This article describes how to determine whether a user profile is damaged and how to create a new profile if the profile is damaged.
To determine whether a user account has a damaged user profile, follow these steps:
- Create a new user account that has the same rights and group memberships or associations as the account that has the questionable profile.
- Copy the user settings in the questionable profile to the profile of the newly created user account:
- Click Start, point to Settings, and then click Control Panel.
- Double-click System.
- On the User Profiles tab, click the questionable profile, and then click Copy To.
- In the Copy To dialog box, click Browse under Copy profile to.
- Locate the Documents and Settings\user profile folder, where user profile is the name of the newly created user profile, and then click OK.
- If necessary, click Change under Permitted to use, set the appropriate permission, and then click OK.
- Log on by using the newly created user account. If you encounter the same errors that led you to question the user profile, the user profile is damaged; otherwise, it is the user account that is damaged.
To resolve the issue if the profile is damaged, delete the profile, and then create a new profile for that user, follow these steps:
- Using an administrator account, log on to the computer where the damaged profile resides.
- In My Computer, locate the Documents and Settings\user profile folder, where user profile is the name of the damaged user profile.
- Delete the folder.
- Log off the computer.
- Log back on to the computer by using the account that had the damaged profile. Windows 2000 creates a new user profile for the user.