148

I am struggling to get a SQL Server connection from machine A to machine B which is running the SQL Server.

I have Googled extensively and all the things I have found have not worked. Nor do they lead you step by step through the process of solving this.

We are not using Kerberos, but NTLM where configured.

enter image description here

The machines involved are (xx is used to obscure some of the machine name for security purposes):

  • xxPRODSVR001 - Windows Server 2012 Domain Controller
  • xxDEVSVR003 - Windows Server 2012 (This machine is generating the error)
  • xxDEVSVR002 - Windows Server 2012 (This machine is running SQL Server 2012)

The following SPN's are registered on the DC (xxPRODSVR001). I have obscured the domain with yyy for security purposes:

Registered ServicePrincipalNames for CN=xxDEVSVR002,CN=Computers,DC=yyy,DC=local:

            MSSQLSvc/xxDEVSVR002.yyy.local:49298

            MSSQLSvc/xxDEVSVR002.yyy.local:TFS

            RestrictedKrbHost/xxDEVSVR002

            RestrictedKrbHost/xxDEVSVR002.yyy.local

            Hyper-V Replica Service/xxDEVSVR002

            Hyper-V Replica Service/xxDEVSVR002.yyy.local

            Microsoft Virtual System Migration Service/xxDEVSVR002

            Microsoft Virtual System Migration Service/xxDEVSVR002.yyy.local

            Microsoft Virtual Console Service/xxDEVSVR002

            Microsoft Virtual Console Service/xxDEVSVR002.yyy.local

            SMTPSVC/xxDEVSVR002

            SMTPSVC/xxDEVSVR002.yyy.local

            WSMAN/xxDEVSVR002

            WSMAN/xxDEVSVR002.yyy.local

            Dfsr-12F9A27C-BF97-4787-9364-D31B6C55EB04/xxDEVSVR002.yyy.local

            TERMSRV/xxDEVSVR002

            TERMSRV/xxDEVSVR002.yyy.local

            HOST/xxDEVSVR002

            HOST/xxDEVSVR002.yyy.local

Registered ServicePrincipalNames for CN=xxDEVSVR003,CN=Computers,DC=yyy,DC=local:

            MSSQLSvc/xxDEVSVR003.yyy.local:1433

            MSSQLSvc/xxDEVSVR003.yyy.local

            Hyper-V Replica Service/xxDEVSVR003

            Hyper-V Replica Service/xxDEVSVR003.yyy.local

            Microsoft Virtual System Migration Service/xxDEVSVR003

            Microsoft Virtual System Migration Service/xxDEVSVR003.yyy.local

            Microsoft Virtual Console Service/xxDEVSVR003

            Microsoft Virtual Console Service/xxDEVSVR003.yyy.local

            WSMAN/xxDEVSVR003

            WSMAN/xxDEVSVR003.yyy.local

            TERMSRV/xxDEVSVR003

            TERMSRV/xxDEVSVR003.yyy.local

            RestrictedKrbHost/xxDEVSVR003

            HOST/xxDEVSVR003

            RestrictedKrbHost/xxDEVSVR003.yyy.local

            HOST/xxDEVSVR003.yyy.local

Now if only the SQL Server error message was more descriptive and told me what principal name it was trying to connect to I might be able to diagnose this.

So can anyone step me through how to solve this one or can you see anything in what I have provided that is wrong?

I would be happy to generate more debug info, just tell me what you need.

4
  • We don't run an internal DNS server. But to eliminate this as a problem are you saying I should "ping -a x.x.x.x" or is there another way to determine if there are duplicates?
    – TheEdge
    Commented Aug 31, 2015 at 11:19
  • I'm no expert but I thought SPNs and SSPI was a Kerberos thing? Are you sure you're not using Kerberos? Commented Aug 31, 2015 at 13:06
  • @DylanSmith Not that I can see..... When I ran SP in SQL Server (Forget name now) it all came up as NTLM. Do you know how I check?
    – TheEdge
    Commented Aug 31, 2015 at 13:12
  • I know the question is old, so save time and run this tool: microsoft.com/en-us/download/…
    – Eduardo
    Commented Feb 11, 2019 at 19:08

61 Answers 61

95

Try logging out and logging back in again.

I had this problem with an ASP.NET MVC app I was working on after I changed my Windows password. Relggging fixed it.

1
  • Same when I got this error in SSMS, reboot and login again, done. Commented Jun 27, 2023 at 22:42
36

The SSPI context error definitely indicates authentication is being attempted using Kerberos.

Since Kerberos authentication SQL Server's Windows Authentication relies on Active Directory, which requires a trusted relationship between your computer and your network domain controller, you should start by validating that relationship.

