NewsArchive
06-21-2008, 12:27 PM
Hi all,
I recently posted a question regarding ACL and SB. I've made those
changes which appear to be fine, however, here is a new problem that has
been happening and it either has to be related to changes in the core
operating system (ie windows), recent changes to SetupBuilder OR the
possibility of a file in use during the install process.
Here is the problem; We are running an application under Terminal
Services. If we install a new copy of the application in a new folder,
a person can login and run the application without problems. If
however, we update an existing application and reboot, people logging in
through TS will not be able to run the app. The reason is that many of
the DLL's in the losing BUILTIN\Users security descriptor.
I can reset the permissions from the command line with cacls, however, I
was curious if there was any way to determine exactly why this is
being caused. I'm leaning toward people in the app at the time of
update, but wanted to get other people's opinion.
Cheers!
ken
I recently posted a question regarding ACL and SB. I've made those
changes which appear to be fine, however, here is a new problem that has
been happening and it either has to be related to changes in the core
operating system (ie windows), recent changes to SetupBuilder OR the
possibility of a file in use during the install process.
Here is the problem; We are running an application under Terminal
Services. If we install a new copy of the application in a new folder,
a person can login and run the application without problems. If
however, we update an existing application and reboot, people logging in
through TS will not be able to run the app. The reason is that many of
the DLL's in the losing BUILTIN\Users security descriptor.
I can reset the permissions from the command line with cacls, however, I
was curious if there was any way to determine exactly why this is
being caused. I'm leaning toward people in the app at the time of
update, but wanted to get other people's opinion.
Cheers!
ken