![]() |
|
Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Networking with Windows Vista Networking issues and questions with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.networking_sharing) |
|
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
I've done considerable research and have insured that I am in compliance
with the MS article "File and Printer Sharing in Windows Vista", but when I use a Save As dialog on my XP machine to save a file to the Vista machine I get the message "You do not have access to the folder xxxxxxx. See your administrator for access to the folder." This is a simple P2P home network. The XP machine can save to the Vista "Public" folder. I have setup the Vista machine to be as open as possible. The share I can't get to is the E-drive and I've made it available to "Everyone". And "Everyone" can do everything - Full Control, Change, and Read! "Password protected sharing" is Off. In the Save As dialog when I click on "My Network Places" I can see the Public folder on the Vista machine but not the E-drive. However, when I navigate to the Vista machine (i.e. Entire Network Microsoft Windows Network Bobshome the Vista Machine) then I can see both the Public folder and the E-drive. When I double click the E-drive I get the message "You do not have access to the folder xxxxxxx. See your administrator for access to the folder." (The problem is not unique to the Save As dialog, that's just where I first encountered it. I have a similar problem, although not exactly the same message text, if I simply try, from the XP machine, to see what is on the Vista E-drive.) I'd be grateful if someone can suggest where I go next with this. Thanks, Bob |
|
|||
|
eBob.com wrote:
I've done considerable research and have insured that I am in compliance with the MS article "File and Printer Sharing in Windows Vista", but when I use a Save As dialog on my XP machine to save a file to the Vista machine I get the message "You do not have access to the folder xxxxxxx. See your administrator for access to the folder." This is a simple P2P home network. The XP machine can save to the Vista "Public" folder. I have setup the Vista machine to be as open as possible. The share I can't get to is the E-drive and I've made it available to "Everyone". And "Everyone" can do everything - Full Control, Change, and Read! "Password protected sharing" is Off. (snippage) Turn password protected sharing ON. Follow these directions and you will be able to share to folders other than Public: Create matching user accounts and passwords on all machines. You do not need to be logged into the same account on all machines and the passwords assigned to each user account can be different; the accounts/passwords just need to exist and match on all machines. DO NOT NEGLECT TO CREATE PASSWORDS, EVEN IF ONLY SIMPLE ONES. If you wish a machine to boot directly to the Desktop (into one particular user's account) for convenience, you can do this. The instructions at this link work for both XP and Vista: Configure Windows to Automatically Login (MVP Ramesh) - http://windowsxp.mvps.org/Autologon.htm If one or more of the computers is XP Pro or Media Center, turn off Simple File Sharing (Folder OptionsView tab). Create shares as desired. XP Home does not permit sharing of users' home directories or Program Files, but you can share folders inside those directories. A better choice is to simply use the Shared Documents folder. Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
|
|||
|
"Malke" wrote in message ... eBob.com wrote: I've done considerable research and have insured that I am in compliance with the MS article "File and Printer Sharing in Windows Vista", but when I use a Save As dialog on my XP machine to save a file to the Vista machine I get the message "You do not have access to the folder xxxxxxx. See your administrator for access to the folder." This is a simple P2P home network. The XP machine can save to the Vista "Public" folder. I have setup the Vista machine to be as open as possible. The share I can't get to is the E-drive and I've made it available to "Everyone". And "Everyone" can do everything - Full Control, Change, and Read! "Password protected sharing" is Off. (snippage) Turn password protected sharing ON. Follow these directions and you will be able to share to folders other than Public: Create matching user accounts and passwords on all machines. You do not need to be logged into the same account on all machines and the passwords assigned to each user account can be different; the accounts/passwords just need to exist and match on all machines. DO NOT NEGLECT TO CREATE PASSWORDS, EVEN IF ONLY SIMPLE ONES. If you wish a machine to boot directly to the Desktop (into one particular user's account) for convenience, you can do this. The instructions at this link work for both XP and Vista: Configure Windows to Automatically Login (MVP Ramesh) - http://windowsxp.mvps.org/Autologon.htm If one or more of the computers is XP Pro or Media Center, turn off Simple File Sharing (Folder OptionsView tab). Create shares as desired. XP Home does not permit sharing of users' home directories or Program Files, but you can share folders inside those directories. A better choice is to simply use the Shared Documents folder. Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ Malke, Thanks very much for your assistance. My XP machine is XP Pro so thanks for pointing out that wrinkle. I was unable to find a way to turn off "Simple File Sharing" in Folder OptionsView tab. But I did find, and turned off (i.e. unchecked) "Use Sharing Wizard". Is that what you meant? Also I turned on "Password protected sharing". Then I created a password for my "default" userid on the XP Pro machine. And I created a "default" userid on the Vista machine and gave it the same password as on the XP Pro machine. Then I hoped that you didn't mean that I HAD to create all of the same userid/password pairs on ALL machines because I'd rather not have to do that. So logged on to the XP Pro machine as "default" I tried to access the E-drive on the Vista machine and nothing has changed. I am not sure if you RECOMMENDED that I "Create matching user accounts and passwords on all machines" for convenience or if that's NECESSARY! I only mentioned two machines in my post but there are several and each has a number of userids. Do I HAVE TO "Create matching user accounts and passwords on all machines" or was that a RECOMMENDATION for convenience? Thanks, Bob |
|
|||
|
eBob.com wrote:
My XP machine is XP Pro so thanks for pointing out that wrinkle. I was unable to find a way to turn off "Simple File Sharing" in Folder OptionsView tab. But I did find, and turned off (i.e. unchecked) "Use Sharing Wizard". Is that what you meant? Also I turned on "Password protected sharing". Then I created a password for my "default" userid on the XP Pro machine. And I created a "default" userid on the Vista machine and gave it the same password as on the XP Pro machine. Then I hoped that you didn't mean that I HAD to create all of the same userid/password pairs on ALL machines because I'd rather not have to do that. So logged on to the XP Pro machine as "default" I tried to access the E-drive on the Vista machine and nothing has changed. I am not sure if you RECOMMENDED that I "Create matching user accounts and passwords on all machines" for convenience or if that's NECESSARY! I only mentioned two machines in my post but there are several and each has a number of userids. Do I HAVE TO "Create matching user accounts and passwords on all machines" or was that a RECOMMENDATION for convenience? It is not a "recommendation for convenience". It is necessary if you want to share resources in a Workgroup aside from Public directories. Very simply, in peer-to-peer networks (Workgroups in the Windows world), authentication is done on the *local* machine. So let's assume we have: Machine A - user Bob, password 1234 user Jane, password 4567 user Phil, password 9870 Machine B - user Bob, password 1234 user Jane, password 4567 If Phil is logged onto Machine A and tries to access shared resources from Machine B, he will be refused access since Machine B doesn't recognize him (no user account Phil, password 9870). He'll be asked to submit credentials of a known user. So yes, all users who need access to shared resources need to have matching user accounts and passwords on all machines involved. The alternative is to use "simple sharing" which means that the network connection is made as guest. This guest connection cannot access shared resources in user space and that's why only Public (All Users Shared Documents in XP) is accessible to them. With only a few machines, creating the user accounts and passwords is not an onerous task. If one has many (more than ~7 in a workplace) machines, then a server should be used. The advantage to using a server running a server operating system and creating an Active Directory domain is that all user/password management is done in one place, centrally on the server. Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
|
|||
|
"Malke" wrote in message ... eBob.com wrote: My XP machine is XP Pro so thanks for pointing out that wrinkle. I was unable to find a way to turn off "Simple File Sharing" in Folder OptionsView tab. But I did find, and turned off (i.e. unchecked) "Use Sharing Wizard". Is that what you meant? Also I turned on "Password protected sharing". Then I created a password for my "default" userid on the XP Pro machine. And I created a "default" userid on the Vista machine and gave it the same password as on the XP Pro machine. Then I hoped that you didn't mean that I HAD to create all of the same userid/password pairs on ALL machines because I'd rather not have to do that. So logged on to the XP Pro machine as "default" I tried to access the E-drive on the Vista machine and nothing has changed. I am not sure if you RECOMMENDED that I "Create matching user accounts and passwords on all machines" for convenience or if that's NECESSARY! I only mentioned two machines in my post but there are several and each has a number of userids. Do I HAVE TO "Create matching user accounts and passwords on all machines" or was that a RECOMMENDATION for convenience? It is not a "recommendation for convenience". It is necessary if you want to share resources in a Workgroup aside from Public directories. Very simply, in peer-to-peer networks (Workgroups in the Windows world), authentication is done on the *local* machine. So let's assume we have: Machine A - user