AD Question concerning errors

  • Thread starter Thread starter Guest
  • Start date Start date
G

Guest

A couple of weeks ago we were locked out of our PDC. While searching for a way to resolve the problem on the internet I ran across a forum where someone mentioned mapping a drive from another system to the PDCs sysvol and deleting the all the GPO's. My question, would my deleting of the Default Domain policy and Default Domain Controller Policy cause me problems. I have noticed that I have the following Event IDs showing up in my BDC no

Event 1000 "Windows cannot query for list of Group Policy Objects
Event 13562 "Could not Bind to Domain Controller

My PDC only has the following problem

Event 1265 , Its giving an Access Denied when the KCC trys to replicate

Another wierd thing is that DNS on the PDC and BDC cannot resolve names on the Internet. They resolve successfully internally but if you try pinging or doing an nslookup on cisco.com or yahoo.com they do not respond. It was working a few weeks ago and it just somehow stopped working. In order to get to the Internet I added a third DNS server that points to one of our BIND servers. Anyway, anyone got any ideas on this stuff?

Sorry for some of the errors not being very specific, Im at home so I tried to remember the best I could. This is bothering me alot and if I were single I would probably be at work now trying to work on it.

TI
Phillip
 
You should not delete any of the default policy (DEfault Domain and Domain
Controller Policy). There are some default setting and if you have deleted
those you need to recreate that and logon again to get the recovery agent
back. You can call the support line and ask for a tool that may help to
recreate the default policies. If you will have to play with policies, I
suggest that you create the custom policy in separate OU and you can delete
those ones after testing with policy.

Nafiz Ahmed
Microsot Enterprise Platform Support

ducks said:
I'll repost some of my problems again, but I fixed the DNS resolution
error.
 
Back
Top