CAUTION: This article contains information about opening or modifying the registry.
- The following information is intended for System Administrators. Registry modifications are irreversible and could cause system failure if done incorrectly.
- Before proceeding, Technical Support strongly recommends that you back up your registry and understand the restore process. For more information, see the Microsoft Windows registry information for advanced users article.
- Do not run a REG file that is not confirmed to be a genuine registry import file.
For current deployments
IMPORTANT: These instructions are intended for an ePO administrator only.
Verify the issue:
- Click Start, Run, type regedit, and click OK.
- Compare the agent GUIDs on the affected clients. The issue is verified when the GUIDs are the same. An agent GUID is stored as the data of the AgentGUID registry value:
32-bit: [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Network Associates\ePolicy Orchestrator\Agent\AgentGUID]
64-bit: [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Network Associates\ePolicy Orchestrator\Agent\AgentGUID]
NOTE: The agent GUID is ePO's primary method of uniquely identifying a computer. Matching
AgentGUID values have the following effects:
- They affect the process used when computers check in
- They prevent properties from being recorded correctly
- They prohibit policy enforcement
Resolve the issue:
On each affected client, delete the
AgentGUID registry key and restart the MA services.
-
Delete the
AgentGUID registry key:
- Click Start, Run, type regedit, and click OK.
-
Navigate to one of the following registry keys:
32-bit: [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Network Associates\ePolicy Orchestrator\Agent\]
64-bit: [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Network Associates\ePolicy Orchestrator\Agent\]
-
Right-click the
AgentGUID and select
Delete.
- Click Registry, Exit.
- Restart the McAfee Agent services:
-
Click Start, Run, type services.msc, and click OK.
-
Right-click the following service and select
Restart:
McAfee Framework Service