Ok,
You read this thinking this was an easy one.
We have two BDC's on 'my side of town' that communicate to the PDC over a fairly good WAN link. This problem is isolated to my side of the WAN.
When users passwords expire, and they get the GUI (at logon) to make a new password, they change their password, then receive a meesage saying "You cannot Change you password at this time... Please Contact your system administrator"
Things I have checked:
1. The "User must log on to change password" box is NOT checked in Account Policies in User Manager (there went the easy solution, sorry)
2. I can ping the PDC by name and IP
3. If I force Replication, the SAM updates successfully on the PDC (as per the PDC and BDC event logs)
4. All client settings are correct (WINS, TCP/IP addys, etc.)
We did just switch to a new PDC, and there is a new secondary WINS server..... but these were on our Network 5 months or so b/f this problem started showing up late last year.
Any steering in the right direction would be appreciated, as I have run out of investigative options to choose from.
Thanks,
Dave
You read this thinking this was an easy one.
We have two BDC's on 'my side of town' that communicate to the PDC over a fairly good WAN link. This problem is isolated to my side of the WAN.
When users passwords expire, and they get the GUI (at logon) to make a new password, they change their password, then receive a meesage saying "You cannot Change you password at this time... Please Contact your system administrator"
Things I have checked:
1. The "User must log on to change password" box is NOT checked in Account Policies in User Manager (there went the easy solution, sorry)
2. I can ping the PDC by name and IP
3. If I force Replication, the SAM updates successfully on the PDC (as per the PDC and BDC event logs)
4. All client settings are correct (WINS, TCP/IP addys, etc.)
We did just switch to a new PDC, and there is a new secondary WINS server..... but these were on our Network 5 months or so b/f this problem started showing up late last year.
Any steering in the right direction would be appreciated, as I have run out of investigative options to choose from.
Thanks,
Dave