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lsass crashes
About this tag
LSASS crashes on Windows Server domain controllers have been a recurring issue, particularly following the April 2026 security updates. Multiple reports link these crashes to reboot loops affecting domain controllers, especially in environments using Privileged Access Management (PAM). The crashes can cause authentication failures, broken directory services, and widespread outages. Microsoft released an out-of-band fix to address the restart-loop problem tied to LSASS crashes. The issue spans Windows Server 2016 through 2025 and coincides with a Kerberos hardening change, making the April 2026 update cycle particularly challenging for enterprise identity teams. Administrators should monitor for LSASS crash patterns and apply the OOB fix to mitigate disruptions.
Microsoft’s latest Windows Server patch drama is a reminder that the most dangerous updates are often the ones meant to protect the crown jewels. An out-of-band fix issued in April 2026 targets a restart-loop problem that could knock domain controllers into repeated reboots after the month’s...
Microsoft has moved quickly to contain a nasty April 2026 Windows Server servicing problem, issuing out-of-band fixes that address both repeated restart failures and update-installation errors tied to the month’s Patch Tuesday release. The immediate relief is real for administrators running...
domain controller
domain controller stability
kb5091157
lsasscrasheslsass reboot loop
out-of-band hotfix
patch tuesday
windows server
windows server 2025
windows server patching
The April 2026 Windows security cycle is already proving to be one of the most consequential update months in recent memory for enterprise identity teams. Microsoft has confirmed a Kerberos hardening change that begins in April 2026, and that shift is landing at the same time administrators are...
Microsoft’s April 2026 Patch Tuesday is turning into an uncomfortable reminder that Windows servicing can fail in more than one way at once. While Microsoft is already dealing with a Microsoft account sign-in regression in Windows 11, fresh reporting and forum analysis now point to a separate...
The latest round of May Windows updates, intended as routine Patch Tuesday security improvements, instead caused widespread chaos for thousands of enterprise and power users worldwide. Within hours of the cumulative update rollout—most notably KB5058379 for Windows 10—frustrated IT...