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2003 Server Hangs on "Applying Computer Settings"

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atspell

IS-IT--Management
Jul 27, 2006
8
US
I have an internet server running 2003 standard edition on a domain with six domain controllers an exchange server and a whole slue of file servers. It also runs ISA 2004 and our website which I can't access from the internet now. I can rdp from the network to it but can't login to it (error: cannot log you on...insufficient resources to complete the request). If I try to rdp from off network (home) I get...Because of a protocol error the session will be disconnected blah blah blah. It hung this morning and I could get it to respond, after a reboot it hangs on "applying computer setting". I let it try for 20-30 mins but couldn't wait any longer. If I unplug the internal nic it will immediately go to ctrl-alt-del screen, however it won't let me login on the domain. I can log in as administrator but can't use network resources. All dns setting are correct and I can ping other servers from this one. Any help would be fantastic, my head hurts from banging it on the racks.
 
take out the ethernet lead and logon to a cached session or local admin account should help out
 
I've got more than 180 gigs free on the local disc.
I was able to login with a cached session and the local admin account after removing the ethernet cable, however I could access and network resources.

The logs show that the microsoft firewall rules have failed to start and that several ranges of our network ip's are not allowed to flow, can't remember all the wording.
 
One of the event logs......ISA Server detected routes through the network adapter internet that do not correlate with the network to which this network adapter belongs. When networks are configured correctly, the IP address ranges included in each array-level network must include all IP addresses that are routable through its network adapters according to their routing tables. Otherwise valid packets may be dropped as spoofed. The following ranges are included in the network's IP address ranges but are not routable through any of the network's adapters:
 
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