FireMike84
Technical User
Hello,
I currently run a software for roughly 300 users and it has been working great with people logged in as just regular restricted users. An administrator would have to run the program once on a new computer to register the OCX and DLL files but that was all. Recenlty we upgraded to a newer version that handles registering OCX files and DLL files differently and they attempt to register them everytime you launch the program which obviously causes a problem becuase my users don't have rights to register DLL and OCX files. I am looking to find a way to either create a script that will launch the program with elevated permissions so that it can register the files. Or I am looking for a way to possibly give my users rights just to register OCX and DLL files. So far I have found nothing real helpful on the net and the company the software is with basically told me to make everyone an administrator which I almost not a option. If anyone could help me with this problem it would be greatly appriciated.
Thanks,
Mike Walton
Network+
I currently run a software for roughly 300 users and it has been working great with people logged in as just regular restricted users. An administrator would have to run the program once on a new computer to register the OCX and DLL files but that was all. Recenlty we upgraded to a newer version that handles registering OCX files and DLL files differently and they attempt to register them everytime you launch the program which obviously causes a problem becuase my users don't have rights to register DLL and OCX files. I am looking to find a way to either create a script that will launch the program with elevated permissions so that it can register the files. Or I am looking for a way to possibly give my users rights just to register OCX and DLL files. So far I have found nothing real helpful on the net and the company the software is with basically told me to make everyone an administrator which I almost not a option. If anyone could help me with this problem it would be greatly appriciated.
Thanks,
Mike Walton
Network+