>Are you impersonating a user on your domain? If so, they need to act as part of the operating system.
Yes,
I set the ID to act as part of the operating system and received the same error.
>Try changing the impersonation account to the system wide adminstrator and make sure you get access then.
I do not have access to the system wide adminstrator account. I will have to get our security administrator down here to try that. I may very well have to wait until next week after the holidays. I'll let you know and thanks for your help.
Mike
>
>>Hi Cathy,
>>
>>I do have the domain name included though I only had one backslash. I tried with two but get the same error. I've also set the ASPNET account to act as part of the operating system per a previous post.
>>
>>Mike
>>
>>>Hi Michael,
>>>
>>>Make sure you have the domain name as part of the userName attribute of your impersonation:
>>>
>>>
>>><identity impersonate="true" userName="domain\\logonname"
>>>
>>>
>>>>I'm trying to access a VFP table on a remote W2K server. The IIS is running on a W2K server as well. I'm getting the following error message:
>>>>
>>>>Could not create Windows user token from the credentials specified in the config file. Error from the operating system 'A required privilege is not held by the client.'
>>>>
>>>>The debug is pointing to the identity impersonate line in the config.web file. Many thanks for any help.
Michael McLain