A user has requested a type of logon (e.g. interactive or network) that has not been granted

#1

docfxit


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Posted 18 August 2016 - 03:36 PM

I'm getting an error trying to access 192.168.168.9 from 192.168.168.21. The error is "Logon failure: The user has not been granted the requested logon type at this computer."

I can access 192.168.168.9 from 192.168.168.7 without any errors.

I have done this:
On the remote computer, select
Administrative Tools>Local Security Settings>Local Policies>User Rights Assignment, right-click on Access this computer from the network>Properties>Add Users or Groups, add everyone

In Deny access to this computer from the network
All I have is Guest

It must have something wrong at the source PC 192.168.168.21

I have run Malwarebytes.

What else could be causing this?

Win7 Professional 32bit

Thank you,
Docfxit


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#2
Kilroy

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Posted 19 August 2016 - 06:32 AM

The account you are using to connect needs to be either an Administrator or member of the Remote Desktop group in order to connect remotely.


#3
docfxit

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Posted 22 August 2016 - 01:01 PM

The account you are using to connect needs to be either an Administrator or member of the Remote Desktop group in order to connect remotely.

Thanks for the reply.  Both the local and the remote users are Administrator.

Docfxit


#4
Trikein

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Posted 22 August 2016 - 01:11 PM

You may have already answered this, but to clarify, are there any admin policy restrictions on the remote(192.168.168.9) computer? For example, is a user blocked from signing in with the admin account even if that account is set to be allowed access from LAN?


#5
Kilroy

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Posted 23 August 2016 - 09:43 AM

Is there a password on the account?  I've found that not having a password when you attempt remote access causes all kinds of odd issues.


#6
docfxit

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Posted 23 August 2016 - 12:04 PM

You may have already answered this, but to clarify, are there any admin policy restrictions on the remote(192.168.168.9) computer? For example, is a user blocked from signing in with the admin account even if that account is set to be allowed access from LAN?

Not that I know of.  But I don't know how to block a user like that.  Do you know how I can check that in Win7?

Thanks,

Docfxit


#7
docfxit

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Posted 23 August 2016 - 12:13 PM

Is there a password on the account?  I've found that not having a password when you attempt remote access causes all kinds of odd issues.

There is a password on all accounts.

The User signed on to 192.168.168.9 is the same user signed on to 192.168.168.7 which works.

The User signed on to 192.168.168.21 is different.  This computer does have the same user as 192.168.168.9 as an administrator with the same password.

Thanks for the suggestion.

Docfxit


#8
Kilroy

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Posted 24 August 2016 - 10:15 AM

I'd remove any deny access that you have configured.  Access is denied if not granted so, specifically denying access is not necessary.  Again, denying access is one of those things that causes more problems than it solves.


#9
docfxit

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Posted 26 August 2016 - 05:11 PM

Thanks for the reply...

I had denying access for the user Guest only.  I have removed Guest and still have the same problem.

Thanks,

Docfxit


#10
MQassas

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    Posted 27 March 2018 - 12:47 PM

    #11
    kiester

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    Posted 07 May 2019 - 01:38 PM

    I know this is an old post, but I had the same issue come up today and there is nothing out there other than the Group Policy edit which doesn't seem to work.

    What worked for me was go into the Control Panel > Users > Manage your credentials > Windows Credentials. In here, delete the saved credentials for the location you are having issues connecting to. Add a Windows credential and put the creds in for a user that has permission to the shared folder(s).


    #12
    shimself

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    Posted 03 December 2019 - 02:01 PM

    I know this is an old post, but I had the same issue come up today and there is nothing out there other than the Group Policy edit which doesn't seem to work.

    What worked for me was go into the Control Panel > Users > Manage your credentials > Windows Credentials. In here, delete the saved credentials for the location you are having issues connecting to. Add a Windows credential and put the creds in for a user that has permission to the shared folder(s).

    I love you


    How do I fix logon failure the user has not granted the requested logon type at this computer?

    To resolve this issue, edit the Access this computer from the network local policy on the desktop to restore the "Users" access group or add one or more user and group values to provide the required access. Alternatively this can be configured using Group Policy.

    What has not been granted the requested logon type?

    To solve “The user has not been granted the requested logon type at this computer” error, you should make sure that the login user and all groups that belong to are allowed to log on locally to this computer.

    What is interactive logon VS network logon?

    2: Interactive logon—This is used for a logon at the console of a computer. A type 2 logon is logged when you attempt to log on at a Windows computer's local keyboard and screen. 3: Network logon—This logon occurs when you access remote file shares or printers.

    What is logon failure?

    A user sees the error “Logon failure: the user has not been granted the requested logon type at this computer” when attempting to log in through Duo Authentication for Windows Logon (RDP). Alternatively, a user may see the error "To sign in remotely, you need the right to sign in through Remote Desktop Services.

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