Group Policy Error 1058 Windows 2003
Contents |
360 games PC games event id 1058 group policy server 2012 Windows games Windows phone games Entertainment All Entertainment event id 1058 group policy windows 7 Movies & TV Music Business & Education Business Students & educators the processing of group policy failed 1030 Developers Sale Sale Find a store Gift cards Products Software & services Windows Office Free downloads & security Internet
Windows Cannot Access The File Gpt.ini For Gpo
Explorer Microsoft Edge Skype OneNote OneDrive Microsoft Health MSN Bing Microsoft Groove Microsoft Movies & TV Devices & Xbox All Microsoft devices Microsoft Surface All Windows PCs & tablets PC accessories Xbox & games Microsoft Lumia All event id 1058 error code 65 Windows phones Microsoft HoloLens For business Cloud Platform Microsoft Azure Microsoft Dynamics Windows for business Office for business Skype for business Surface for business Enterprise solutions Small business solutions Find a solutions provider Volume Licensing For developers & IT pros Develop Windows apps Microsoft Azure MSDN TechNet Visual Studio For students & educators Office for students OneNote in classroom Shop PCs & tablets perfect for students Microsoft in Education Support Sign in Cart Cart Javascript is disabled Please enable javascript and refresh the page Cookies are disabled Please enable cookies and refresh the page CV: {{ getCv() }} English (United States) Terms of use Privacy & cookies Trademarks © 2016 Microsoft
360 games PC games microsoft windows grouppolicy 1058 Windows games Windows phone games Entertainment All Entertainment
Windows Cannot Query For The List Of Group Policy Objects Server 2003
Movies & TV Music Business & Education Business Students & educators
Windows Cannot Access The File Gpt.ini For Gpo 1058
Developers Sale Sale Find a store Gift cards Products Software & services Windows Office Free downloads & security Internet https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/887303 Explorer Microsoft Edge Skype OneNote OneDrive Microsoft Health MSN Bing Microsoft Groove Microsoft Movies & TV Devices & Xbox All Microsoft devices Microsoft Surface All Windows PCs & tablets PC accessories Xbox & games Microsoft Lumia All https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/888943 Windows phones Microsoft HoloLens For business Cloud Platform Microsoft Azure Microsoft Dynamics Windows for business Office for business Skype for business Surface for business Enterprise solutions Small business solutions Find a solutions provider Volume Licensing For developers & IT pros Develop Windows apps Microsoft Azure MSDN TechNet Visual Studio For students & educators Office for students OneNote in classroom Shop PCs & tablets perfect for students Microsoft in Education Support Sign in Cart Cart Javascript is disabled Please enable javascript and refresh the page Cookies are disabled Please enable cookies and refresh the page CV: {{ getCv() }} English (United States) Terms of use Privacy & cookies Trademarks © 2016 Microsoft
Event ID 1058 & 1030 So... I have this customer... and for quite a while now (unsure how long - I suspect a year or more) they have been having challenges enumerating & applying http://www.darylhunter.me/blog/2011/06/solved-group-policy-gptini-event-id-1058-1030.html group policies. Event ID 1030/1058 would appear in their Application Logs... and it was no fun... I did the usual stuff. I asked Dr. Google of course. I tried permissions. I tried re-shares. I checked FRS and http://www.eventid.net/display-eventid-1058-source-Userenv-eventno-1752-phase-1.htm DFS and many other TLAs along the way. Nothing. From the 2x domain controllers, I could access the \\server\sysvol\domain\policies stuff just fine. I could also access the \\domain\sysvol\domain\policies stuff. No problems. But, from domain joined servers/computers, group policy it was a no go. I could get to \\server\sysvol\domain but it was empty. Same with \\domain\sysvol\domain - empty. Finally, I dropped to a command prompt and found this Do you see it? No, I don't mean my horrible "coloring job" - I mean the Junction pointing to C:\Winnt\path... Really? WINNT? What decade is this? Anyway, without trying to figure out who/what/why, I simply removed that junction point and re-added it with "mklink" event id 1058 like so Then, I did a "gpupdate /force" to force a Group Policy Update. Then went to check the logs again... BAM! I still got it... Hope this helps. I found many "me too" people with issues, and many different forums suggesting many different fixes. I thought I would add my own fix to the mix. Woah, that rhymed. G'nite. Posted by DWHunter on 06/18/2011 at 01:41 AM in Active Directory, Networking, Server 2008 | Permalink Digg This | Save to del.icio.us | | Comments You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post. My friend. I had the same problem and was resolved after remove all groups of the user. Then i went puting the groups one-by-one until find the problem group. Posted by: Ricardo | 08/04/2012 at 09:55 PM Hi Daryl, my JUNCTION path was pointing to "domain.local". 1/ Would I still need to make that change since WINNT wasn't part of the path? 2/ If so, would you be able to email me the command to removed and re-add the JUNCTION entry to my gmail account at bostonbajan@gmail.com thank you in advance. Posted by: Tony | 02/27/2013 at 11:56 AM The comments to this entry are closed. About Twitter Updates follow me on Twitter Subscribe to this blog's feed Categories
Monitor an unlimited number of servers with $49/year With the current low prices for servers and the need for processing power, even a small company may end up with quite a few of them. If ten years ago it was still common to see an entire company using just one server, these days that's no longer the case. New computers are added to the network with the understanding that they will be taken care of by the admins. Keeping an eye on these servers is a tedious, time-consuming process. Even with 5 minutes per server (to check the logs and other parameters), it may take an hour to make sure that everything is ok and no "red lights" are blinking on any of the servers. read more... Event ID: 1058 Source: Userenv Source: Userenv Type: Error Description:Windows cannot access the file gpt.ini for GPO CN={31B2F340-016D-11D2-945F-00C04FB984F9},CN=Policies,CN=System,DC=