> What would cause the "run logon scripts synchronously" policy from not
being effective?  

 

Is "Always wait for the network at computer startup and logon" enabled?
The logon performance enhancements in XP can present the desktop despite
the synchronous setting. The always wait policy is said to disable Fast
Logon Optimization feature. There's a MSKB article about it.

 

 

This is something I saw that's related and also a possibility but I
never looked into it-
http://www.gpanswers.com/community/viewtopic.php?p=7099

 

 

 

From: Carl Houseman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, September 26, 2008 9:06 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Startup / Logon script issues

 

Two questions:

 

What could prevent a computer startup script from continuing until a
user logs in?  I know that it starts before the user logs in, but it
hangs and eventually times out unless the user logs in.  I also know it
isn't network access, at least not obviously.  The script is able to
write a file on an Everyone-writable share before the user logs in.

 

What would cause the "run logon scripts synchronously" policy from not
being effective?   I have verified that the setting is in effect with
RSOP.  The desktop is shown without any apparent delay, meanwhile the
script takes up to 2 minutes to complete.  From timestamps written at
start and end of the script, I know that the logon script has not exited
until long after the desktop is displayed.

 

The same script is in play for both of the above questions - obviously I
am trying to complete the script before the user has control of the
computer.   The script is a .cmd file that in turn cscript's a .vbs file
located on a network share.

 

thanks all,

Carl

 

 

 

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