You may experience one or more of the following symptoms. These symptoms may be intermittent or continuous. These symptoms are more likely and more widespread during "high usage" times, such as at the beginning of a business day when increased client load occurs on the servers in the environment.
You may experience the following issues in a web services scenario:
You may experience the following issues in a web services scenario:
- Web clients receive delayed responses from the web server.
- Web clients are repeatedly prompted for credentials even if the correct credentials are entered.
- Web clients receive delayed responses from the web server.
- Web clients are repeatedly prompted for credentials even if the correct credentials are entered.
- Clients receive delayed responses from the server.
- Clients are repeatedly prompted for credentials even if the correct credentials are entered.
Line of business or custom applications that use NTLM authentication fail. Additionally, you may receive different errors that are intermittent and may include "access denied."
You may experience the following issue in a remote file access scenario:Windows clients receive "access denied" errors or delayed responses from the file server.
You may experience the following issue in any scenario in which Kerberos delegation is being used in a middle-tier service:The clients gain access successfully at first but then lose access to the same resources. Additionally, you may be repeatedly prompted for credentials or experience "access denied" errors.
Notes- This issue is more likely to occur if one or more of the following conditions are true:
- There are highly transactional and heavily used services in the environment.
- There is heavy use of scripts that use the WINNT provider.
- There are applications and services that are not configured (or are not configurable) to use Kerberos authentication.
- When the following three conditions are true at the same time:
- There are many "accounts" domains (in other words, domains that have user accounts in them) in the environment.
- There are Windows Server 2003-based domain controllers (DCs) .
- There are applications or services that may authenticate without providing the domain name. For example, there are applications or services that provide <null>\username instead of domainname\username.
- The following symptoms indicate that this issue is occurring in the environment:
- A Kerberos source event is logged in the System log of application servers. This event indicates that Kerberos PAC validation is failing. The event resembles the following:
- Text in Netlogon service debug logs (Netlogon.log) matches the text "NlpUserValidateHigher: Can't allocate Client API slot." These entries may appear in any of the Netlogon debug logs of the following servers:
- The application server
- The domain controllers in the application servers domain
- Trusting domain controllers
- Perfmon performance logging of the Netlogon performance counter for Semaphore Timeouts during the time when the issue is occurring shows numbers greater than zero. This counter value may appear on any of the following servers in this scenario:
- The application server
- The domain controllers in the application servers domain
- Trusting domain controllers