can still see it in the Network Neighbourhood. Note that there is a user on the Work Laptop with the same User ID and Password as exists on my Home PC. Every User is an Administrator. "smlunatick" wrote: On Oct 8, 8:45 am, "No One" wrote: Unfortunitely I get this error message : "System error 1311 has occurred. There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request." "Robert L. (MS-MVP)" wrote in . .. You may try this command when you are home network: net use \\computername /user:username Or this search result may give more details. Please post back with the result. workgroup networking faqs There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request - \\Computername is not accessible ... www.howtonetworking.com/workgroupnet.htm -- Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Mark" wrote in message ... Right I have a work laptop that connects to a domain. When I am at home and connect to the domain over the VPN I can access the fileshare on my laptop. When I bring the laptop home and connect to my home network I cannot access the fileshare - I get the error message above. I can see the machine in the Network Neighbourhood - I just cannot see any of the fileshares or connect to them in anyway. (This happens regardless of whether I shutdown the laptop at work or I leave it running when I bring it home). The strangest thing is this used to work (ie. I could do the above and see the fileshare and access it no problems at all). Now it does not. What do I need to investigate to fix this. Many thanks for any help in advance. There are two possible cause: 1) VPN does not normally send / resolve the computer's name, VPN normally sends only traffic via the IP addresses. 2) Anti-virus softwares that block the NetBIOS name resolution protocol. Several anti-virus (especially Norton) blocks the NetBIOS name resolution as part of the Internet worm blocking module. Locate the PC's IP address and then try to access this via the IP address (\\192.168.1.1) instead of the name (\\Computer.) |
#7
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There are no logon servers available to service the logon requ
Service Pack 3 - Fully Up to Date...
"harrier" wrote: Mark, I've been working on this problem for several months now. I first saw it in June and have had absolutely no luck with responses on the forum. What Service Pack are you running? -Harrier "Mark" wrote: I dont believe this is the problem... I can connect from the Home PC to the Work Laptop File Share when the Home PC is connected to the Work Network via VPN (the Laptop is still at work connected to the Work Network - an NT Domain) I cannot connect to the Work Laptop File Share from the Home PC when the Laptop is at home and only connected to the Home Network (although it is still logged into the Domain using cached credentials) Note when the Work Laptop is at Home connected to the Home Network I can still Remote Desktop to it and I can still see it in the Network Neighbourhood. Note that there is a user on the Work Laptop with the same User ID and Password as exists on my Home PC. Every User is an Administrator. "smlunatick" wrote: On Oct 8, 8:45 am, "No One" wrote: Unfortunitely I get this error message : "System error 1311 has occurred. There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request." "Robert L. (MS-MVP)" wrote in . .. You may try this command when you are home network: net use \\computername /user:username Or this search result may give more details. Please post back with the result. workgroup networking faqs There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request - \\Computername is not accessible ... www.howtonetworking.com/workgroupnet.htm -- Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Mark" wrote in message ... Right I have a work laptop that connects to a domain. When I am at home and connect to the domain over the VPN I can access the fileshare on my laptop. When I bring the laptop home and connect to my home network I cannot access the fileshare - I get the error message above. I can see the machine in the Network Neighbourhood - I just cannot see any of the fileshares or connect to them in anyway. (This happens regardless of whether I shutdown the laptop at work or I leave it running when I bring it home). The strangest thing is this used to work (ie. I could do the above and see the fileshare and access it no problems at all). Now it does not. What do I need to investigate to fix this. Many thanks for any help in advance. There are two possible cause: 1) VPN does not normally send / resolve the computer's name, VPN normally sends only traffic via the IP addresses. 2) Anti-virus softwares that block the NetBIOS name resolution protocol. Several anti-virus (especially Norton) blocks the NetBIOS name resolution as part of the Internet worm blocking module. Locate the PC's IP address and then try to access this via the IP address (\\192.168.1.1) instead of the name (\\Computer.) |
#8
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There are no logon servers available to service the logon requ
SP3 is the problem. I rolled back two laptops to SP2 today and the problem
