[Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]
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@jaredbusch said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Cached creds have expired.
Log in on the network.
Anyway to prevent it from expiring? or extend the caching?
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@stess said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@jaredbusch said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Cached creds have expired.
Log in on the network.
Anyway to prevent it from expiring? or extend the caching?
Increase the value. The max is 50.
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@stess said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@jaredbusch said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Cached creds have expired.
Log in on the network.
Anyway to prevent it from expiring? or extend the caching?
You can change domain settings related to this. But it has been years since I looked into it.
It could be the machine credentials have expired and not user.
Domain machines are not designed to be off the network forever.
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@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@stess said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@jaredbusch said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Cached creds have expired.
Log in on the network.
Anyway to prevent it from expiring? or extend the caching?
Increase the value. The max is 50.
Are you referred to the "Interactive logon: Number of previous logons to cache (in case domain controller is not available)
" ?@jaredbusch said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@stess said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@jaredbusch said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Cached creds have expired.
Log in on the network.
Anyway to prevent it from expiring? or extend the caching?
You can change domain settings related to this. But it has been years since I looked into it.
It could be the machine credentials have expired and not user.
Domain machines are not designed to be off the network forever.
Any keyword I can start off with? Especially the machine credentials setting.
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@stess said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Are you referred to the "Interactive logon: Number of previous logons to cache (in case domain controller is not available)
" ?Yes.
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@stess said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@stess said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@jaredbusch said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Cached creds have expired.
Log in on the network.
Anyway to prevent it from expiring? or extend the caching?
Increase the value. The max is 50.
Are you referred to the "Interactive logon: Number of previous logons to cache (in case domain controller is not available)
" ?@jaredbusch said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@stess said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@jaredbusch said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Cached creds have expired.
Log in on the network.
Anyway to prevent it from expiring? or extend the caching?
You can change domain settings related to this. But it has been years since I looked into it.
It could be the machine credentials have expired and not user.
Domain machines are not designed to be off the network forever.
Any keyword I can start off with? Especially the machine credentials setting.
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@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@stess said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Are you referred to the "Interactive logon: Number of previous logons to cache (in case domain controller is not available)
" ?Yes.
I just checked all the GPOs. We do not have this enabled. Should I enable it?
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@jaredbusch said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Cached creds have expired.
Log in on the network.
They do that?
I just today had a laptop come into the office that hasn't logged in over a year. In fact I had deleted the computer account too. While the PC was on the network, it refused to logon because there was no domain computer account, but once I disconnected the network, the cached creds worked just fine. -
You can try disabling nic then rebooting, then logging in using credentials. If it is a laptop wifi adapter you can do this with Fn keys probably. Might have to use [email protected] if they chose Other User previously.
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@stess said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@stess said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Are you referred to the "Interactive logon: Number of previous logons to cache (in case domain controller is not available)
" ?Yes.
I just checked all the GPOs. We do not have this enabled. Should I enable it?
You normally have this enabled and set to 2 or more for mobile users.
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Always worth asking.... is AD even needed? Maybe moving to local accounts would make more sense.
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@scottalanmiller said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Always worth asking.... is AD even needed? Maybe moving to local accounts would make more sense.
Not a bad idea. I’ve been going that route for mobile users for awhile.
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@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@scottalanmiller said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Always worth asking.... is AD even needed? Maybe moving to local accounts would make more sense.
Not a bad idea. I’ve been going that route for mobile users for awhile.
How do you manage them? or do you just not worry about them?
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@dashrender said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@scottalanmiller said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Always worth asking.... is AD even needed? Maybe moving to local accounts would make more sense.
Not a bad idea. I’ve been going that route for mobile users for awhile.
How do you manage them? or do you just not worry about them?
Majority of mobile users are instructors that don't have there own laptop uses the laptop issued to them for presentations.
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@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@dashrender said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@scottalanmiller said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Always worth asking.... is AD even needed? Maybe moving to local accounts would make more sense.
Not a bad idea. I’ve been going that route for mobile users for awhile.
How do you manage them? or do you just not worry about them?
Majority of mobile users are instructors that don't have there own laptop uses the laptop issued to them for presentations.
And I'll pull a @JaredBusch here - That's not an answer to my questions.
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@dashrender said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@dashrender said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@scottalanmiller said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Always worth asking.... is AD even needed? Maybe moving to local accounts would make more sense.
Not a bad idea. I’ve been going that route for mobile users for awhile.
How do you manage them? or do you just not worry about them?
Majority of mobile users are instructors that don't have there own laptop uses the laptop issued to them for presentations.
And I'll pull a @JaredBusch here - That's not an answer to my questions.
The short answer: I don't.
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@dashrender said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@scottalanmiller said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Always worth asking.... is AD even needed? Maybe moving to local accounts would make more sense.
Not a bad idea. I’ve been going that route for mobile users for awhile.
How do you manage them? or do you just not worry about them?
You can use IaaS such as JumpCLoud or anything else.
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@dbeato said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@dashrender said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@scottalanmiller said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Always worth asking.... is AD even needed? Maybe moving to local accounts would make more sense.
Not a bad idea. I’ve been going that route for mobile users for awhile.
How do you manage them? or do you just not worry about them?
You can use IaaS such as JumpCLoud or anything else.
JumpCloud is SaaS.
Vultr is IaaS.
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@dbeato said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@dashrender said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@scottalanmiller said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Always worth asking.... is AD even needed? Maybe moving to local accounts would make more sense.
Not a bad idea. I’ve been going that route for mobile users for awhile.
How do you manage them? or do you just not worry about them?
You can use IaaS such as JumpCLoud or anything else.
Why replace it with another version of AD?
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@scottalanmiller said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@dbeato said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@dashrender said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@black3dynamite said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
@scottalanmiller said in [Help] Windows 10 lost AD profile [remote user]:
Always worth asking.... is AD even needed? Maybe moving to local accounts would make more sense.
Not a bad idea. I’ve been going that route for mobile users for awhile.
How do you manage them? or do you just not worry about them?
You can use IaaS such as JumpCLoud or anything else.
JumpCloud is SaaS.
Vultr is IaaS.
Yes! Sorry I was trying to talk about IDaaS.. sigh