Bob, password 1234 user Jane, password 4567 user Phil, password 9870 Machine B - user Bob, password 1234 user Jane, password 4567 If Phil is logged onto Machine A and tries to access shared resources from Machine B, he will be refused access since Machine B doesn't recognize him (no user account Phil, password 9870). He'll be asked to submit credentials of a known user. So yes, all users who need access to shared resources need to have matching user accounts and passwords on all machines involved. The alternative is to use "simple sharing" which means that the network connection is made as guest. This guest connection cannot access shared resources in user space and that's why only Public (All Users Shared Documents in XP) is accessible to them. With only a few machines, creating the user accounts and passwords is not an onerous task. If one has many (more than ~7 in a workplace) machines, then a server should be used. The advantage to using a server running a server operating system and creating an Active Directory domain is that all user/password management is done in one place, centrally on the server. Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ Hi Malke, Thanks for your continued help and very prompt replies. Your example makes perfect sense. But how 'bout if Phil is defined only on machine A and not on machine B, as in your example, but never has need to access machine B. Can Bob and Jane still access machine A from machine B and vice-versa? I'd think/hope so. But, if so, then I don't understand why I am still having a problem. I have "default" defined on both machines, the XP Pro and the Vista machine, both with the same password, but logged on the XP Pro machine as "default" I cannot access the shared E-drive on the Vista machine. By the way, since it made a difference that the XP machine is XP Pro, I should point out that the Vista machine is Vista Ultimate. Thanks again for your continued help. Bob |
|
|||
|
eBob.com wrote:
Your example makes perfect sense. But how 'bout if Phil is defined only on machine A and not on machine B, as in your example, but never has need to access machine B. Can Bob and Jane still access machine A from machine B and vice-versa? I'd think/hope so. Yes, of course. But, if so, then I don't understand why I am still having a problem. I have "default" defined on both machines, the XP Pro and the Vista machine, both with the same password, but logged on the XP Pro machine as "default" I cannot access the shared E-drive on the Vista machine. By the way, since it made a difference that the XP machine is XP Pro, I should point out that the Vista machine is Vista Ultimate. I don't know what you mean by "default". There is a Default user but this isn't a real user. The Default User, seen when hidden files/folders are visible, is the template for all new user accounts, not an active user account. If you have created identical user accounts and passwords on all machines and are still getting "access denied", then: 1. You have a misconfigured firewall; 2. And/or your security settings on the shared resource are incorrect. Look on the Security tab and make sure your users have read/write permissions. You can add individual users (ex. if only Bob is allowed and not Jane) or allow Everyone to read/write. Everyone means everyone with a user account on the local machine, not everyone in the world. XP Pro needs to have simple sharing disabled. Vista Ultimate handles this with the pasword protection on and doesn't have a simple sharing check box in Folder Options like XP does. Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
|
|||
|
Hi Malke,
I really appreciate your continued help. PLEASE hang in there with me because I have got to get this working. "Malke" wrote in message ... trimmed I don't know what you mean by "default". There is a Default user but this isn't a real user. The Default User, seen when hidden files/folders are visible, is the template for all new user accounts, not an active user account. I have a useid on both machines, "default", which is exactly that - the seven letters "default". It's the userid I use most often on the XP Pro machine. If you have created identical user accounts and passwords on all machines and are still getting "access denied", then: The one id "default" is defined on both machines and has the same password on both machines. In case it might make some difference the Vista machine is Ultimate, 64-bit. And, while I am fully disclosing, it has an AMD chip. Also, I think that now I am getting a slightly different error message than originally. On the XP Pro machine when I click on "My Network Places" the window which opens shows me the shared drive on the Vista machine, "E-drive on Gigavista64". When I double click on that, after a surprisingly long time, 20 seconds - I timed it, I get this error message: "\\GIGAVISTA64\E-drive is not accessible. You might not have permission to use this network resource. Contact the administrator of this server to find out if you have access permissions. Logon failu the user has not been granted the requested logon type at this computer" BTW, when I look at Properties/Sharing there is a button labled "Share ..." which is greyed out. That's disconcerting but I think that in my original research I learned that it's OK. 1. You have a misconfigured firewall; I haven't installed a firewall on the Vista machine. I use an old version of ZoneAlarm on the XP Pro machine but shutting it down makes no difference. 