"mysteriously" went away. The other SP3 laptop I completely rebuilt the networking stack and was able to get the issues to go away up until I added the laptop back to the domain. Once the domain membership was established the issues resurfaced. As long as the domain controller is online there is no issue with SP3. If the domain controller is not online you see the issues. I don't know if this is a change in behavior with SP3 or an SP3 defect. Hopefully an MS engineer investigates and responds accordingly. -harrier "Mark" wrote: Service Pack 3 - Fully Up to Date... "harrier" wrote: Mark, I've been working on this problem for several months now. I first saw it in June and have had absolutely no luck with responses on the forum. What Service Pack are you running? -Harrier "Mark" wrote: I dont believe this is the problem... I can connect from the Home PC to the Work Laptop File Share when the Home PC is connected to the Work Network via VPN (the Laptop is still at work connected to the Work Network - an NT Domain) I cannot connect to the Work Laptop File Share from the Home PC when the Laptop is at home and only connected to the Home Network (although it is still logged into the Domain using cached credentials) Note when the Work Laptop is at Home connected to the Home Network I can still Remote Desktop to it and I can still see it in the Network Neighbourhood. Note that there is a user on the Work Laptop with the same User ID and Password as exists on my Home PC. Every User is an Administrator. "smlunatick" wrote: On Oct 8, 8:45 am, "No One" wrote: Unfortunitely I get this error message : "System error 1311 has occurred. There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request." "Robert L. (MS-MVP)" wrote in . .. You may try this command when you are home network: net use \\computername /user:username Or this search result may give more details. Please post back with the result. workgroup networking faqs There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request - \\Computername is not accessible ... www.howtonetworking.com/workgroupnet.htm -- Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Mark" wrote in message ... Right I have a work laptop that connects to a domain. When I am at home and connect to the domain over the VPN I can access the fileshare on my laptop. When I bring the laptop home and connect to my home network I cannot access the fileshare - I get the error message above. I can see the machine in the Network Neighbourhood - I just cannot see any of the fileshares or connect to them in anyway. (This happens regardless of whether I shutdown the laptop at work or I leave it running when I bring it home). The strangest thing is this used to work (ie. I could do the above and see the fileshare and access it no problems at all). Now it does not. What do I need to investigate to fix this. Many thanks for any help in advance. There are two possible cause: 1) VPN does not normally send / resolve the computer's name, VPN normally sends only traffic via the IP addresses. 2) Anti-virus softwares that block the NetBIOS name resolution protocol. Several anti-virus (especially Norton) blocks the NetBIOS name resolution as part of the Internet worm blocking module. Locate the PC's IP address and then try to access this via the IP address (\\192.168.1.1) instead of the name (\\Computer.) |
#9
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There are no logon servers available to service the logon requ
I feared as much...
No doubt this is a microsoft security improvement... I would have hoped they would be able to tell us what registry settings need changing to allow for this scenario - assuming it can be done via registry settings and isnt some code change thats reduced completely normal and required functionality (you should see the number of posts with this problem - not only here but across the web). Just another example of microsoft assuming something and completely arsing it up... "harrier" wrote: SP3 is the problem. I rolled back two laptops to SP2 today and the problem "mysteriously" went away. The other SP3 laptop I completely rebuilt the networking stack and was able to get the issues to go away up until I added the laptop back to the domain. Once the domain membership was established the issues resurfaced. As long as the domain controller is online there is no issue with SP3. If the domain controller is not online you see the issues. I don't know if this is a change in behavior with SP3 or an SP3 defect. Hopefully an MS engineer investigates and responds accordingly. -harrier "Mark" wrote: Service Pack 3 - Fully Up to Date... "harrier" wrote: Mark, I've been working on this problem for several months now. I first saw it in June and have had absolutely no luck with responses on the forum. What Service Pack are you running? -Harrier "Mark" wrote: I dont believe this is the problem... I can connect from the Home PC to the Work Laptop File Share when the Home PC is connected to the Work Network via VPN (the Laptop is still at work connected to the Work Network - an NT Domain) I cannot connect to the Work Laptop File Share from