How do I use msg.exe to send messages to a XP PC?


Recommended Posts

How do I use msg.exe to send messages to a XP PC? From the looks of it, both of them are in the workgroup WORKGROUP but I send to all the users and I they dont receive it (I do).

Most computers have this feature turned off by default as it was a security risk.

I think it got turned off around XP SP2 so you'd need to manually turn it on again in order for your messages to get through.

msg.exe is more for sending messages to terminal sessions on the same machine, it is not really designed to mass message people.

You need to know the username your wanting to send to and the server they are on.

where with net send you could mass send to all computers on the network, etc.

msg

Send a message to a user.

Net send

Sends messages to other users, computers, or messaging names

on the network. The Messenger service must be running to receive messages.

net send

* Sends the message to all the names in your group.

/DOMAIN[:name] Sends the message to all the names in the

workstation domain. If name is specified, the

message is sent to all the names in the specified

domain or workgroup.

For you to send a msg to someone you would need to know their username and the machine they are on.

msg username /server:computername

If you want to be able to send mass messages or just have to put in the computer OR username the messenger services has to be running on the target machine - and of course for any of this to work any software filewalls running would have to allow for it.

Not sure where you go the idea msg is not available prior to vista.

C:\>ver

Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600]

C:\>msg /?

Send a message to a user.

MSG {username | sessionname | sessionid | @filename | *}

[/sERVER:servername] [/TIME:seconds] [/V] [/W] [message]

username Identifies the specified username.

sessionname The name of the session.

sessionid The ID of the session.

@filename Identifies a file containing a list of usernames,

sessionnames, and sessionids to send the message to.

* Send message to all sessions on specified server.

/SERVER:servername server to contact (default is current).

/TIME:seconds Time delay to wait for receiver to acknowledge msg.

/V Display information about actions being performed.

/W Wait for response from user, useful with /V.

message Message to send. If none specified, prompts for it

or reads from stdin.

C:\>ver

Microsoft Windows 2000 [Version 5.00.2195]

C:\>msg

Send a message to a user.

MSG {username | sessionname | sessionid | @filename | *}

[/sERVER:servername] [/TIME:seconds] [/V] [/W] [message]

username Identifies the specified username.

sessionname The name of the session.

sessionid The ID of the session.

@filename Identifies a file containing a list of usernames,

sessionnames, and sessionids to send the message to.

* Send message to all sessions on specified server.

/SERVER:servername server to contact (default is current).

/TIME:seconds Time delay to wait for receiver to acknowledge msg.

/V Display information about actions being performed.

/W Wait for response from user, useful with /V.

message Message to send. If none specified, prompts for it

or reads from stdin.

what command are you using? As I stated you need to send to the username and the machinename

For example.. From my desktop I will send a msg to an account logged into a server.

C:\>msg tsadmin /server:tsbesvsan01

Enter message to send; end message by pressing CTRL-Z on a new line, then ENTER

testing msg 123456

^Z

here is the message that account sees.

post-14624-1232642989.jpg

Are you running any software firewalls between the machines? Either on your client or on the machine your wanting to send to?

No msg is not a pointer to net send.. They are different methods. And no the messenger service does not need to be running for msg to send or recv messages. For net send yes, for msg no.

  • 2 weeks later...
Gotcha.

Ok, I'll help and also ask a question.

To recap...MSG.EXE is completely seperate from NETSEND.

It does NOT need the messenger service to be running and is available on XP and Vista.

For it to work on XP over a domain you must add a registry key.

HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\Terminal Server

Dword=AllowRemoteRPC

Value=1

You don't have to know the username...just the computer name. You can place an "*" in place of the username to send to all session that are logged into a specific computer at once. So for any normal workstation it would just be one user.

Syntax example sending to a computer called "TestComp01" with a message of "Hi, this is a test message."

msg /server:TestComp01 * Hi, this is a test message.

You can also add the switches of /v /w between * and the message to give you a read out of when it was sent and when the user presses "OK".

Now, to my question to see if anyone knows.

I have written a GUI so this is easier to use for my users at my work. All the users in my department are Admins on all the boxes company wide so we've never had a problem sending messages to each other as needed.

Now another department is wanting to use MSG.exe but they are not admins. I have tried sending test messages from their computers with their credentials but it doesn't go through. I am able to send to them but not the other way around.

Anyone know a way around this or do you HAVE to be an admin of the box you are sending to?

  • 1 year later...

Now, to my question to see if anyone knows.

I have written a GUI so this is easier to use for my users at my work. All the users in my department are Admins on all the boxes company wide so we've never had a problem sending messages to each other as needed.

Knightro2,

Is there any way that you can post a copy of the GUI you created?

Kinda OT: Back when I was a nooblet teenager I got in trouble for running a python script that looked a little something like this, on an XP network that didn't have SP2 yet or the messenger service disabled.

import os
while 0==0:
 	os.system("net send * The problem is I can do this without your permission!")

There weren't very happy with having to click OK a few thousand times...

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • It's time to say goodbye to Edge and switch back to Firefox. There's no way to disable the ugly rounded corners that appear everywhere. Not even on the page frame. No one uses screens with rounded corners, you idiots.
    • Being on Github makes it more trustable since I can see the code at any point.
    • Gen Atlas is the next game from Shadow of the Colossus creator, this time with giant robots by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe The mind behind widely well-received games like Ico, Shadow of the Colossus, and The Last Guardian, Fumito Ueda, showed up at Summer Game Fest today, and that was to reveal his latest project. Being developed by genDESIGN, Gen Atlas is incoming with what looks to be plenty of mech and robot action. Watch the reveal trailer, which makes not much sense, above. The game will have players waking up on an abandoned planet where deserted facilities and grand designs from the original creators remain. Soon, they will stumble upon a colossal robot, from which players gain access to the power to change the world. "Across an endless expanse of time, the remnants of those forgotten constructs begin to move once more," adds the studio. The gameplay snippets seen in the trailer show the player character climbing giant robots (as expected from the creator), while also controlling these titans somehow as well. This is a fully single-player open-world adventure. “The team and I are grateful to all the fans who’ve been eager to learn more about our game,” says Fumito Ueda, CEO and creative director of genDESIGN. “Their passion and enthusiasm has always motivated and inspired us. We hope to share an experience that inspires moments of quiet wonder and discovery.” Before gaining the name Gen Atlas, Ueda first announced this project back in 2024 with the codename Project Robot. Interestingly, this will be a project being funded and published by Epic Games, which should mean that a Steam release is out of the question. Gen Atlas will be releasing on Epic Games Store, Xbox Series X|S, and PlayStation 5. A release date has not been announced just yet.
    • How backwards can you have it? Yes, Linux was gaining because of Linux handhelds and the push for gaming compatibility, but that's not desktop users, it barely converts anyone who owns a SteamDeck, though it helps for those who wanted to do it, but anyways, the AI+RAM debacle helped Linux because people can't easily upgrade their PCs easily and many hate AI so they'd be incentivized to try Linux.
    • 🤦🏻‍♂️ No, expected because 10 EOL
  • Recent Achievements

    • Mentor
      grik went up a rank
      Mentor
    • Dedicated
      JKR earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Year In
      CHUNWEI earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      FBSPL earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • Week One Done
      I2D earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      472
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      269
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      78
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      68
    5. 5
      +Edouard
      61
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!