Important This article contains information about modifying the registry. Before you modify the registry, make sure to back it up and make sure that you understand how to restore the registry if a problem occurs. For information about how to back up, restore, and edit the registry, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
256986 Description of the Microsoft Windows Registry
RESOLUTION
Note that the fix listed below does not change the behavior in which LSA secrets are available to local administrators. Administrators have access to data including LSA secrets. This fix provides improved protection for LSA secrets against attacks noted below that do not involve accounts with administrative priviledges.
To resolve this problem, obtain the latest service pack for Windows NT 4.0 or Windows NT Server 4.0, Terminal Server Edition. For additional information, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
152734 How to Obtain the Latest Windows NT 4.0 Service Pack
The updates in this Windows NT 4.0 hotfix provide the following additional
protection for the LSA Secret data:
- Additional encryption for the LSA Secrets, which provides protection for
this information when stored on backup tapes, the Emergency Repair Disk,
or other registry backups. For maximum protection, you should also
enable the System Key option.
For additional information about System Key (Syskey.exe), click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
143475
Windows NT system key permits strong encryption of the SAM
- The value of the LSA private data is not returned to remote clients over
the network.
- Calls to the Win32 APIs will not return LSA private data used for
service accounts and other system components to unauthorized
applications (non-system components).
- This update includes a change to the privilege needed to open the
Security Event log. Applications that open this log on systems running
with this update installed fail unless the security privilege
(SE_SECURITY_NAME) is enabled.
For additional information about this change, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
188855
The Security permission must be granted to view the Security event log
Before You Apply The Hotfix
Because this hotfix makes a modification to the on-disk storage of the LSA
data information, Microsoft does not recommend that it be uninstalled.
Perform the following steps to ease the transition back to a pre-LSA2-fix
configuration in case you experience problems with the hotfix:
- Perform a Full System Backup.
- Run Rdisk /s. Using the /s command-line switch with Rdisk.exe causes the
Sam._ and Security._ databases to be copied to the %Systemroot%\Repair
folder.
- Create a temporary folder under the %Systemroot% folder called
Lsabackout.
- Copy the following files from the %Systemroot\System32 folder to the
%Systemroot%\Lsabackout folder as they are updated by LSA2-fix:
Eventlog.dll
Lsasrv.dll
Msaudite.dll
Msv1_0.dll
Netcfg.dll
Samlib.dll
Samsrv.dll
Services.exe
Srvmgr.exe
Xactsrv.dll
- Create an updated Emergency Repair Disk (ERD) which updates the on-disk
SAM and Registry information in the %Systemroot%\System32\Config folder.
Note This hotfix supersedes the fix referred to in the following
articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
154087 Access violation in Lsass.exe due to incorrect buffer size
174205 LSASS may use a large amount of memory on a domain controller
129457 RestrictAnonymous Access enabled lets anonymous connections obtain the password policy
This hotfix has been posted as Lsa2fixi.exe (x86) and Lsa2fixa.exe
(Alpha).For your convenience, the English version of this post-SP3 hotfix
has been posted to the following Internet location. However, Microsoft
recommends that you install Windows NT 4.0 Service Pack 4 to correct this
problem.
Note An updated version of this hotfix was posted on July 20, 1998 and
provides an additional security level to systems running Windows NT 4.0
Service Pack 3.
Note The above link is one path; it has been wrapped for readability.
If you run Systems Management Server on systems where this hotfix is
applied, the SNMP Event Log Extension Agent (Snmpelea) generates the
following Event ID 3007 error:
Error opening event log file Security.
Log will not be processed.
Return code from OpenEventLog is 1314.
The SNMP Event Log Extension Agent requires an update to manage the
security event log.
For additional information about how to resolve the SNMP Event Log Extension Agent problem, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
183770
Snmpelea unable to open security event log
Windows NT 3.51
A hotfix for Windows NT 3.51 is not available at this time.