User posted Sorry for the late reply. They couldn't explain why it's works without it in some cases and not in others. Thank you for your replies. Monday, January 9, PM. User posted What version of IE are you using? Friday, December 23, PM. User posted Capturing a network trace from the client machine would be a good bet.
Also as Steve mentioned, there is a option in IE to login without prompt in Intranet zone. Regards, Kaushal. Need more help? Expand your skills. Get new features first. Was this information helpful?
Yes No. Thank you! Any more feedback? The more you tell us the more we can help. Can you help us improve? Resolved my issue. Clear instructions. I would start even from comparing kerberos. Yes i did, im not sure whether the patchlevel is the reason though. Its totaly anoying, i cannot find any differences. So, i hope i figured it out. Please try to install kb on your XP Client and try to join the domain. This updated fixed the issue on my XP Machine.
I tried the patches. But no luck for me. My win XP still failed to join to domain. Still having the same error - An Internal error occurred. Unfortunately, this patch doesn't work for me as well. The same error :. Probably it is another patch or combination of some other patches. Office Office Exchange Server. Not an IT pro? Resources for IT Professionals. Sign in. United States English. Ask a question. Quick access. Depending on the virtual private network VPN hardware configuration, these larger packets have to be fragmented when going through a VPN.
The problem is caused by fragmentation of these large UDP Kerberos packets. Because UDP is a connectionless protocol, fragmented UDP packets will be dropped if they arrive at the destination out of order. Even if the packets are dropped, the server will re-request the missing data packet. To do this, follow these steps:. This is the solution approach for Windows , XP, and Server The following template is an administrative template that can be imported into Group Policy to let the MaxPacketSize value be set for all enterprise computers that are running Windows Server , Windows XP, or Windows This template modifies registry keys outside the Policies section.
By default, Group Policy Object Editor does not display these registry settings.
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