You can quickly check that relationship, thru the following Powershell command Test-ComputerSecureChannel.

Test-ComputerSecureChannel -Verbose

enter image description here

If it returns False, you must repair your computer Active Directory secure channel, since without it no domain credencials validation is possible outside your computer.

You can repair your Computer Secure Channel, thru the following Powershell command:

Test-ComputerSecureChannel -Repair -Verbose

If the above doesn't work (because your domain credentials don't work because the machine isn't trusted) you can use NETDOM RESET instead from an elevated cmd.exe (not PowerShell) prompt:

NETDOM RESET %COMPUTERNAME% /UserO:domainAdminUserName /Password0:* /SecurePasswordPrompt

(Yes, the command-line arguments really do have an O (Capital-"Oh", not zero 0). The /Password0:* /SecurePasswordPrompt option will use a credential popup instead of having you put your password directly in the command-line, which you must never do).

Check the security event logs, if you are using kerberos you should see logon attempts with authentication package: Kerberos.

The NTLM authentication may be failing and so a kerberos authentication attempt is being made. You might also see an NTLM logon attempt failure in your security event log?

You can turn on kerberos event logging in dev to try to debug why the kerberos is failing, although it is very verbose.

Microsoft's Kerberos Configuration Manager for SQL Server may help you quickly diagnose and fix this issue.

Here is a good story to read: http://houseofbrick.com/microsoft-made-an-easy-button-for-spn-and-double-hop-issues/

4
  • 1
    This fixed the issue for me. SPNs were registered on the wrong user object in Active Directory. The Kerberos Configuration Manager for SQL Server fixed it two clicks! Commented May 6, 2020 at 17:09
  • 1
    I whitelisted the Active directory (AD) IPs and SQL Server connectivity issue was resolved. I also verified from above mentioned command 'Test-ComputerSecureChannel -verbose' After IP whitelisting true flag was received. By Whitelisting I mean to allow IP over VPN or firewall. The repair command did not worked for me. Commented Jan 29, 2021 at 7:46
  • 2
    The issue was time skew for me. Domain controller and database server 45 minute time skew. Setting correct time fixed it.
    – Jelphy
    Commented Feb 25, 2021 at 15:44
  • 3
    Note that Test-ComputerSecureChannel does not exist in PowerShell Core.
    – Ian Kemp
    Commented Apr 11, 2022 at 17:04
26

I was getting the same error when trying through windows authentication. Sounds ludicrous but just in case it helps someone else: it was because my domain account got locked somehow while I was still logged in (!). Unlocking the account fixed it.

1
  • I needed to change my password. Commented Dec 5, 2023 at 15:06
25

Try setting Integrated Security=true to remove this param from the connection string.


IMPORTANT: As user @Auspex commented,

Removing Integrated Security will prevent this error, because the error occurs when trying to login with your Windows credentials. Unfortunately, most of the time, you want to be able to login with your Windows credentials

4
  • 1
    How do you remove that if the connection is through SSMS? Commented Jun 11, 2018 at 15:45
  • 37
    Well, clearly removing Integrated Security will prevent this error, because the error occurs when trying to login with your Windows credentials. Unfortunately, most of the time, you want to be able to login with your Windows credentials!
    – Auspex
    Commented Jun 12, 2018 at 12:04
  • 2
    @GeoffDawdy my answer below may help? It was due to an expired password, requiring me to change my password, log out and back in and then everything worked as normal. Commented Sep 3, 2018 at 2:42
  • 4
    Save yourself time and run this tool: microsoft.com/en-us/download/…
    – Eduardo
    Commented Feb 11, 2019 at 18:54
22

I was logging into Windows 10 with a PIN instead of a password. I logged out and logged back in with my password instead and was able to get in to SQL Server via Management Studio.

4
  • 2
    Oops, that wasn't quite it. SSMS did a switch on me when I wasn't looking and went back to my SQL Server account. But I finally tried switching from using a Microsoft account to log in locally to using a local account locally. That did the trick, and it seems to work now even if I log in using my PIN.
    – mcb2k3
    Commented May 31, 2018 at 22:01
  • This works. Why does this work???
    – Ian Kemp
    Commented Apr 11, 2022 at 17:03
  • @IanKemp It works because he's using a local account, rather than an Active Directory account. This error is specific to AD
    – Auspex
    Commented Oct 25, 2022 at 12:57
  • That was my problem. I used Windows Hello to log in to my windows session. If I use PIN or fingerprint to log in, it won't work. Use password. Thanks so much I was becoming crazy. Commented Aug 29 at 21:54
16

Just to add another potential solution to this most ambiguous of errors The target principal name is incorrect. Cannot generate SSPI context. (.Net SqlClient Data Provider) :

Verify that the IP that is resolved when pinging the SQL Server is the same as the one in the Configuration Manager. To check, open SQL Server Configuration Manager and then go to SQL Server Network Configuration > Protocols for MSSQLServer > TCP/IP.

