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Autoenrollment Functions

This section discusses various functions performed by the autoenrollment process on Active Directory domain-joined machines.

Download of Active Directory Certificates and Trust Objects

Autoenrollment automatically downloads and manages trusted root certificates, cross-certificates, and NTAuth certificates from Active Directory into the local machine registry for domain-joined machines. All users who log on to the machine inherit the trust and downloaded certificates that are downloaded and managed by autoenrollment.

Deleting Expired and Revoked Certificates

Autoenrollment deletes expired and revoked certificates in the userCertificate attribute on the user object in Active Directory. This feature can be enabled through user or machine Group Policy to help ensure that only valid and active certificates are used for encryption operations.

The exit module on the Windows Server 2003 CA also helps to manage the user account in Active Directory, but only deletes expired certificatesit does not remove revoked certificates due to performance reasons. In general, there is no value in publishing a signing certificate to the user object in Active Directory, except for purposes of record-keeping.

Managing User Certificates in the CryptoAPI MY Store

Certificates in the users local MY certificate store may also be managed through the autoenrollment process. On a per-template basis, autoenrollment can be enabled to delete expired and revoked signature certificates. Encryption certificates and keys are never automatically deleted. However, autoenrollment only manages certificates that correspond to certificate templates defined in Active Directory that contain the certificate template extension. This feature is enabled by setting this policy on the Request Handling tab in the Properties of a given certificate template

 

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MCSE : Security Specialist

Dr. Watson

Windows 98 drwatson.exe

To start Dr. Watson On the Start menu, click Run, and then type Drwatson. Click OK or Click Start, point to Programs, Accessories, and System Tools, and then click System Information. Select the Tools menu and click Dr. Watson

Dr. Watson collects detailed information about the state of your system at the time of and slightly before an application fault. Dr. Watson intercepts the software faults, identifying the software that faulted and offering a detailed description of the cause. When enabled, this tool automatically logs this information to the disk (\Windows\Drwatson\*.wlg), and can display it on screen. Dr. Watson indicates the program that caused the application fault, the program the fault occurred in, and the memory address at which the fault occurred.

Windows 2000 drwtsn32.exe

If a program error occurs, Dr. Watson will start automatically. To start Dr. Watson, click Start, click Run, and then type drwtsn32. To start Dr. Watson from a command prompt, change to the root directory, and then type drwtsn32.

Dr. Watson for Windows 2000 is a program error debugger. The information obtained and logged by Dr. Watson is to diagnose a program error for a computer running Windows 2000. A text file (Drwtsn32.log) is created whenever an error is detected. You also have the option of creating a crash dump file, which is a binary file that a programmer can load into a debugger.

Failure to start GUI

Explorer.exe could be missing or corrupted

Windows Protection Errors

General protection errors

Is caused when a program tries to access a portion of memory that is has not been allocated by Windows or is already being used by another program or TSR. When this happens the screen turns blue with the GPF error message.

Solutions

 

  • Run scandisk / defrag
  • Remove any TSRs or programs which were running before the GPF.
  • Remove and reinstall the program that caused the GPF.
  • Disable power management and screen savers
  • If you frequently receive GPF errors from different programs you may have to reinstall windows

Invalid Page Fault

Is caused when Windows or a program attempts to store or call a segment or block of memory that does not exist. This could happen because of bad memory or the program is incompatible or corrupt

Illegal Operation

Is an operation requested, which is not understood by Windows or the CPU. Illegal Operations can be caused by

 

  • Corrupt files
  • Bad Memory
  • Data that can not be read properly
  • Incorrect Drivers
  • TSRs
  • Bad hard drive sectors

Invalid page faults

Are generally caused by program incompatibility, overheating such as the CPU cooling fan not operating or other hardware / software issues

 

 


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