As of today Firefox won't let me access SharePoint. Get '401 unauthorized' message
In the past, I've been able to access our SharePoint hosted service without a problem.
Although I've not accessed SharePoint for a while, when I tried today (upgraded to Foxfire 30 in the meantime) I get the error message above.
Am able to access the site via Google Chrome.
SP hoster help desk tells me other Firefox users are having the same problem accessing their own (separate) SP servers.
Chosen solution
addled,
The first thing to do is to contact that SP hoster help desk, and let them know about this Bug report. https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=828183
They're using an old method of authentication which isn't considered secure any longer. The preference you just changed so that you can log into that website un-did a security fix that is new in Firefox 30. http://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/30.0/releasenotes/
Ler a resposta no contexto 👍 2All Replies (11)
Many site issues can be caused by corrupt cookies or cache.
- Clear the Cache
Press the <Alt> or <F10> key to bring up the tool bar. Followed by;
Windows; Tools > Options Linux; Edit > Preferences Mac; application name > Preferences
Then Advanced > Network > Cached Web Content: Clear Now
and
- Remove Cookies
This will log you out of all sites you're logged in to. Press the <Alt> or <F10> key to bring up the tool bar. Followed by;
Windows; Tools > Options Linux; Edit > Preferences Mac; application name > Preferences
Then Privacy. Under History, select Firefox will Use Custom Settings. There is a button on the right side called Show Cookies.
If there is still a problem, Start Firefox in Safe Mode {web link} While you are in safe mode; Press the <Alt> or <F10> key to bring up the tool bar. Followed by;
Windows; Tools > Options Linux; Edit > Preferences Mac; application name > Preferences
Then Advanced > General. Look for and turn off Use Hardware Acceleration.
Poke around safe web sites and see if there is still a problem. Then restart
Tried all the suggestions, thank you. But the problem still remains. Simply cannot access SharePoint using Firefox. Chrome works and so does Safari - this is on a Mac. As far as I can see it has nothing to do with cookies or the cache, etc.
401 Unauthorized is a server error message related to an incorrect username / password.
http://pcsupport.about.com/od/findbyerrormessage/a/401error.htm
That type of message might be related to Insecure NTLM (pre-NTLMv2) authentication being disabled in Firefox 30.
Type about:config in the URL bar and hit Enter. Accept the warning. Type NTLM in the Search bar at the top. Right-click network.negotiate-auth.allow-insecure-ntlm-v1 and select Toggle. Then close Firefox and restart.
See if you can access that SharePoint website without getting that 401 message.
The ed-meister
Thank you very much for your advice. This has resolved the problem. I suspected it had something to do with Firefox 30, but I'd never have pinpointed the issue on my own! I don't no how best to spread the word because I'm sure there are others out there with the same problem.
Regards
Mark
You have chosen a solution. That means this post is marked as solved. Anyone that looks thru the forum will see it. Good Luck.
Chosen Solution
addled,
The first thing to do is to contact that SP hoster help desk, and let them know about this Bug report. https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=828183
They're using an old method of authentication which isn't considered secure any longer. The preference you just changed so that you can log into that website un-did a security fix that is new in Firefox 30. http://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/30.0/releasenotes/
the-edmeister
I've notified the tech support people at the hosting company via a trouble ticket which was still open. I sent them most your not, above, with the links.
Thanks again.
Mozilla is making a choice to not use the local user's security profile and integrated Kerberos or NTLM authentication, as the other three major browsers do. This may be the right choice politically or for one technical reason or another, but ultimately, this affects users who use SharePoint, or maybe even Office 365. It makes one adopt Chrome quicker.
Also, not all Mac configurations need this change, and no Windows systems that we noticed need it. We have the same Mac OS level machines that do and others that do not need this NTLM v1 allowed configuration setting to connect to SharePoint - no idea why.
Thanks radascuta
It's helpful to get this kind of information and, for someone who is not technically trained, it suggests that with today's software 'secure' and 'simple' (to use) are probably both distant goals (wishful thinking?) and may not be compatible.
BTW I find that Chrome loads SharePoint pages very slowly and can't figure out why!