Make sure TCP/IP is enabled and in the IP Addresses tab, make sure that the IP that the server resolves to when pinging is the same one here. That fixed this error for me.

0
9

The issue seems to be a windows credentials issue. I was getting the same error on my work laptop with a VPN. I am supposedly logged in as my Domain/Username, which is what I use successfully when connecting directly but as soon as I move to a VPN with another connection I receive this error. I thought it was a DNS issue as I could ping the server but it turns out I needed to run SMSS explicitly as my user from Command prompt.

e.g runas /netonly /user:YourDoman\YourUsername "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio 18\Common7\IDE\Ssms.exe"

1
  • I had a similar issue (iMac vpn with a Windows VM). I solved it by adding my work's DNS servers to my Mac's Wi-Fi network settings. I'm guessing there is a better way, but this got it working for me. Commented Mar 19, 2020 at 1:12
8

I just ran into this and fixed it by doing 2 things:

  1. Granting read/write servicePrincipalName permissions to the service account using ADSI Edit, as described in https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/811889
  2. Removing the SPNs that previously existed on the SQL Server computer account (as opposed to the service account) using

    setspn -D MSSQLSvc/HOSTNAME.domain.name.com:1234 HOSTNAME
    

    where 1234 was the port number used by the instance (mine was not a default instance).

1
  • I switched an MS SQL Server instance from running using NT Service\MSSQLSSERVER to running as a Managed Service Account. After doing so, SSMS could connect to the database locally on the server, but not remotely from my laptop. Fixing the SPNs addressed the problem. Commented Feb 5, 2019 at 4:03
7

In my case, restarting SQL Server 2014 (on my development server) fixed the issue.

2
  • Ditto SQL Server 2016. Commented Oct 30, 2018 at 3:36
  • For my SQL Server 2019+Windows Server 2022 VM, I fixed it by restarting Windows, but maybe restarting just the SQL Server service would have done the trick. I did try the "Test-ComputerSecureChannel -Verbose" solution, but it returned "True", which is nominal, so I resorted to a machine reboot. Commented Oct 16, 2023 at 18:50
7

This is usually due to missing, incorrect or duplicated Service Principle Names (SPNs)

Steps to resolve:

  1. Confirm what AD account SQL Server is using
  2. Run the following command in Powershell or CMD in administrator mode (service account should not contain the domain)
setspn -L <ServiceAccountName> | Select-String <ServerName> | select line
  1. Make sure the returned output contains an SPN which is fully qualified, no fully qualified, with a port and without a port.

    Expected Output:

    Registered ServicePrincipalNames for CN=<ServiceAccountName>,OU=CSN Service Accounts,DC=<Domain>,DC=com: 
    MSSQLSvc/<ServerName>.<domain>.com:1433
    MSSQLSvc/<ServerName>:1433                                           
    MSSQLSvc/<ServerName>.<domain>.com
    MSSQLSvc/<ServerName>
    
  2. If you don't see all of the above, run the following command in PowerShell or CMD in admin mode (make sure to change the port if you don't use default 1433)

SETSPN -S  MSSQLSvc/<ServerName> <Domain>\<ServiceAccountName> 
SETSPN -S  MSSQLSvc/<ServerName>.<Domain> <Domain>\<ServiceAccountName> 
SETSPN -S  MSSQLSvc/<ServerName>:1433 <Domain>\<ServiceAccountName> 
SETSPN -S  MSSQLSvc/<ServerName>.<Domain>:1433 <Domain>\<ServiceAccountName>
  1. Once above is complete it normally takes a few minutes for DNS propagation

Also, if you get a message about duplicate SPNs found, you may want to delete them and recreate them

2
6

Login to both your SQL Box and your client and type:

ipconfig /flushdns
nbtstat -R

If that doesn't work, renew your DHCP on your client machine... This work for 2 PCs in our office.

1
  • 2
    did your answer on my client machine and SQL box plus ipconfig/release and ipconfig/renew on my client machine and it did not work for me ;( Commented Mar 23, 2017 at 18:01
6

Check your clock matches between the client and server.

When I had this error intermittently, none of the above answers worked, then we found the time had drifted on some of our servers, once they were synced again the error went away. Search for w32tm or NTP to see how to automatically sync the time on Windows.

