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Troubleshooting IIS Authentication Problems

Had a customer show me this today... It's a tool from Microsoft (named 'Authentication and Access Control Diagnostics') to help IT staff troubleshoot authentication problems with IIS (your ears should perk up if you're a SharePoint administrator).  See the details on the tool below.  The link to the download it is http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyID=e90fe777-4a21-4066-bd22-b931f7572e9a&DisplayLang=en

Authentication and Access Control Diagnostics 1.0 (more commonly known as AuthDiag) is a tool released by Microsoft aimed at aiding IT professionals and developers at more effectively finding the source of authentication and authorization failures.

These users have often seen behavior from Internet Information Services (IIS) that doesn't seem appropriate or random when users authenticate to the IIS server. The complex world of authentication types and the various levels of security permissions necessary to allow a user to access the server causes many hours of labor for those tasked with troubleshooting these problems.

AuthDiag 1.0 offers a robust tool that offers a efficient method for troubleshooting authentication on IIS 5.x and 6.0. It will analyze metabase configuration and system-wide policies and warn users of possible points of failure and guide them to resolving the problem. AuthDiag 1.0 also includes a robust monitoring tool called AuthMon designed at capturing a snapshot of the problem while it occurs in real-time. AuthMon is robust and specially designed for IIS servers removing any information not pertinent to the authentication or authorization process.

Published Tuesday, March 28, 2006 7:54 PM by Mauro

Comments

Friday, April 14, 2006 1:53 PM by Anonymous

# re: Troubleshooting IIS Authentication Problems

I'm going to give authdiag a shot -- I've had extreme authentication problems with IIS 6.0 and Visual Studio 05. It's beyond annoying when you don't work on a particular project for a month, then go back to it to find authentication is b0rked again, then spend hours fixing it.

There is no rhyme nor reason, it just breaks.

I, myself, have had *nothing* but problems with VS05 and Sql Server 2005. They're a pain in the ass.
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