Sharing folder between two local users on different machines
I'm having a problem that seems trivial, and it used to work just a few weeks ago...
I have two computers on a larger domain. On both computers I have local users with admin privileges.
I want to share one folder on one computer and have it accessible on the other. Seems easy, but it doesn't work.
It does work if I access the folder with a domain-connected user, but not with a local user.
Any ideas? The computer sharing the folder is Win10, and it's not accessible with either Win7 or Win10 machines.
windows-7 windows-10 windows-domain
add a comment |
I'm having a problem that seems trivial, and it used to work just a few weeks ago...
I have two computers on a larger domain. On both computers I have local users with admin privileges.
I want to share one folder on one computer and have it accessible on the other. Seems easy, but it doesn't work.
It does work if I access the folder with a domain-connected user, but not with a local user.
Any ideas? The computer sharing the folder is Win10, and it's not accessible with either Win7 or Win10 machines.
windows-7 windows-10 windows-domain
Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?
– grawity
Jan 30 at 10:02
add a comment |
I'm having a problem that seems trivial, and it used to work just a few weeks ago...
I have two computers on a larger domain. On both computers I have local users with admin privileges.
I want to share one folder on one computer and have it accessible on the other. Seems easy, but it doesn't work.
It does work if I access the folder with a domain-connected user, but not with a local user.
Any ideas? The computer sharing the folder is Win10, and it's not accessible with either Win7 or Win10 machines.
windows-7 windows-10 windows-domain
I'm having a problem that seems trivial, and it used to work just a few weeks ago...
I have two computers on a larger domain. On both computers I have local users with admin privileges.
I want to share one folder on one computer and have it accessible on the other. Seems easy, but it doesn't work.
It does work if I access the folder with a domain-connected user, but not with a local user.
Any ideas? The computer sharing the folder is Win10, and it's not accessible with either Win7 or Win10 machines.
windows-7 windows-10 windows-domain
windows-7 windows-10 windows-domain
asked Jan 30 at 9:50
bjarvenbjarven
1011
1011
Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?
– grawity
Jan 30 at 10:02
add a comment |
Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?
– grawity
Jan 30 at 10:02
Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?
– grawity
Jan 30 at 10:02
Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?
– grawity
Jan 30 at 10:02
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
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votes
You may be running into the old gotcha that Windows really has two incompatible
sets of network shares for administrators and non-administrators.
Depending on whether the share was created in Administrator mode,
a Windows explorer that is not run in the same mode might not see it.
In addition, network shares established during startup are created in
non-administrator mode.
To work around this problem, set to 1
the EnableLinkedConnections
registry value,
of type DWORD, under the registry key
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem
.
This is further described in the Microsoft article
Some Programs Cannot Access Network Locations When UAC Is Enabled :
This value enables Windows Vista and Windows 7 to share network connections between the filtered access token and the full administrator access token for a member of the Administrators group.
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You may be running into the old gotcha that Windows really has two incompatible
sets of network shares for administrators and non-administrators.
Depending on whether the share was created in Administrator mode,
a Windows explorer that is not run in the same mode might not see it.
In addition, network shares established during startup are created in
non-administrator mode.
To work around this problem, set to 1
the EnableLinkedConnections
registry value,
of type DWORD, under the registry key
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem
.
This is further described in the Microsoft article
Some Programs Cannot Access Network Locations When UAC Is Enabled :
This value enables Windows Vista and Windows 7 to share network connections between the filtered access token and the full administrator access token for a member of the Administrators group.
add a comment |
You may be running into the old gotcha that Windows really has two incompatible
sets of network shares for administrators and non-administrators.
Depending on whether the share was created in Administrator mode,
a Windows explorer that is not run in the same mode might not see it.
In addition, network shares established during startup are created in
non-administrator mode.
To work around this problem, set to 1
the EnableLinkedConnections
registry value,
of type DWORD, under the registry key
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem
.
This is further described in the Microsoft article
Some Programs Cannot Access Network Locations When UAC Is Enabled :
This value enables Windows Vista and Windows 7 to share network connections between the filtered access token and the full administrator access token for a member of the Administrators group.
add a comment |
You may be running into the old gotcha that Windows really has two incompatible
sets of network shares for administrators and non-administrators.
Depending on whether the share was created in Administrator mode,
a Windows explorer that is not run in the same mode might not see it.
In addition, network shares established during startup are created in
non-administrator mode.
To work around this problem, set to 1
the EnableLinkedConnections
registry value,
of type DWORD, under the registry key
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem
.
This is further described in the Microsoft article
Some Programs Cannot Access Network Locations When UAC Is Enabled :
This value enables Windows Vista and Windows 7 to share network connections between the filtered access token and the full administrator access token for a member of the Administrators group.
You may be running into the old gotcha that Windows really has two incompatible
sets of network shares for administrators and non-administrators.
Depending on whether the share was created in Administrator mode,
a Windows explorer that is not run in the same mode might not see it.
In addition, network shares established during startup are created in
non-administrator mode.
To work around this problem, set to 1
the EnableLinkedConnections
registry value,
of type DWORD, under the registry key
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem
.
This is further described in the Microsoft article
Some Programs Cannot Access Network Locations When UAC Is Enabled :
This value enables Windows Vista and Windows 7 to share network connections between the filtered access token and the full administrator access token for a member of the Administrators group.
answered Jan 30 at 10:08
harrymcharrymc
264k14272581
264k14272581
add a comment |
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Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?
– grawity
Jan 30 at 10:02