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I've got a situation where a client computer (Windows Vista) doesn't seem to be sending the right password to a server (Windows Server 2003).

The event log records the logon failure, but as far as I can tell the client has the right password - so I'd really like to know what is actually being sent back & forth between the two computers as they try to negotiate the logon.

Is there any way to monitor/trace/examine a Windows logon session? (I assume a plain packet capture wouldn't work, since the passwords aren't sent in plain text - at least I hope not!)

MORE INFO: The server is the only server on the network. The computers are all on the same subnet, 192.168.1.xxx. The client computer is not a member of the domain. The server computer is the DNS server - and the client computer can correctly resolve the server's address without any problems.

The following events are logged in the event log:

  • A logon attempt by MICROSOFT_AUTHENTICATION_PACKAGE_V1_0, which fails with code 0xC0000234
  • A "logon failure" event which says "unknown user name or bad password."
    • The user name specified in the event is the user name I'm using
    • The "logon type" is "3"
    • The logon process is "NtLmSsp"
    • The authentication package is NTLM

All the client computer is trying to do is connect to a network share (mapping a network drive, actually).

3 Answers 3

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There is more data to be gathered.

Does the user report problems with logging in, or are you just responding to the messages in the event log? Can you reproduce this yourself?

If the user isn't reporting problems, then it is quite possible that they are running a service under their user name that has an expired password. Take a look at their local services (under Administrative Tools, and make sure that the "Log on As" field doesn't have their user name.

Also, ensure that the clocks are in sync. Kerberos doesn't work with a large time skew between two boxes.

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  • The user does report problems, and I can reproduce the problem... on their computer, only. There are records in the event log; I've added them to the question description.
    – Keithius
    May 5, 2009 at 18:50
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    There isn't a time lag here, is there? Both the client and the server show the same clock? May 5, 2009 at 19:10
  • Actually, no. The server is about 13 minutes ahead of the client. Odd, I thought Windows Server 2003 knew how to get the time from the Internet, like XP & Vista do...
    – Keithius
    May 6, 2009 at 15:10
  • Get the time sync'd up, and see how things go: if I recall, kerberos won't work if there is more than a 5 minute lag. May 6, 2009 at 15:46
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I agree with Michael. I would like a bit more of information. Are you running AD? Is the Windows 2003 box the only server on your domain? Are they within the same IP segment? How is DNS being handled?

You could sniff the network (by placing the sniffer on a port that "sees" all traffic). There is no way, out of the box, that I know off to monitor/trace/examine Windows logon sessions.

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  • The Windows 2003 server is the only server on the network, and both computers are on the same IP segment (192.168.1.xxx).
    – Keithius
    May 5, 2009 at 18:51
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Do you have any specific error IDs from the logs, and when do you get them? (e.g. one error when the user logs on vs. periodic errors the entire time theyr'e logged in)

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  • I do have error IDs from the event log; I've edited the question to include them.
    – Keithius
    May 5, 2009 at 18:52

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