windows 7 and NT 4 server - workaround
There is reference on the Internet to folks who have played around with various settings related to security levels, encryption, SMB, etc. to successfully connect a Windows 7 computer to an NT 4 domain. which according to MS is not supported I am always dubious of claims made in general forums. I know that according to official MS, Windows 7 was designed not to do this (or perhaps differently phrased not designed to do this). I don't care about security issues in the situation I am contemplating where I could use this so if overall security gets lowered, encryption, etc. no problem.
February 16th, 2010 10:04am

click the start button and type secpol.msc in the search function. Browse to "Local Policies" -> "Security Options". Now look for the entry "Network Security: LAN Manager authentication level" and open it. Click on the dropdown menu and select "Send LM & NTLM - use NTLMv2 session security if negotiated". Apply the settings. In the Advanced sharing settings page of Network and sharing center, you need to have it set as Work/Home profile. Try Make sure computers are the same workgroup for now (you can change it later)Enable network discoveryTurn on file and print sharingTurn off password protected sharingTurn on Use user accounts and passwords to connect to other computers The other settings such as encryption I have set as use 128 bit encryption, you may need lower. Please check related policies.If a HOME version of win 7 1. Launch regedit from Start Search box.2. Find the following branch. HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Lsa 3. Create a DWORD key under Lsa and set: Name: LmCompatibilityLevel Value: 1 4. Restart.
Free Windows Admin Tool Kit Click here and download it now
February 16th, 2010 1:42pm

Hi, If your Windows 7 is Windows 7 Professional, Enterprise, or Ultimate Edition, I think you can also add Windows XP Mode to the Windows NT 4.0 domain to access the resources. To get Windows XP Mode, please visit the following webpage: Download Windows XP Mode Hope this helps. Thanks. Nicholas Li - MSFT
February 17th, 2010 11:53am

This topic is archived. No further replies will be accepted.

Other recent topics Other recent topics