It’s from the log on the ClearPass appliance, which uses RADIUS. It’s
something that I don’t have responsibility for or access to. But you have
the right idea, as our director is getting the Network group seriously
involved in this now.



Thanks.



*From:* listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:
listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com] *On Behalf Of *Brian Desmond
*Sent:* Thursday, August 27, 2015 10:39 AM
*To:* ntsys...@lists.myitforum.com
*Subject:* RE: [NTSysADM] AD LDAP Policies 2012 R2



*That error looks like it’s coming from a RADIUS server. Does that system
have some logging as to what’s going on? A network trace when this is
reproducible would give you some clear evidence on what’s going on.*



*Thanks,*

*Brian*





*From:* listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com [
mailto:listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com <listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com>] *On
Behalf Of *Charles F Sullivan
*Sent:* Thursday, August 27, 2015 8:34 AM
*To:* ntsys...@lists.myitforum.com
*Subject:* RE: [NTSysADM] AD LDAP Policies 2012 R2



A few months ago we started implementing ClearPass as a network
registration/authentication solution. For years we had a home-grown
solution that actually worked quite well, but it did not rely on AD, where
ClearPass does.



There have been some outages where the app throws errors such as “No free
connections available.\n[Local User Repository] - localhost: User not
found.\nMSCHAP: Authentication failed\nEAP-MSCHAPv2: User authentication
failure”.



This is something that is run by a different department than the Windows
System Admins group that I belong to, so I don’t know a lot about it, but
the vendor insisted on blaming it on our AD and they wanted us to check on
the MaxConnections, which is when I noticed the apparent inconsistencies,
but….



I checked on my test Windows 2012 R2 domain, which definitely has all of
the default LDAP policies and it’s exactly the same as what I saw here in
production. Reading a bit more about LDAP in Windows 2012 AD, I saw phrases
like “LDAP enhancements” and “LDAP gets an overhaul”, so that may explain
why it’s different than even 2008 R2 AD.



Nobody here (including the other department) actually believes the problem
is with AD, as we just don’t see anything abnormal when the problem
happens. This includes having LDAP logging set to debug mode.



*From:* listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:
listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com] *On Behalf Of *Christopher Bodnar
*Sent:* Thursday, August 27, 2015 9:12 AM
*To:* ntsys...@lists.myitforum.com
*Subject:* RE: [NTSysADM] AD LDAP Policies 2012 R2



Just curious. Are you experiencing any issues related to this? Or did you
do an audit and are trying to see why the values seem to be skewed?





*From:* listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com [
mailto:listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com <listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com>] *On
Behalf Of *Charles F Sullivan
*Sent:* Wednesday, August 26, 2015 5:38 PM
*To:* ntsys...@lists.myitforum.com
*Subject:* RE: [NTSysADM] AD LDAP Policies 2012 R2



Thanks, that’s good to hear. If either of those are true, I think it would
be acceptable.



I would lean toward default rather than hard limits, only because I doubt
anyone here ever changed the values. (Just because I doubt it doesn’t mean
it didn’t happen!)



*From:* listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:
listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com] *On Behalf Of *Brian Desmond
*Sent:* Wednesday, August 26, 2015 2:39 PM
*To:* ntsys...@lists.myitforum.com
*Subject:* RE: [NTSysADM] AD LDAP Policies 2012 R2



*I would need to double check but I expect that either a) when it’s zero it
honors the default or b) when it’s zero it falls back to the hard max
limit. *



*From:* listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com [
mailto:listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com <listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com>] *On
Behalf Of *Charles F Sullivan
*Sent:* Wednesday, August 26, 2015 10:58 AM
*To:* ntsys...@lists.myitforum.com
*Subject:* [NTSysADM] AD LDAP Policies 2012 R2



We have a single domain/forest at Windows 2012 R2 functional level. This
began 14 years ago as a Windows 2000 domain. (Actually it was originally
migrated from NT 4, but I don’t think that would be a factor.)



In checking the LDAP policies using ntdsutil, I see at least 5 settings
that are non-default. An example is MaxValRange = 0. The default is 1500.



Is there anyone else out there running a Windows 2012 R2 domain who is
aware of these settings in their own environment, or who would be willing
to check? Particularly helpful may be someone whose domain started out as
Windows 2000. Does anyone know if this is expected or normal?



Thanks for any help with this.



Charlie Sullivan

Sr. Windows Systems Administrator


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