![]() |
|
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 |
|
|||
|
To anyone who can help---
Here is my problem. I added a Vista Preimum laptop to a small network NT 4.0 and XP Pro and Home machines. I need to have total access to all machine's drives from whatever machine I log on to under any user name and password, and yes I know it isn't recommended. The Vista laptop has no problem accessing the other machines and drives, but my other machines can't access the C: drive on the Vista laptop. I added the suggested addition to the registry "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\Cur rentVersion\Policies\system\ " posted in many threads, I've added all the possible users in the Share Permissions under the Group or User Names and including Dailup, terminal user, network service, batch, preformance monitor, preformance log user, and many others. Guess what, still can't access the C: drive. I've check and uncheked boxes, rebooted, have sharing enabled, workgroups are the same name, turned on and off UAC. What if I changed the drive letter of the drive?---Any help is greatly appriciated as I'm ready to format the drive and install XP. -- Good Cooking Forever! |
|
|||
|
Chef John V. wrote:
To anyone who can help--- Here is my problem. I added a Vista Preimum laptop to a small network NT 4.0 and XP Pro and Home machines. I need to have total access to all machine's drives from whatever machine I log on to under any user name and password, and yes I know it isn't recommended. The Vista laptop has no problem accessing the other machines and drives, but my other machines can't access the C: drive on the Vista laptop. I added the suggested addition to the registry "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\Cur rentVersion\Policies\system\ " posted in many threads, I've added all the possible users in the Share Permissions under the Group or User Names and including Dailup, terminal user, network service, batch, preformance monitor, preformance log user, and many others. Guess what, still can't access the C: drive. I've check and uncheked boxes, rebooted, have sharing enabled, workgroups are the same name, turned on and off UAC. What if I changed the drive letter of the drive?---Any help is greatly appriciated as I'm ready to format the drive and install XP. 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't 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. Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
|
|||
|
Malke,
Thank you but there are still a few questions. First, When applying the changes I got and error "Error occured applying security info, C:/ Windows Access denied." Yes, I can now oven the drive on the Vista laptop using an XP desktop to see the folders but I can't open any of them and when I try I receive the Access denied, contact administrator about permissions error message? -- Good Cooking Forever! "Malke" wrote: Chef John V. wrote: To anyone who can help--- Here is my problem. I added a Vista Preimum laptop to a small network NT 4.0 and XP Pro and Home machines. I need to have total access to all machine's drives from whatever machine I log on to under any user name and password, and yes I know it isn't recommended. The Vista laptop has no problem accessing the other machines and drives, but my other machines can't access the C: drive on the Vista laptop. I added the suggested addition to the registry "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\Cur rentVersion\Policies\system\ " posted in many threads, I've added all the possible users in the Share Permissions under the Group or User Names and including Dailup, terminal user, network service, batch, preformance monitor, preformance log user, and many others. Guess what, still can't access the C: drive. I've check and uncheked boxes, rebooted, have sharing enabled, workgroups are the same name, turned on and off UAC. What if I changed the drive letter of the drive?---Any help is greatly appriciated as I'm ready to format the drive and install XP. 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't 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. Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
|
|||
|
Chef John V. wrote:
Malke, Thank you but there are still a few questions. First, When applying the changes I got and error "Error occured applying security info, C:/ Windows Access denied." Yes, I can now oven the drive on the Vista laptop using an XP desktop to see the folders but I can't open any of them and when I try I receive the Access denied, contact administrator about permissions error message? Since I can't see your machine and I don't share out the root of any of my drives, I'm not quite sure what you're doing wrong. Did you create identical user accounts with identical passwords? If not, please try that. Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
|
|||
|
"Malke" wrote: Chef John V. wrote: Malke, Thank you but there are still a few questions. First, When applying the changes I got and error "Error occured applying security info, C:/ Windows Access denied." Yes, I can now oven the drive on the Vista laptop using an XP desktop to see the folders but I can't open any of them and when I try I receive the Access denied, contact administrator about permissions error message? Since I can't see your machine and I don't share out the root of any of my drives, I'm not quite sure what you're doing wrong. Did you create identical user accounts with identical passwords? If not, please try that. Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
|
|||
|
Gentlemen: I too have this problem with a Vista system placed into an XP
populated network. The Vista machine was purchased 8/18/07 and in the 11 days since, I have wasted 6-10 hours in phone conversations with both the manufacturer and Microsoft. Microsoft abslutely refuses to discuss the issue, and the manufacturer, although claiming it is not their responsibility to correct the problem, was at least willing to try. They were not successful. I tried the Microsoft Support chat line but that site will not allow access because it says my PIN is not valid. Now, after 11 days of fruitless inquiry with the presumably responsible parties, I am convinced that Microsoft has recreated ME 2000, only on a much grander scale, that they know they have dumped a nightmare on the public, and are doing everything they can to avoid, evade, or disclaim any responsibility for Vista's obvious deficiencies.Another thing I have learned in these trying days; don't bother sending "feedback" to them. They don't even acknowledge them, let alone reply to them. I have concluded that the only solution to this dilema is to discard Vista and go back to XP unless, of course, you are wealthy enough to replace all your XP machines with Vista machines and multiply the problems with having a single Vista machine. "Malke" wrote: Chef John V. wrote: Malke, Thank you but there are still a few questions. First, When applying the changes I got and error "Error occured applying security info, C:/ Windows Access denied." Yes, I can now oven the drive on the Vista laptop using an XP desktop to see the folders but I can't open any of them and when I try I receive the Access denied, contact administrator about permissions error message? Since I can't see your machine and I don't share out the root of any of my drives, I'm not quite sure what you're doing wrong. Did you create identical user accounts with identical passwords? If not, please try that. Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |