window| problem
I usually use a task schedule to manage the automatic backup of the transfer document between workstation and file server (Scheduler). When you set up a log, you need to enter a password. For security reasons, I will often modify the computer's login password, and at this point, you must modify the Task Scheduler password, otherwise you will not be able to enable the service. It doesn't matter if you use Task Scheduler only occasionally, but it's annoying to set up a system backup schedule that I have to do every day. I am currently using the operating system for Win2K, I heard that the Win XP Task Scheduler can be set to "only run at logon." Excuse me, does Win 2K have similar options? If not, what can I do once and for all, so that I don't have to change the password every time I run a Task scheduler?
I've had this problem before, and I really hurt my brain. If you are logged on to the computer with an administrator account and have modified the password for that account, you can only modify the Task Scheduler service password stored on the computer, otherwise you will not be able to enable it. Once, when I changed the administrator's login password, it was found that the tasks performed by the SQL Server agent were also aborted to find the symptoms of the problem (since these tasks were performed with an administrator's identity, not a SQL login account, and the administrator's user account changed, The task cannot continue even though the latter's password remains unchanged.
The only possible way to circumvent this "barrier" is to set up a stand-alone account in the system that enables the scheduled task service, so that no password changes are required, but all permissions must be open to that user. (The Task Scheduler service has a default rule that allows unauthorized users to create scheduled jobs and to be executed by the Task Planner.) I am currently using this method. If you log on to the system with an anonymous account and password, you will not be attacked (if you are worried about the problem, you may not need to).