GPO Software Deployment Woes
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Help yourself in the future - make a cname DNS record for the new server and use that. Then in the future, you just have to change the DNS record instead of changing the GPOs.
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As for your issue - have you run gpresult on a client and looked at it's error - or is that where you got the 1612 error from?
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@Dashrender said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
Help yourself in the future - make a cname DNS record for the new server and use that. Then in the future, you just have to change the DNS record instead of changing the GPOs.
Ooo that's not a bad idea. I could create a CNAME of "gposhare". I may do this once I get this sorted out.
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@Dashrender said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
As for your issue - have you run gpresult on a client and looked at it's error - or is that where you got the 1612 error from?
I grabbed that from the Event Viewer. I'll see if gpresult returns anything different.
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@anthonyh said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
@Dashrender said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
As for your issue - have you run gpresult on a client and looked at it's error - or is that where you got the 1612 error from?
I grabbed that from the Event Viewer. I'll see if gpresult returns anything different.
For all of the Software Installs GPOs it just shows a Deployment State of "Assigned" and AutoInstall "True". A sample of one is below:
GPO: SW Distribution - ESET Endpoint AV Name: ESET Endpoint Antivirus (6.6.2089.2) Version: 6.6 Deployment State: Assigned Source: \\filesrv02\gposw$\eset\eea_nt64_enu_6.6.2089.2.msi AutoInstall: True Origin: Applied Application
But in the Event Viewer it states:
The install of application ESET Endpoint Antivirus (6.6.2089.2) from policy SW Distribution - ESET Endpoint AV failed. The error was : %%1612
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To add:
When using the Effective Access feature of Advanced Security Settings for the share, if I specify the user/group of "Authenticated Users", it shows success for the various execute and read permissions. If I do the same for "Domain Computers", it shows no access at all. Though my understanding is that "Authenticated Users" is supposed to encompass computer accounts as well and supersede "Domain Computers", but it is odd nonetheless since I explicitly give "Domain Computers" read/execute just like "Authenticated Users".
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@anthonyh said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
To add:
When using the Effective Access feature of Advanced Security Settings for the share, if I specify the user/group of "Authenticated Users", it shows success for the various execute and read permissions. If I do the same for "Domain Computers", it shows no access at all. Though my understanding is that "Authenticated Users" is supposed to encompass computer accounts as well and supersede "Domain Computers", but it is odd nonetheless since I explicitly give "Domain Computers" read/execute just like "Authenticated Users".
That is correct. Domain computers are included in Authenticated Users.
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@wrx7m said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
@anthonyh said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
To add:
When using the Effective Access feature of Advanced Security Settings for the share, if I specify the user/group of "Authenticated Users", it shows success for the various execute and read permissions. If I do the same for "Domain Computers", it shows no access at all. Though my understanding is that "Authenticated Users" is supposed to encompass computer accounts as well and supersede "Domain Computers", but it is odd nonetheless since I explicitly give "Domain Computers" read/execute just like "Authenticated Users".
That is correct. Domain computers are included in Authenticated Users.
Thanks for the confirmation!
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Are your GPOs working now?
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@wrx7m said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
Are your GPOs working now?
Nope, as that's the permissions I've had set when this started. I'm really pulling my hair out on this one...
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@anthonyh said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
@wrx7m said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
Are your GPOs working now?
Nope, as that's the permissions I've had set when this started. I'm really pulling my hair out on this one...
What does the security filtering look like for the GPO? If you removed authenticated users from there, you need to make sure that you add it as read in the delegation tab.
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@wrx7m said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
@anthonyh said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
@wrx7m said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
Are your GPOs working now?
Nope, as that's the permissions I've had set when this started. I'm really pulling my hair out on this one...
What does the security filtering look like for the GPO? If you removed authenticated users from there, you need to make sure that you add it as read in the delegation tab.
The security filtering has both "Authenticated Users" and "Domain Computers" listed (I added Domain Computers after the fact in desperation). The Delegation tab has them both listed as well as "Read (from Security Filtering).
The GPOs are running, it's the install that fails with error 1612.
I need to figure out how to see if the GPO is actually trying to grab the files or not. And if it is and failing, why...
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@anthonyh said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
error 1612
Just to confirm, the share that the GPO is pointing to, has read permissions set for authenticated users all the way down to the msi file, right?
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@wrx7m said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
@anthonyh said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
error 1612
Just to confirm, the share that the GPO is pointing to, has read permissions set for authenticated users all the way down to the msi file, right?
Using the files from the example GPO information I posted earlier:
Authenticated Users, Domain Computers, and even Everyone has read & execute set for the root folder (gposw). The share permissions are set to Everyone with Full Control
The subfolder
eset
is inheriting these permissions properly (at least per the Advanced Security Settings dialog box).The file
eea_nt64_enu_6.6.2089.2.msi
is inheriting the expected permissions as well. -
Hmmm. What if you create a new share and see if that works?
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@wrx7m said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
Hmmm. What if you create a new share and see if that works?
Yeah, that's an option. I may try this first to see if I can get some clarification on if it's even attempting to hit the share first...
https://www.rootusers.com/configure-file-access-auditing-in-windows-server-2016/
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@anthonyh Have you created a new GPO from scratch too?
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@wrx7m said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
@anthonyh Have you created a new GPO from scratch too?
No, that's something to test too.
I'd really like to get these existing Software Installation GPOs working if at all possible. I imagine there will be some havoc if I delete and re-create them...
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Alright, for the heck of it, I re-created the share on my new DC (it assumed the same name as the DC it replaced, which was the DC originally hosting these files). And, guess what? All of the software installation policies applied successfully.
So even though I'm changing the msiFileList in ADSI Edit, it's not applying somewere. Even though looking at the Deployment Information of the GPOs shows the modified path, and running gpresult shows the modified path.
What the heck?!
I may just kick this can down the road a bit and re-visit it later unless anyone has any ideas?
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@anthonyh said in GPO Software Deployment Woes:
Alright, for the heck of it, I re-created the share on my new DC (it assumed the same name as the DC it replaced, which was the DC originally hosting these files). And, guess what? All of the software installation policies applied successfully.
So even though I'm changing the msiFileList in ADSI Edit, it's not applying somewere. Even though looking at the Deployment Information of the GPOs shows the modified path, and running gpresult shows the modified path.
What the heck?!
I may just kick this can down the road a bit and re-visit it later unless anyone has any ideas?
For the heck of it, do you get to access the share while on Windows Explorer?