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Thank you for quickly reply, Tony. > It's authenticated by whatever Windows decides to authenticate with, > which can be domain, AD, kerberos ticket, etc. In my case, can't I know which way does Windows use? > Windows thinks your username is not 'keys', and you haven't got a > cached login for that user. It's best not to specify the username > with sspi as it allows the system to work it out (the exception being > XP Home which has a habit of being 'guest'). Thanks. I understood. By the way, I want to learn SSPI service more in detail. Are there good documents on it? I've read README and InstallationTips. Thanks. --- keys