1
  • 1
    Same problem for me. Test environment with no NTP running. Time skew produced this error message.
    – Jelphy
    Commented Feb 25, 2021 at 15:45
5

I was testing out IPv6 on a cluster of PC's in an isolated network and ran into this issue when I reverted back yo IPv4. I had been play in the active directory, DNS and DHCP so have no idea what I prodded to break the Kerberos setup.

I retested the connection outside of my software with this useful tip to connect remote connectivity I found.

https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/steverac/2010/12/13/test-remote-sql-connectivity-easily/

then after a brief search found this on the Microsoft website https://support.microsoft.com/en-gb/help/811889/how-to-troubleshoot-the-cannot-generate-sspi-context-error-message.

run the tool on the SQL server see if there are any issue if the status says error then hit the fix button that appears.

This resolved the problem for me.

5

In case anyone is wondering, I untangled the MS terminology:

Target = (active directory) target

Active directory target = target server running the domain controller

Domain controller = server that verifies your login information

Principal name = your windows username

SSPI = security support provider interface

Security support provider interface = software interface that manages "authenticated 
communications" and allows SSPs like TLS to allow SSL, among others

SSP = security support provider (SSPI implementation)

TLS/SSL = you should already know this
 

= Can't verify your password.

0
4

I had this problem when accessing the web application. It might be due to i have changed a windows password recently.

This issue got resolved when i have updated the password for the app pool where i have hosted the web application.

4

In my situation I was trying to use Integrated Security to connect from a PC to SQL Server on another PC on a network without a domain. On both PCs, I was signing in to Windows with the same Microsoft account. I switched to a local account on both PCs and SQL Server now connects successfully.

3

Since I landed here when looking for a solution to my own problem, I'll share my solution here, in case others land here as well.

I was connecting fine to SQL Server until my machine was moved to another office on another domain. Then, after the switch, I was getting this error regarding the target principal name. What fixed it was connecting using a fully qualified name such as: server.domain.com. And actually, once I connected to the first server that way, I could connect to other servers using just the server name (without the full qualification), but your mileage may vary.

1
  • This problem only happened to me when I added a certificate to the SQL Connection. The certificate was issued to the FQDN, so when I connect to FQDN\Instance, it worked. Commented Jun 9, 2017 at 11:56
3

I had the same issue, but locking, and unlocking the machine worked for me. Sometimes, firewall issues will give errors.

I am not sure it will work for you or not, just sharing my experience.

0
3

This Microsoft Tool is like Magic. Run it, connect it to the SQL server, and click Fix

The old version linked here worked on SQL server 2017.

Kerberos Configuration Manager for SQL Server https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=39046

2

Make sure that "Named Pipes" are enabled from "SQL Server Configuration Manager". This worked for me.

  1. Open "SQL Server Configuration Manager".
  2. Expand "SQL Server Network Configuration", from the list on the left.
  3. Select "Protocols for [Your Instance Name]".
  4. Right click on "Named Pipes", from the list on the right.
  5. Select "Enable"
  6. Restart your Instance service.
1
  • 1
    I had the same message. I was trying to connect with IP so I did as stackoverflow.com/users/8568873/s3minaki, i.e steps 1-6 but I enabled TCP/IP instead of Named Pipes. Also under IPALL I cleared TCP Dynamic port and set TCP Port instead. Be sure no other instance runs this port or the instance won't restart. I also needed an SQL user, Windows Authentication wont work. In SQL Manager you connect with x.x.x.x\instancename,portnr. ie 127.0.0.1\SQLEXPRESS,1433 Commented May 28, 2019 at 6:49
2

In my Case since I was working in my development environment, someone had shut down the Domain Controller and Windows Credentials couldn't be authenticated. After turning on the Domain Controller, the error disappeared and everything worked just fine.

1
  • In my case the Domain Controller VM froze and had to be reset.
    – Cryptc
    Commented Mar 15, 2022 at 20:14
2

I had the same problem while using face recognition to logon to Windows 10. The workaround is to hold shift and right-click on the SSMS and use Run As Different User and provide username with password.

1
  • +1, though I wasn't using face recognition. For some reason running as a different user but using the same user I'm already logged in with fixed it. Something with our corporate VPN maybe. Commented Jun 6 at 18:12
1

I ran into this today and wanted to share my fix, since this one is simply overlooked and easy to fix.

We manage our own rDNS and recently redid our server naming scheme. As part of that, we should have updated our rDNS and forgot to do this.

A ping turned up the correct hostname, but a ping -a returned the wrong hostname.

