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Microsoft solves the lingering troubleshooting issues in Win11 by introducing Event ID 4117 to locate the source of the problem
IT Home March 6 news: Tech media NeoWin published a blog post yesterday (March 5), saying that Microsoft, through its January update, fixed a long-standing troubleshooting issue in Group Policy Preferences (GPP) affecting Windows 11 24H2/25H2 and Windows Server 2025.
IT Home Note: Group Policy Preferences is a Windows extension feature that allows IT administrators to deploy specific configurations for domain-joined computers and users, such as network drive mappings, task scheduling, and printer management.
GPP has long had a troublesome troubleshooting gap that gives IT administrators headaches. Once GPP encounters a failure, the system will only throw an “Event ID 4098” error in Event Viewer and will not provide any indication of the underlying cause.
IT administrators can only rely on Procmon, debugging tools, and complicated log details to figure out the root cause. The entire troubleshooting process is extremely tedious, full of uncertainty.
Microsoft released an update in January 2026 to address this historical issue for Windows 11 24H2/25H2 and Windows Server 2025. This update introduces a brand-new “Event ID 4117,” which can accurately explain what exactly went wrong in the system. At the same time, for compatibility reasons, Microsoft still retains the original “Event ID 4098.”
Now, when a GPP failure occurs, “Event ID 4117” will include the root cause in detail, helping IT administrators quickly and effectively carry out the investigation. Microsoft has outlined the new error message and its corresponding remediation advice in detail:
Source file missing: Ensure the file exists, and that its name and path match the GPP settings exactly.
Access denied (file): Repair the NTFS or share permissions for the policy context.
Failed to delete folder: Correct permissions, ownership, or the file lock status.
Invalid drive mapping path: Fix UNC, DNS, target resolution, or delete outdated mappings.