Hello All,
Very odd one here that just started happening a little while ago. A month or so ago we had a user complain that they tried to RDP into the Terminal Server and could successfully do so but once in they had no inter/intranet connections. If they opened a browser or Outlook it would holler they were not connected to a network. Obviously that is false as they were able to RDP into the server. This only affected two or so users on the terminal server as all others were using it fine. We have 34 total Per User CALs on the server and not all were taken according to RD Licensing Manager. All network settings seemed fine as well as 20ish other users using the same server via RDP fine. Trying to RDP with that user's creds from a different PC in house showed the same results. Using that user's creds and RDPing into a different server, everything acted fine. So we know it isn't a user specific issue and shouldn't be a network issue. We restarted the server and the issue went away.
Today another user had the above issue. Could RDP into Terminal Server but couldn't access anything network related. All other 25 employees were fine. Still had 6 or so open licenses. I Signed Off three users who weren't actively using the server and had him reconnect. He connected fine and had network capabilities then. So I am wondering if somehow the licenses were "tied up" even though they showed free in RD Licensing Manager which would explain why a reboot fixed it a month ago. The licensing mode is set to Per User but I cannot find any powershell requests to see what it thinks license-wise is tied up to verify what RD Licensing Manager is seeing.
Any thoughts on where I should poke around?
Only thing I see in Event Viewer around that time are a few of these DistributedCOM errors:
The application-specific permission settings do not grant Local Activation permission for the COM Server application with CLSID
{8D8F4F83-3594-4F07-8369-FC3C3CAE4919}
and APPID
{F72671A9-012C-4725-9D2F-2A4D32D65169}
to the user NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM SID (S-1-5-18) from address LocalHost (Using LRPC) running in the application container Unavailable SID (Unavailable). This security permission can be modified using the Component Services administrative tool.
Learning - A never ending quest for knowledge usually attained by being thrown in a situation and told to fix it NOW.
Very odd one here that just started happening a little while ago. A month or so ago we had a user complain that they tried to RDP into the Terminal Server and could successfully do so but once in they had no inter/intranet connections. If they opened a browser or Outlook it would holler they were not connected to a network. Obviously that is false as they were able to RDP into the server. This only affected two or so users on the terminal server as all others were using it fine. We have 34 total Per User CALs on the server and not all were taken according to RD Licensing Manager. All network settings seemed fine as well as 20ish other users using the same server via RDP fine. Trying to RDP with that user's creds from a different PC in house showed the same results. Using that user's creds and RDPing into a different server, everything acted fine. So we know it isn't a user specific issue and shouldn't be a network issue. We restarted the server and the issue went away.
Today another user had the above issue. Could RDP into Terminal Server but couldn't access anything network related. All other 25 employees were fine. Still had 6 or so open licenses. I Signed Off three users who weren't actively using the server and had him reconnect. He connected fine and had network capabilities then. So I am wondering if somehow the licenses were "tied up" even though they showed free in RD Licensing Manager which would explain why a reboot fixed it a month ago. The licensing mode is set to Per User but I cannot find any powershell requests to see what it thinks license-wise is tied up to verify what RD Licensing Manager is seeing.
Any thoughts on where I should poke around?
Only thing I see in Event Viewer around that time are a few of these DistributedCOM errors:
The application-specific permission settings do not grant Local Activation permission for the COM Server application with CLSID
{8D8F4F83-3594-4F07-8369-FC3C3CAE4919}
and APPID
{F72671A9-012C-4725-9D2F-2A4D32D65169}
to the user NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM SID (S-1-5-18) from address LocalHost (Using LRPC) running in the application container Unavailable SID (Unavailable). This security permission can be modified using the Component Services administrative tool.
Learning - A never ending quest for knowledge usually attained by being thrown in a situation and told to fix it NOW.