Permissions Are Affected After You Demote a Domain Controller (320230)
The information in this article applies to:
- Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Standard Edition
- Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Enterprise Edition
- Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Datacenter Edition
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Server SP1
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Server SP2
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Server SP3
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server SP1
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server SP2
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server SP3
This article was previously published under Q320230 SYMPTOMS After you demote a domain controller, domain local groups
are not used to provide access to local resources. Note that this behavior only
applies to domains that are in Mixed mode. The local group may still be
displayed in the access control list (ACL). However, it cannot be used for
authorization, and cannot be added to any other ACLs. When a user whose access
has been defined by using a domain local group tries to use resources on the
demoted server, the user may receive an "access denied" error message (or
equivalent error messages). CAUSE In mixed mode, the scope of the domain local group is the
domain controllers. When a domain controller is demoted, it falls out of the
scope of this group type. Even though the group SID remains in the ACL and can
be resolved, they cannot be used for granting access. The reason is that the
domain local group is not in the access token of users that are logged on to
member computers. This only occurs when the domain is in Native mode.
RESOLUTION To work around this behavior, use any of the following
methods:
- Change the domain mode to Native mode to expand the scope
of groups to all domain members. Note that this also prevents Windows NT 4.0
backup domain controllers from replicating. In Windows Server 2003, Windows NT
4.0 is not supported in the Windows 2000 functional level. Only Windows 2000
and Windows 2003 are supported at the Windows 2000 functional level.
Note By default, domains in a Windows Server 2003 environment operate
at the Windows 2000 mixed functional level. At this level, Windows NT 4.0,
Windows 2000, and the Windows Server 2003 family are all
supported. - Create a new local group (or domain global group), and then
use the Active Directory Migration tool version 2 to translate the references
from the domain local group to the newly-created group. You can do so by using
the Security Translation feature with a SID mapping file. The SID mapping file
contains the SID from the domain local group and the SID for the replacement
group. The Active Directory Migration tool searches and replaces (or adds) the
old SID with the new one.
- You can use the Subinacl tool from the Microsoft Windows NT
Resource Kit.
For more information, visit the following Microsoft Web site:
STATUSThis
behavior is by design.
Modification Type: | Major | Last Reviewed: | 6/23/2004 |
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Keywords: | kbnetwork kbprb kbui KB320230 |
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