Windows XP Disconnected Network Drive problem - Drives lose mapping

  • Thread starter Thread starter Bret
  • Start date Start date
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Bret

Hello,

Probably anyone who read the title already knows what the problem is.
But for those who dont, here is the rundown.

On our network, we run a logon script every time a user logs in to the
domain. This script should map all the network drives that an employee
will use for their shift. So every 8 hours, a user logs out and a new
user should log back on, which in theory should rerun the script and
remap all the drives.

The problem though is that after 3 or 4 days any user on that computer
will lose all of their mappings, and a logout/login will not fix it.
ONLY restarting the computer will bring back those lost maps. The
drives will appear in My Computer as "Disconnected Network Drive", and
cannot be deleted through right click>disconnect or net use * /del
command (both give a message that the drive is not in use). We have
several drives that this error appears on. One of them I can click on
and still view all contents, regardless of the status indicated. On a
couple others, I click on them and those will also take me to that
other network drive that says disconnected.

To clear things up, these are very high priority machines that run
24/7 and shouldnt be shut down for any reason (they do 911
dispatching). One user logs out and another should log right back in
to continue the job, so I want to avoid having to restart every few
days. You cant really trust users to do it on their own anyway.

I have tried this solution from microsoft with no luck:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/932463
I am aware that one potential cause is Symantec AV, which is what we
are running. I MAY try uninstalling and seeing if it fixes it. These
users shouldnt have internet access anyway.
I have also tried some manual logon scripts that delete mappings with
net use and then redo them every time a user logs in. No luck there
either, and the domain logon script should do that for me anyway.

The BIG REASON that I need this resolved because the mission critical
software that we use does not recognize UNC paths, and therefore
needs a particular drive letter to send output to.

After the long-winded description I feel like I'm beating a dead
horse. I hope I hit all the details, and I know I'm not the only one
who has seen this. Any suggestions?

Thank you,
Bret
 
On 24 Sep, 23:00, Bret <bpotter...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Probably anyone who read the title already knows what the problem is.
> But for those who dont, here is the rundown.
>
> On our network, we run a logon script every time a user logs in to the
> domain. This script should map all the network drives that an employee
> will use for their shift. So every 8 hours, a user logs out and a new
> user should log back on, which in theory should rerun the script and
> remap all the drives.
>
> The problem though is that after 3 or 4 days any user on that computer
> will lose all of their mappings, and a logout/login will not fix it.
> ONLY restarting the computer will bring back those lost maps. The
> drives will appear in My Computer as "Disconnected Network Drive", and
> cannot be deleted through right click>disconnect or net use * /del
> command (both give a message that the drive is not in use). We have
> several drives that this error appears on. One of them I can click on
> and still view all contents, regardless of the status indicated. On a
> couple others, I click on them and those will also take me to that
> other network drive that says disconnected.
>
> To clear things up, these are very high priority machines that run
> 24/7 and shouldnt be shut down for any reason (they do 911
> dispatching). One user logs out and another should log right back in
> to continue the job, so I want to avoid having to restart every few
> days. You cant really trust users to do it on their own anyway.
>
> I have tried this solution from microsoft with no luck:http://support.microsoft.com/kb/932463
> I am aware that one potential cause is Symantec AV, which is what we
> are running. I MAY try uninstalling and seeing if it fixes it. These
> users shouldnt have internet access anyway.
> I have also tried some manual logon scripts that delete mappings with
> net use and then redo them every time a user logs in. No luck there
> either, and the domain logon script should do that for me anyway.
>
> The BIG REASON that I need this resolved because the mission critical
> software that we use does not recognize UNC paths, and therefore
> needs a particular drive letter to send output to.
>
> After the long-winded description I feel like I'm beating a dead
> horse. I hope I hit all the details, and I know I'm not the only one
> who has seen this. Any suggestions?
>
> Thank you,
> Bret


Have you tried using drives created with SUBST rather than mapped
drives?
 
RE: Windows XP Disconnected Network Drive problem - Drives lose mappin

Hi Bret,

Did you ever find a fix for this problem? We have recently had this issue
occur on only some of our workstations.

Any sort of workaround would be much appreciated.

