C++ Logon task schedule Error: No Mapping between account names and security ids was done

Issue

I am trying to write a windows Logon trigger task using C++ on Windows 7.

I am following this microsoft tutorial.

But I am facing problem in saving the task to root folder.
Here:

//  ------------------------------------------------------
    //  Save the task in the root folder.
    IRegisteredTask *pRegisteredTask = NULL;

    hr = pRootFolder->RegisterTaskDefinition(
            _bstr_t( wszTaskName ),
            pTask,
            TASK_CREATE_OR_UPDATE, 
            _variant_t(L"Builtin\\Administrators"), 
            _variant_t(), 
            TASK_LOGON_GROUP,
            _variant_t(L""),
            &pRegisteredTask);

Where the hr is getting error : No Mapping between account names and security ids was done

I also tried replacing _variant_t(L"Builtin\\Administrators") with _variant_t(L"S-1-5-32-544") to NULL out language hard coding issue, still No luck.

How can I make it work?

Solution

I suspect the demo code you have is XP-era, and hasn’t been updated to match the Vista/Win7 rules.

I updated the sample to set the LUA settings after setting the logon trigger, and it seems to work:

    hr = pLogonTrigger->put_UserId(_bstr_t(L"DOMAIN\username"));
    if (FAILED(hr))
    {
        printf("\nCannot add user ID to logon trigger: %x", hr);
        CoUninitialize();
        return 1;
    }


    //*** NEW**** Set the LUA settings
    CComPtr<IPrincipal>         pPrincipal;

    hr = pTask->get_Principal(&pPrincipal);
    if (SUCCEEDED(hr))
    {
        hr = pPrincipal->put_RunLevel(TASK_RUNLEVEL_LUA);
    }
    if (SUCCEEDED(hr))
    {
        hr = pPrincipal->put_GroupId(_bstr_t(L"Builtin\\Administrators"));
    }
    if (FAILED(hr))
    {
        printf("\nCannot set runlevel/groupid: %x", hr);
        CoUninitialize();
        return 1;
    }

If you need it to run on XP, then it’s likely that the get_Principal call will fail, so let that failure through.

Answered By – Eric Brown

This Answer collected from stackoverflow, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5 , cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0

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