2. And/or your security settings on the shared resource are incorrect. Look on the Security tab and make sure your users have read/write permissions. You can add individual users (ex. if only Bob is allowed and not Jane) or allow Everyone to read/write. Everyone means everyone with a user account on the local machine, not everyone in the world. I hadn't looked at the Security tab before and I wasn't sure what to do there. Under "Group or user names:" it already had "Users (GIGAVISTA64\Users)" and "default" is a defined userid on the machine. But I added "Everyone" to "Group or user names:" and gave "Everyone" all permissions except for "Full Control" and "Special Permissions". (I tried to give it "Full Control" but then got "An error occurred while applying security information to E:\$RECYCLE.BIN Access is denied". I hope I haven't done any damage!) What I wanted to do here, but couldn't, was to specifically add user "default". But when I click on "Advanced Sharing ..." (on the Sharing tab of Properties), and then click on Permissions, and then try to "Add ..." to the "Group or user names:", the "Select Users or Groups" dialog only knows about location "GIGAVISTA64". (I.E. I click on the "Locations ..." button and GIGAVISTA64 is the only entry in the list.) I expected to find "VPR-MATRIX" in there. (That's the name of the XP Pro machine and it shows up in "Network". So the Vista machine does know about it.) XP Pro needs to have simple sharing disabled. Vista Ultimate handles this with the pasword protection on and doesn't have a simple sharing check box in Folder Options like XP does. Done. (Now. It had been enabled.) I expect that this is getting frustrating for you but I sure hope you will continue to help me. Thanks, Bob Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
|
|||
|
eBob.com wrote:
I really appreciate your continued help. PLEASE hang in there with me because I have got to get this working. Yes, but it would have been better to get *all* the information first in one post instead of dragging it out in dribs and drabs. I have a useid on both machines, "default", which is exactly that - the seven letters "default". It's the userid I use most often on the XP Pro machine. The one id "default" is defined on both machines and has the same password on both machines. In case it might make some difference the Vista machine is Ultimate, 64-bit. And, while I am fully disclosing, it has an AMD chip. It makes no difference that one OS is 64-bit and the other is 32-bit. I share files between machines running Vista, XP Pro, Mac OS X, and Linux. The processor doesn't matter in networking either. Also, I think that now I am getting a slightly different error message than originally. On the XP Pro machine when I click on "My Network Places" the window which opens shows me the shared drive on the Vista machine, "E-drive on Gigavista64". When I double click on that, after a surprisingly long time, 20 seconds - I timed it, I get this error message: "\\GIGAVISTA64\E-drive is not accessible. You might not have permission to use this network resource. Contact the administrator of this server to find out if you have access permissions. Logon failu the user has not been granted the requested logon type at this computer" BTW, when I look at Properties/Sharing there is a button labled "Share ..." which is greyed out. That's disconcerting but I think that in my original research I learned that it's OK. Are you trying to share the root of a drive in Vista? This is not considered good security practice so the root of a drive is protected in Vista. To get around this: From Michael Bell, MS - When you share out the root of a drive in Vista, the UI only allows this through the advanced sharing option. When the advanced sharing option is used it only sets the share permissions. The actual permissions on a file share are a combination of Folder and Share permissions. In Vista the everyone group doesn not have permissions so when you connect without a password the system you can see the folders but not access them or possibly connect to the share but fail to open it. 1. Open Computer 2. Right click on the shared drive and select properties from the context menu 3. Select the Security Tab in the displayed properties sheet. If you are connecting to the computer with no password then you are connecting with the guest account. In order to access the files on the drive, the everyone group needs to have access set here. 1. You have a misconfigured firewall; I haven't installed a firewall on the Vista machine. I use an old version of ZoneAlarm on the XP Pro machine but shutting it down makes no difference. You should uninstall ZA according to their instructions. 1. Go into ZA Overview/Preferences and uncheck "Load Zone Alarm on Startup". 2. Reboot computer to remove Zone Alarm drivers from memory. 3. Temporarily shut down any other AV/security programs. 