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Here's the scoop on how it is happening. Not sure what to do about it, but the user in question is barred temporarily from using CVS! He is a mobile warrior... and his laptop is not part of our domain, yet he has a domain account. When he logs in, he adds the @espgroup.net so that the Win authentication will know to contact the appropriate domain server (it does not appear in the pulldown). Evidently, the full name as he entered it is then passed around within the Win auth scheme and thus into CVS. Thought you'd like to know. I'm going to manually edit the files to remove the offending text. Thanks for the tip. Dwayne Tony Hoyle wrote: >P. Dwayne Miller wrote: > > > >>Version is 1.11.1.3 Build 72 >> >>Top of the file looks like: >> >>head 1.4; >>access; >>symbols >> V1_0_40:1.3 >> V1_0_31:1.2 >> V1_0:1.1.1.1 >> InitialLoad:1.1.1; >>locks; strict; >>comment @# @; >> >> >>1.4 >>date 2003.04.01.20.41.21; author njohnson at espgroup.net; state >>Exp; branches; >> >>Could it be the @ in the username that's causing problems? >> >> >> >Yes - you can't have @ signs in usernames (not sure how you managed it in NT >either... they're certainly not possible in any version I've used). > >I can stop it writing them, but you'll have to take the @ out manually from >existing ones (you can actually do this in notepad, as it doesn't change >the format of the file when it saves it). > >Tony > > > > > >