Unable to initialise windows sockets interface on XP Home

M

Mario

This is the second time in a week that I cannot browse
although my VPN says I am connected. I had already
reinstalled XP to fix it but now I am having a similar
problem. Ping command is giving me the error code
0 "Unable to initialise window sockets interface" I
suspect TCP vs XP firewall settings. By the way, the
internet connection is on the XP pc which is networked to
a Win 2000 PC

Any Help ?
 
K

kaji

-----Original Message-----
This is the second time in a week that I cannot browse
although my VPN says I am connected. I had already
reinstalled XP to fix it but now I am having a similar
problem. Ping command is giving me the error code
0 "Unable to initialise window sockets interface" I
suspect TCP vs XP firewall settings. By the way, the
internet connection is on the XP pc which is networked to
a Win 2000 PC

Any Help ?
.

do you try to monitor the packet, put on firewall
programme and tempoary block the uDP 135 - 139 , it come
to work , it means your system have virus or torjan
 
K

Ken Wickes [MSFT]

I have traced several of these problems to improperly configured winsock
LSPs. Run "winmsd" and go to Components/Network/Protocol. Look at the
names in the list, anything with "MSAFD" in it or the "RSVP xxx Service
Provider" should be fine. Anything else is suspect, and uninstalling the
owning program might help.

If that fails or your provider list is empty, you may need to rebuild the
catalog from scratch. The following instructions will rebuild your catalog
for TCP/IP. If you are using any other transports (If you don't know, then
you probably aren't) then you will have to reinstall them as well.


1. Backup and delete the following registry keys

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\Winsock
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\Winsock2

2. Reboot

3. Go to the network connections folder, right click the icon for your
network connection, and select properties.

4. Click install, choose "protocol", and click "add..."

5. Click "Have Disk...", enter "\windows\inf", click OK

6. Select "Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), click OK

7. When the process in complete, reboot
 

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