the Home PC when the Laptop is at home and only connected to the Home Network (although it is still logged into the Domain using cached credentials) Note when the Work Laptop is at Home connected to the Home Network I can still Remote Desktop to it and I can still see it in the Network Neighbourhood. Note that there is a user on the Work Laptop with the same User ID and Password as exists on my Home PC. Every User is an Administrator. "smlunatick" wrote: On Oct 8, 8:45 am, "No One" wrote: Unfortunitely I get this error message : "System error 1311 has occurred. There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request." "Robert L. (MS-MVP)" wrote in . .. You may try this command when you are home network: net use \\computername /user:username Or this search result may give more details. Please post back with the result. workgroup networking faqs There are currently no logon servers available to service the logon request - \\Computername is not accessible ... www.howtonetworking.com/workgroupnet.htm -- Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Mark" wrote in message ... Right I have a work laptop that connects to a domain. When I am at home and connect to the domain over the VPN I can access the fileshare on my laptop. When I bring the laptop home and connect to my home network I cannot access the fileshare - I get the error message above. I can see the machine in the Network Neighbourhood - I just cannot see any of the fileshares or connect to them in anyway. (This happens regardless of whether I shutdown the laptop at work or I leave it running when I bring it home). The strangest thing is this used to work (ie. I could do the above and see the fileshare and access it no problems at all). Now it does not. What do I need to investigate to fix this. Many thanks for any help in advance. There are two possible cause: 1) VPN does not normally send / resolve the computer's name, VPN normally sends only traffic via the IP addresses. 2) Anti-virus softwares that block the NetBIOS name resolution protocol. Several anti-virus (especially Norton) blocks the NetBIOS name resolution as part of the Internet worm blocking module. Locate the PC's IP address and then try to access this via the IP address (\\192.168.1.1) instead of the name (\\Computer.) |
#10
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System error 1311 has occurred. Why assume cached credentials?
I am experiencing the exact same issue on a batch script utilizing the
following net use DOS command structu FOR /F "tokens=1* delims=," %%G IN (web_server_list.txt) DO ( ECHO OFF NET USE * /d /yes ECHO ON NET USE M: "\\%%G\%web_drv_shr_nm%" %passwd% /USER:%usrnm%@%web_domain_nm% ) During the iteration through the servers listed in the web_server_list.txt, I receive the 'System error 1311 has occurred' error for the first attempted server in the listing, but have no issues AFTER the 1st attempt. Can someone at Microsoft explain why this occurs and how this is consistent with any RFC that speaks to authentication to mapped drives using domain servers. It appears that during the 1st attempt by Microsoft code underlying NET USE they are "assuming" cached credentials to a domain that is "primary" to a laptop or PC is a faulty assumption and would not necessarily be recommended in any RFC on this subject. If I plan to use a second domain server to service the NET USE request, why doesn't the NET USE sequence of supporting methods that Microsoft has programmed into their OS directly follow the instructions to authenticate with the provided (secondary) domain and not assume I'm requesting to utilize local cached credentials to the primary server I first logged in with? |
#11
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System error 1311 has occurred. Why assume cached credentials?
I am experiencing the exact same issue on a batch script utilizing the
following net use DOS command structu FOR /F "tokens=1* delims=," %%G IN (web_server_list.txt) DO ( ECHO OFF NET USE * /d /yes ECHO ON NET USE M: "\\%%G\%web_drv_shr_nm%" %passwd% /USER:%usrnm%@%web_domain_nm% ) During the iteration through the servers listed in the web_server_list.txt, I receive the 'System error 1311 has occurred' error for the first attempted server in the listing, but have no issues AFTER the 1st attempt. Can someone at Microsoft explain why this occurs and how this is consistent with any RFC that speaks to authentication to mapped drives using domain servers. It appears that during the 1st attempt by Microsoft code underlying NET USE they are "assuming" cached credentials to a domain that is "primary" to a laptop or PC is a faulty assumption and would not necessarily be recommended in any RFC on this subject. If I plan to use a second domain server to service the NET USE request, why doesn't the NET USE sequence of supporting methods that Microsoft has programmed into their OS directly follow the instructions to authenticate with the provided (secondary) domain and not assume I'm requesting to utilize local cached credentials to the primary server I first logged in with? |
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