A required privilege is not held by the client
Greetings, all...
I may well be overlooking something simple here (would not be the first time!).
Using ATI 2010-7160:
I have been trying to include a ATI task into a procedure which can be run unattended via windows task scheduler. This procedure sends an email to my Gmail account, with beginning date and time, then starts the Acronis task. Next, when Acronis completes, the resulting log file is read and formatted, and added to the email data. The email is sent again, this time containing:
1.) Beginning date and time (see above)
2.) Completion date and time
3.) Log file, showing Acronis task completion status
The purpose of all this:
When away from home, with my laptop I can monitor the backup status of my desktop using my laptop! Since ATI 2010 will not send an email unless run manually from the Acronis interface, I can do it myself. Certainy this is not of critical importance, but is a real convenience to me!
The problem:
All this works very well, except when the ATI task tries to start. The small window in lower right of the screen shows "True Image starting", then a few seconds later, says "failed to initialize" and everything freezes. Going to the ATI interface shows an error message "A required privilege is not held by the client".
The Acronis task runs very nicely when started manually from the ATI interface. However, other method of starting the task -- desktop shortcut, bat file, etc.-- results in the failure described above. The only clue I can find to address this is article #2896, which suggests "the task was created under a different Windows user account....". As I am the ONLY user (other than 'default' and 'public') I am not able to relate to any of this. Not only was it my user account that created any and all of this, but as the only user, I would assume that my user must be the administrator.
OR AM I MISSING SOMETHING BIG HERE?? How could the ATI task have been created by anyone other than ME?
An added note -- if I start the shortcut with the "run as administrator" option, it works OK. However, I haven’t found a way to invoke "run as administrator" in a bat file, CMD file, or a REXX procedure. All fail on the ATI task.
Thanks for any clarification... Bob Vaughan
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