Angie

"Bret" wrote:

> Hello,
>
> Probably anyone who read the title already knows what the problem is.
> But for those who dont, here is the rundown.
>
> On our network, we run a logon script every time a user logs in to the
> domain. This script should map all the network drives that an employee
> will use for their shift. So every 8 hours, a user logs out and a new
> user should log back on, which in theory should rerun the script and
> remap all the drives.
>
> The problem though is that after 3 or 4 days any user on that computer
> will lose all of their mappings, and a logout/login will not fix it.
> ONLY restarting the computer will bring back those lost maps. The
> drives will appear in My Computer as "Disconnected Network Drive", and
> cannot be deleted through right click>disconnect or net use * /del
> command (both give a message that the drive is not in use). We have
> several drives that this error appears on. One of them I can click on
> and still view all contents, regardless of the status indicated. On a
> couple others, I click on them and those will also take me to that
> other network drive that says disconnected.
>
> To clear things up, these are very high priority machines that run
> 24/7 and shouldnt be shut down for any reason (they do 911
> dispatching). One user logs out and another should log right back in
> to continue the job, so I want to avoid having to restart every few
> days. You cant really trust users to do it on their own anyway.
>
> I have tried this solution from microsoft with no luck:
> http://support.microsoft.com/kb/932463
> I am aware that one potential cause is Symantec AV, which is what we
> are running. I MAY try uninstalling and seeing if it fixes it. These
> users shouldnt have internet access anyway.
> I have also tried some manual logon scripts that delete mappings with
> net use and then redo them every time a user logs in. No luck there
> either, and the domain logon script should do that for me anyway.
>
> The BIG REASON that I need this resolved because the mission critical
> software that we use does not recognize UNC paths, and therefore
> needs a particular drive letter to send output to.
>
> After the long-winded description I feel like I'm beating a dead
> horse. I hope I hit all the details, and I know I'm not the only one
> who has seen this. Any suggestions?
>
> Thank you,
> Bret
>
>
 
RE: Windows XP Disconnected Network Drive problem - Drives lose ma

Angie, this same topic is also being duscussed in the following thread -- no
one has found a solution.

http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/...608a&mid=4b4f88ec-093e-4366-8c42-520b2cd2608a


"Angie" wrote:

> Hi Bret,
>
> Did you ever find a fix for this problem? We have recently had this issue
> occur on only some of our workstations.
>
> Any sort of workaround would be much appreciated.
>
> Angie
>
> "Bret" wrote:
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > Probably anyone who read the title already knows what the problem is.
> > But for those who dont, here is the rundown.
> >
> > On our network, we run a logon script every time a user logs in to the
> > domain. This script should map all the network drives that an employee
> > will use for their shift. So every 8 hours, a user logs out and a new
> > user should log back on, which in theory should rerun the script and
> > remap all the drives.
> >
> > The problem though is that after 3 or 4 days any user on that computer
> > will lose all of their mappings, and a logout/login will not fix it.
> > ONLY restarting the computer will bring back those lost maps. The
> > drives will appear in My Computer as "Disconnected Network Drive", and
> > cannot be deleted through right click>disconnect or net use * /del
> > command (both give a message that the drive is not in use). We have
> > several drives that this error appears on. One of them I can click on
> > and still view all contents, regardless of the status indicated. On a
> > couple others, I click on them and those will also take me to that
> > other network drive that says disconnected.
> >
> > To clear things up, these are very high priority machines that run
> > 24/7 and shouldnt be shut down for any reason (they do 911
> > dispatching). One user logs out and another should log right back in
> > to continue the job, so I want to avoid having to restart every few
> > days. You cant really trust users to do it on their own anyway.
> >
> > I have tried this solution from microsoft with no luck:
> > http://support.microsoft.com/kb/932463
> > I am aware that one potential cause is Symantec AV, which is what we
> > are running. I MAY try uninstalling and seeing if it fixes it. These
> > users shouldnt have internet access anyway.
> > I have also tried some manual logon scripts that delete mappings with
> > net use and then redo them every time a user logs in. No luck there
> > either, and the domain logon script should do that for me anyway.
> >
> > The BIG REASON that I need this resolved because the mission critical
> > software that we use does not recognize UNC paths, and therefore
> > needs a particular drive letter to send output to.
> >
> > After the long-winded description I feel like I'm beating a dead
> > horse. I hope I hit all the details, and I know I'm not the only one
> > who has seen this. Any suggestions?
> >
> > Thank you,
> > Bret
> >
> >
 
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