2020. 3. 22. 21:30ㆍ카테고리 없음
If you have recently changed your Windows logon password, try entering your previous password. There are some instances where your McAfee Endpoint Encryption password becomes 'out of synch' with your Windows logon password. If entering your old password works, you will want right-mouse click on the McAfee Endpoint Encryption icon in the System Tray, and select 'Synchronize'. This will synchronize your McAfee Endpoint Encryption password with your Windows logon password. If this still does not work, please contact the Helpdesk.
Not sure how best to put this. We installed McAfee Endpoint Encryption clien version 5.1.7 onto two test machines. We want to limit the users ability to plug in USB devices and we want to encrypt those as well as the D drives on laptops in case those are lost. Our machines use CAC (Command Access Cards) with a CAC reader and the ActiveCard software which authenticates us to a PKI server and then allows us to log on to the network. The cards contain our certificates and pin numbers. Anyway, during research we believe that you must have the McAfee boot protection set to enabled.
That will encrypt the drive or drives that you want but when restarting you computer it will bring up first a McAfee log on screen which you enter your username and the pin number/password. But we don't want the McAfee log on screen. We just want to continue to use the Windows log on and the ActiveCard. The McAfee in a perfect world is bypassed all together while still being able to lock down USB's. And possibly decrypt if that is still an option at that point. We are using Windows XP. ActiveCard is: The website for the McAfee product in question is: Hope I made this is as clear as possible.
Sometimes smartcard logon works anyways - have you tried that, before we get going too crazy? If not, read on. Do you just not want the McAfee thing, or just not at the expense of SC logon? The area in question is called the gina - these are essentially hooks into the winlogon process to allow for additional logon features. I'm not familiar enough with McAfee's product specifically, but you might be able to make things easier by installing that prior to the activcard software - smartcard gina stubs should usually be the last thing to be installed.
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You could contact Activesync to see what their product's registry string is, however I believe it is 'acmsgina' so I will use that as an example. The registry area in question is: HKEYLOCALMACHINE SOFTWAR E Microsof t Windows NT CurrentVersion Winlogon First - export this key to.reg file - if anything goes weird, just boot to safe mode and can restore to what you have now. If there is not a string called 'GinaDLL' then it is default MS settings.
I will assume there is an entry in this case. Method 1) Keeping McAfee, but giving ActivCard first priority. When you installed smartcard software, it would have populated GinaDLL to point to the file path for their Gina DLL file.
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When you installed McAfee, it would have seen this present and moved its value to McAfee's own custom string - not sure what their regsitry string name is, but would be in this same area - just look for something that points to a gina.dll file - again I think this is acmsgina.dll for Activcard, along with the file path. Find this value and copy it into Notepad. Next, find the GinaDLL string - copy its value to notepad - this is the McAfee Gina's file path and name. Try making a new string called 'acmsgina' and paste the McAfee value.
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Copy the Activcard value and paste into GinaDLL string. Remove the McAfee custom string from the registry so you don't create a loop. 2) If you don't care about keeping the McAfee settings. Locate the Activcard gina path as described above and copy Paste into GinaDLL value. Remove the McAfee custom string from the registry.