Easy fix: change the rDNS, do an ipconfig /flushdns, wait 30 seconds (just something I do), do another ping -a , see it resolving the correct hostname, connect ... profit.

1

I ran into a variant of this issue, here were the characteristics:

  • User was able to successfully connect to a named instance, for example, connections to Server\Instance were successful
  • User was unable to connect to the default instance, for example, connections to Server failed with the OP's screenshot regarding SSPI
  • User was unable to connect default instance with fully qualified name, for example, connections to Server.domain.com failed (timeout)
  • User was unable to connect IP address without named instance, for example, connections to 192.168.1.134 failed
  • Other users not on the domain (for example, users who VPN to the network) but using domain credentials were able to successfully connect to the default instance and IP address

So after many headaches of trying to figure out why this single user couldn't connect, here are the steps we took to fix the situation:

  1. Take a look at the server in the SPN list using
    setspn -l Server
    a. In our case, it said Server.domain.com
  2. Add an entry to the hosts file located in C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts (run Notepad as Administrator to alter this file). The entry we added was
    Server.domain.com Server

After this, we were able to successfully connect via SSMS to the default instance.

1
  • Adding a host entry solve my problem. Not sure why...
    – Ariwibawa
    Commented Aug 4, 2022 at 16:08
1

I ran into a new one for this: SQL 2012 hosted on Server 2012. Was tasked to create a cluster for SQL AlwaysOn.
Cluster was created everyone got the SSPI message.

To fix the problems ran following command:

setspn -D MSSQLSvc/SERVER_FQNName:1433 DomainNamerunningSQLService

DomainNamerunningSQLService == the domain account I set for SQL I needed a Domain Administrator to run the command. Only one server in the cluster had issues.

Then restarted SQL. To my surprise I was able to connect.

1
  • I had this same issue, but it wasn't on a cluster. I had changed the logon for the SQL Engine service to a domain account. I had to remove the MSSQLSvc/SERVER_FQNName:* SPNs from the computer account and then add them to the user account running the service. Commented May 10, 2018 at 18:03
1

I was trying to connect to a VM running SQL Server 2015 from my laptop in a Visual Studio 2015 Console App. I run my app the night before and it is fine. In the morning I try to debug the app and I get this error. I tried ipconfig/flush and release + renew and a a bunch of other garbage, but in the end...

Restart your VM and restart the client. That fixed it for me. I should have known, restart works every time.

1
  • Similar experience, SQLServer 2016 on VM. Not sure why connections began to fail. Restart of VM fixed it without needing to restart client. Commented Oct 30, 2018 at 3:35
1

I had this problem on my sql server. I setspn -D mssqlsvc\Hostname.domainname Hostname then stoped and started my SQL server service.

I am thinking that just stopping and starting my sql service would have done it.

2
  • This is what I did after comparing setspn -L <Hostname> with a server that worked. Turned out all instances that worked had no SPN registered. I don’t really know what I’m doing, but apparently without those SPNs registered, NTLM can be used. Thanks!
    – BenderBoy
    Commented Jun 26, 2020 at 11:06
  • Be aware that this is not really a solution if you want to use Kerberos instead of NTLM, as you apparently should: serverfault.com/a/384721. In fact, this solution basically turns off Kerberos auth.
    – BenderBoy
    Commented Jun 26, 2020 at 12:17
1

I have tried all the solutions here and none of them have worked yet. A workaround that is working is to Click Connect, enter the server name, select Options, Connection Properties tab. Set the "Network protocol" to "Named Pipes". This allows users to remote connect using their network credentials. I'll post an update when I get a fix.

1
  • I actually set mine to "TCP/IP". I don't know if the act of changing it fixed the problem or the specific setting for my network situation...
    – Zarepheth
    Commented Oct 5, 2020 at 21:37
1

In my case, the problem was setting up DNS on the wifi. I removed the settings, and left them empty, and worked.

Como ficou minha configuração do DNS

1

Another niche to this issue caused by network connections. I connect via windows VPN client and this issue popped up when I switched from Wifi to a wired connection. The fix for my situation was to manually adjust the adapter metric.

In powershell use Get-NetIPInterface to see all of the metric values. The lower numbers are lower cost and so they are preferred by windows. I switched the ethernet and VPN and the credentials got where they needed to be for SSMS to be happy.

To configure the Automatic Metric feature: In Control Panel, double-click Network Connections. Right-click a network interface, and then select Properties. Click Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), and then select Properties. On the General tab, select Advanced. To specify a metric, on the IP Settings tab, select to clear the Automatic metric check box, and then enter the metric that you want in the Interface Metric field.

Source: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/troubleshoot/windows-server/networking/automatic-metric-for-ipv4-routes

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