Permissions or ACL for Scheduled TasksScheduled Task in Windows Server 2016, run by non-admin UsersUnable to...
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Permissions or ACL for Scheduled Tasks
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I am on a Windows Server 2012 R2 and the logged in account is a member of Administrators.
This is a screen shot of Task Scheduler:
I have tasks in folders another administrator created: RPA
and Test
. Running schtasks /query
, it lists only the and
Microsoft
folders.
If I run schtasks
in an elevated shell, I can see all the folders and tasks. What properties of a task make it visible or not visible to a user? The two tasks in the Test folder were created by me the logged-in user, ie I am shown as the Author.
I am not related to the Microsoft's tasks in anyway, yet those tasks are listed.
Where is permissions or access control for Scheduled Tasks managed?
task-scheduler schtasks
add a comment |
I am on a Windows Server 2012 R2 and the logged in account is a member of Administrators.
This is a screen shot of Task Scheduler:
I have tasks in folders another administrator created: RPA
and Test
. Running schtasks /query
, it lists only the and
Microsoft
folders.
If I run schtasks
in an elevated shell, I can see all the folders and tasks. What properties of a task make it visible or not visible to a user? The two tasks in the Test folder were created by me the logged-in user, ie I am shown as the Author.
I am not related to the Microsoft's tasks in anyway, yet those tasks are listed.
Where is permissions or access control for Scheduled Tasks managed?
task-scheduler schtasks
add a comment |
I am on a Windows Server 2012 R2 and the logged in account is a member of Administrators.
This is a screen shot of Task Scheduler:
I have tasks in folders another administrator created: RPA
and Test
. Running schtasks /query
, it lists only the and
Microsoft
folders.
If I run schtasks
in an elevated shell, I can see all the folders and tasks. What properties of a task make it visible or not visible to a user? The two tasks in the Test folder were created by me the logged-in user, ie I am shown as the Author.
I am not related to the Microsoft's tasks in anyway, yet those tasks are listed.
Where is permissions or access control for Scheduled Tasks managed?
task-scheduler schtasks
I am on a Windows Server 2012 R2 and the logged in account is a member of Administrators.
This is a screen shot of Task Scheduler:
I have tasks in folders another administrator created: RPA
and Test
. Running schtasks /query
, it lists only the and
Microsoft
folders.
If I run schtasks
in an elevated shell, I can see all the folders and tasks. What properties of a task make it visible or not visible to a user? The two tasks in the Test folder were created by me the logged-in user, ie I am shown as the Author.
I am not related to the Microsoft's tasks in anyway, yet those tasks are listed.
Where is permissions or access control for Scheduled Tasks managed?
task-scheduler schtasks
task-scheduler schtasks
edited Feb 10 at 7:25
Old Geezer
asked Feb 8 at 11:59
Old GeezerOld Geezer
148114
148114
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
The API provides a documented mechanism to set and query the ACL for a task or a task folder, but this doesn't seem to be exposed by the GUI or command line user interfaces.
On older versions of Windows, it appears that the permissions are stored in the file system so you can view and/or modify them by looking at the permissions on the files and folders in the c:windowssystem32Tasks
folder.
On Windows 10, the permissions are stored in the registry. Unfortunately, that leaves you with no built-in tools for manipulating them. A Google search failed to turn up any third-party tools either. See also this question.
How is the initial value determined or set? I have problems on a new machine and it appears that there is more to it than just file permissions. Please see serverfault.com/q/957039/245450.
– Old Geezer
1 hour ago
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
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active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
The API provides a documented mechanism to set and query the ACL for a task or a task folder, but this doesn't seem to be exposed by the GUI or command line user interfaces.
On older versions of Windows, it appears that the permissions are stored in the file system so you can view and/or modify them by looking at the permissions on the files and folders in the c:windowssystem32Tasks
folder.
On Windows 10, the permissions are stored in the registry. Unfortunately, that leaves you with no built-in tools for manipulating them. A Google search failed to turn up any third-party tools either. See also this question.
How is the initial value determined or set? I have problems on a new machine and it appears that there is more to it than just file permissions. Please see serverfault.com/q/957039/245450.
– Old Geezer
1 hour ago
add a comment |
The API provides a documented mechanism to set and query the ACL for a task or a task folder, but this doesn't seem to be exposed by the GUI or command line user interfaces.
On older versions of Windows, it appears that the permissions are stored in the file system so you can view and/or modify them by looking at the permissions on the files and folders in the c:windowssystem32Tasks
folder.
On Windows 10, the permissions are stored in the registry. Unfortunately, that leaves you with no built-in tools for manipulating them. A Google search failed to turn up any third-party tools either. See also this question.
How is the initial value determined or set? I have problems on a new machine and it appears that there is more to it than just file permissions. Please see serverfault.com/q/957039/245450.
– Old Geezer
1 hour ago
add a comment |
The API provides a documented mechanism to set and query the ACL for a task or a task folder, but this doesn't seem to be exposed by the GUI or command line user interfaces.
On older versions of Windows, it appears that the permissions are stored in the file system so you can view and/or modify them by looking at the permissions on the files and folders in the c:windowssystem32Tasks
folder.
On Windows 10, the permissions are stored in the registry. Unfortunately, that leaves you with no built-in tools for manipulating them. A Google search failed to turn up any third-party tools either. See also this question.
The API provides a documented mechanism to set and query the ACL for a task or a task folder, but this doesn't seem to be exposed by the GUI or command line user interfaces.
On older versions of Windows, it appears that the permissions are stored in the file system so you can view and/or modify them by looking at the permissions on the files and folders in the c:windowssystem32Tasks
folder.
On Windows 10, the permissions are stored in the registry. Unfortunately, that leaves you with no built-in tools for manipulating them. A Google search failed to turn up any third-party tools either. See also this question.
edited 7 mins ago
answered Feb 17 at 10:14
Harry JohnstonHarry Johnston
3,84112038
3,84112038
How is the initial value determined or set? I have problems on a new machine and it appears that there is more to it than just file permissions. Please see serverfault.com/q/957039/245450.
– Old Geezer
1 hour ago
add a comment |
How is the initial value determined or set? I have problems on a new machine and it appears that there is more to it than just file permissions. Please see serverfault.com/q/957039/245450.
– Old Geezer
1 hour ago
How is the initial value determined or set? I have problems on a new machine and it appears that there is more to it than just file permissions. Please see serverfault.com/q/957039/245450.
– Old Geezer
1 hour ago
How is the initial value determined or set? I have problems on a new machine and it appears that there is more to it than just file permissions. Please see serverfault.com/q/957039/245450.
– Old Geezer
1 hour ago
add a comment |
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