I am not sure if this is what you mean, but we have the user put the domain name then a / in front of their user name in the top line at logon. Their password in the second line and the domain name in the bottom line. Jeff -----Original Message----- From: thin-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:thin-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Schneider, Chad M Sent: Monday, August 30, 2004 10:54 AM To: 'thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Subject: [THIN] Re: "You do not have access to logon to this session." This is kind of what we are doing....so specify within the logon credentials, the domain they are in? _____ From: Jeff Stockard [mailto:jstockard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Monday, August 30, 2004 9:43 AM To: thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [THIN] Re: "You do not have access to logon to this session." When we consolidated our 3 domains into one, I had some programs that would do the same thing. When I put OURDOMAINNAME/USERNAME in the user line, they were able to log in. I hope this helps Jeff Jesus Loves You -----Original Message----- From: thin-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:thin-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Schneider, Chad M Sent: Monday, August 30, 2004 10:32 AM To: 'thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Subject: [THIN] Re: "You do not have access to logon to this session." Should I try removing from the servers from AD domain and readding? _____ From: Joanne Determann [mailto:joanne.determann@xxxxxxxxx] Sent: Monday, August 30, 2004 9:04 AM To: thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [THIN] Re: "You do not have access to logon to this session." That has happened to me when moving or renaming accounts. Sometimes I have luck refreshing AD. But I've had to recreate accounts with different names to get them to work. I know that doesn't help much. Joanne -----Original Message----- From: Schneider, Chad M [mailto:CMSchneider@xxxxxxxxx] Sent: Monday, August 30, 2004 9:52 AM To: 'thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Subject: [THIN] Re: "You do not have access to logon to this session." Set properly....it was working for 3 years, and I changed nothing in there. Also does not matter full client vs. web client. _____ From: Seitz, Linden [mailto:L.Seitz@xxxxxxx] Sent: Monday, August 30, 2004 8:34 AM To: 'thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Subject: [THIN] Re: "You do not have access to logon to this session." Security in Citrix Connection Config set properly? -----Original Message----- From: thin-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:thin-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Schneider, Chad M Sent: Monday, August 30, 2004 8:24 AM To: 'thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Subject: [THIN] "You do not have access to logon to this session." I have 3 servers, which have been in use, as is, for @ 3 years. They were member servers of a domain, and recently moved to our AD domain, as part of our ad conversion project. Since they have been moved, and renamed, the published applications running on them, not all, but some, give the error "You do not have access to logon to this session". When this happens, it happens for everyone, users, admins., AD domain admins, everyone. I have tried removing app. Rights, readding, limiting to a single server, deleting the app. And creating a new of the same name. The last item, seems to work, but only temporary. I am pulling out my hair, of course, they only notice this at shift change, which if middle of the night, so I have been woke up every night for the past week. Any help is appreciated.