K
KELLY_IRVINE
Hi. I am a server administrator of Windows Server 2012 R2.
I have a question. When I tried to reboot/shutdown my server, I sometimes got the message below before reboot it.
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Someone else is still using this computer. If you restart now, they could lose unsaved work."
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The server is managed by multiple server administrators, and they work on own different schedule. The server is located in domain, and each server administrator have each own domain account, and it requires to log in to the server.
If I got the message above, how I can identify which server admin is still log in to this server now? I thought I can track them from Security log in event logs such as ID 4624, but there are a lot of the ID showed up in the logs that looks like some service accounts are constantly showed up there, so it is kind of hard to identify which server admin is log in now from the log. If there is any other simpler way to audit current login accounts, please advise me. Any advice will be gratefully appreciated it.
Thank you.
Continue reading...
I have a question. When I tried to reboot/shutdown my server, I sometimes got the message below before reboot it.
--------------------------
Someone else is still using this computer. If you restart now, they could lose unsaved work."
---------------------------
The server is managed by multiple server administrators, and they work on own different schedule. The server is located in domain, and each server administrator have each own domain account, and it requires to log in to the server.
If I got the message above, how I can identify which server admin is still log in to this server now? I thought I can track them from Security log in event logs such as ID 4624, but there are a lot of the ID showed up in the logs that looks like some service accounts are constantly showed up there, so it is kind of hard to identify which server admin is log in now from the log. If there is any other simpler way to audit current login accounts, please advise me. Any advice will be gratefully appreciated it.
Thank you.
Continue reading...