4. Click on Start Programs Zone Labs. RIGHT-click on Uninstall Zone Labs Security, then select Properties. Under Target you will see the following line (the actual drive may be different on your system): "C:\Program Files\Zone Labs\ZoneAlarm\zauninstexe" - Change it to: "C:\Program Files\Zone Labs\ZoneAlarm\zauninst.exe" /clean /rmlicense (add a space and then the /clean). Click OK to save. Say "Yes" when being prompted for the removal of all files and allow TrueVector to shut down. Reboot. Now start in Safe Mode and delete these files in the Windows Directory: WINDOWS\ Internet Logs Program Files\Zone Labs WINDOWS\system32\ Zonelabs Now reboot into Regular Mode. 2. And/or your security settings on the shared resource are incorrect. Look on the Security tab and make sure your users have read/write permissions. You can add individual users (ex. if only Bob is allowed and not Jane) or allow Everyone to read/write. Everyone means everyone with a user account on the local machine, not everyone in the world. I hadn't looked at the Security tab before and I wasn't sure what to do there. Under "Group or user names:" it already had "Users (GIGAVISTA64\Users)" and "default" is a defined userid on the machine. But I added "Everyone" to "Group or user names:" and gave "Everyone" all permissions except for "Full Control" and "Special Permissions". (I tried to give it "Full Control" but then got "An error occurred while applying security information to E:\$RECYCLE.BIN Access is denied". I hope I haven't done any damage!) What I wanted to do here, but couldn't, was to specifically add user "default". But when I click on "Advanced Sharing ..." (on the Sharing tab of Properties), and then click on Permissions, and then try to "Add ..." to the "Group or user names:", the "Select Users or Groups" dialog only knows about location "GIGAVISTA64". (I.E. I click on the "Locations ..." button and GIGAVISTA64 is the only entry in the list.) I expected to find "VPR-MATRIX" in there. (That's the name of the XP Pro machine and it shows up in "Network". So the Vista machine does know about it.) Sorry, you've totally lost me with the above. I don't know why you're having such difficulties unless it's the root of a drive thing. Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
|
|||
|
Malke wrote:
eBob.com wrote: I really appreciate your continued help. PLEASE hang in there with me because I have got to get this working. Addendum - I believe one of your major problems could be that you've called a user account "default". In XP, this wasn't an issue because the template user is called "Default User". However, in Vista it is called simply "Default". Just like you never give a computer the same name as a user account (ex. don't name your computer "bob" if you have a user account "bob"), you don't want to have a user account called by the same name as a System account. Solution: Create a new user account on all computers that will replace "default". If you've been using "default", then you will copy the old account to the new one. You must log into the new one first before you can copy anything to it. This is for XP: Copy a User Account - http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?kbid=811151 Since you just started with Vista, I expect you don't want to go through the bother of copying the "default" profile but can just start fresh. You can't simply rename user accounts; that will only make a cosmetic change and not alter the underlying files/folders/registry entries. Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
|
|||
|
"Malke" wrote in message ... Malke wrote: eBob.com wrote: I really appreciate your continued help. PLEASE hang in there with me because I have got to get this working. Addendum - I believe one of your major problems could be that you've called a user account "default". In XP, this wasn't an issue because the template user is called "Default User". However, in Vista it is called simply "Default". Just like you never give a computer the same name as a user account (ex. don't name your computer "bob" if you have a user account "bob"), you don't want to have a user account called by the same name as a System account. Solution: Create a new user account on all computers that will replace "default". If you've been using "default", then you will copy the old account to the new one. You must log into the new one first before you can copy anything to it. This is for XP: Copy a User Account - http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?kbid=811151 Since you just started with Vista, I expect you don't want to go through the bother of copying the "default" profile but can just start fresh. You can't simply rename user accounts; that will only make a cosmetic change and not alter the underlying files/folders/registry entries. Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ It looks like this was it. I selected another id on the XP Pro system and defined the same userid/password on the Vista machine and now things work as expected. Whew! I can't tell you how glad I am you were aware, and made me aware, of this possible conflict. I got no error or warning message when I created the "default" id on the Vista machine. And I think I could have researched this problem forever without coming across this. Thank you again for sticking with me on this and coming up with the answer. I really appreciate it. Bob |
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|