That we found this out was a fluke, at the time I didn't think anyone else had the problem. Not only that, in the background the Explorer.exe is slowly climbing up the CPU and has to be restarted in the task manager (even if the effective access window is already closed). For example, if you want to display the "Effective access" or "effective access" on a file server, it does not work, the server displays "Computing effective access…" in the dialog. a Windows admin friend and I noticed that we both have the same bug on a Windows 2022 server. So I ask the readers if this can be confirmed. After the May update, no effective rights can be displayed there either. Maybe it is also somehow due to the name resolution as already written above. But at first I didn't associate it with an update, because I didn't find anything else about the problem.Īlso at Microsoft there is nothing about it. I also encountered the "can no longer query effective permissions" on Monday. writes about the same issue in this comment. Has anyone else experienced this problem? Unpatched Server 2022 behaves correctly and as usual.Īnother German user confirms this observeration in this comment as: Just tested it on one of our DC with Windows Server 2022 and can indeed reproduce the problem. Windows Explorer loads the CPU, but nothing happens. Windows Server 2022 cumulative update KB5026370 causes collateral damage that one German user describes here like this (I've translated the text):Īfter installing the KB5026370 update, I can no longer query effective permissions via Windows Server 2022. The issue doesn't seem to be well known yet except for some comments on the blog. Query file access permissions on Windows 11/Server 2022
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