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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Good afternoon everyone, I'm a home user, and I notice that I'm getting many of these errors in the event viewer. I can't find where this error is coming from. Does anyone know what this is ? All my internet apps (mail, web, chat) seem to work fine. "Windows Firewall was unable to notify the user that it blocked an application from accepting incoming connections on the network. (Error Code: 2, Event ID: 5032, Source: security-auditing) " I tried looking up 5032 in Microsoft's error lookup page, but found nothing. Thanks for any insight you can provide, sincerely, Paul | Guest
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| Good afternoon everyone, I'm a home user, and I notice that I'm getting many of these errors in the event viewer. I can't find where this error is coming from. Does anyone know what this is ? All my internet apps (mail, web, chat) seem to work fine. "Windows Firewall was unable to notify the user that it blocked an application from accepting incoming connections on the network. (Error Code: 2, Event ID: 5032, Source: security-auditing) " I tried looking up 5032 in Microsoft's error lookup page, but found nothing. Thanks for any insight you can provide, sincerely, Paul | Guest
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| | #3 (permalink) | |
| This happens when a service is blocked from receiving inbound traffic. The firewall only notifies the user when an interactive program is blocked. If you open the event and look at the details you will see a Process ID. That process ID will tell you which process was blocked. You can determine the name of the process using Task Manager (hit CTRL+SHIFT+ESC to launch it). There is also a thread ID there. If you are inclined to go debugging you can use that to figure out more specifically what was blocked. Keep in mind, however, that process IDs are ephemeral and will change when the process is restarted. --- Your question may already be answered in Windows Vista Security: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/047...otectyourwi-20 "Paul & Lucy" wrote: Quote:
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| | #4 (permalink) | |
| Thanks for the insight Jesper. I did as you suggested. The task manager shows that the process is called "Isass.exe" which is the "local security authority process" and is part of the RPC (remote procedure call) process. The service that are associated with it is something called "CNG Key Isolation" (KeyIso). Don't know what to do here. It was also mentioned that this error can come up when the computer doesn't have enough memory to notify the user. ___________________________________ "Jesper" <Jesper@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote : Quote:
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| | #5 (permalink) | ||
| It is actually kind of the other way around. Think of LSASS as the "executive branch" of security on your computer. It enforces all the rules around security, including authentication, access checks, etc. It uses RPC for many of its calls. I have never heard this may happen when the computer has insufficient memory, but maybe it could. In this particular case it is most definitely a service that received data that the firewall blocked. It could be malicious or benign. Without sniffing to find out you won't know. It can actually be as simple as LSASS calling into itself (which is quite common) using a network API. Upon failure it can retry with a local call. I would not worry about it though. It is quite normal to see these. Over the last two days I have 29 of these. Most or all are related to LSASS. I have noticed no stability problems with it, and in any case, there is insufficient information in the event log message to act on it. --- Your question may already be answered in Windows Vista Security: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/047...otectyourwi-20 "Paul & Lucy" wrote: Quote:
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| | #6 (permalink) | |||
| I'm glad I don't have to worry about it, because it would otherwise one heck of a problem to crack. I was just going through the event viewer to see what errors are in there and trying to see which ones are important and which ones aren't. Thanks once again, Paul __________________________________ "Jesper" <Jesper@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:0238925D-0C6F-410B-9B5A-7181A553BA4D@microsoft.com... Quote:
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| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
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