Unable to connect a Wndows 7 pc to a Windows 7 share anymore?












2















I have many PCs & Macs in my household...all of them connected to a Windows 7 share.



All of a sudden, one of my Windows 7 PCs can't connect to the share anymore. In fact, it can't connect to any computers on the network. The network drive can't be found. Oddly enough, the server is visible in the Network sidebar from Windows Explorer. However, clicking it displays an error dialog (the specified network provider name is invalid)



What is even more odd is I can ping the server (using either the machine name or ip address) and it finds it just fine. But any attempt to reconnect to the server fails via `net use' or manually Windows Explorer.



I've flushed the DNS cache, but that didn't fix the problem.



I'm at a loss on what else I can try...can somebody offer some insight?










share|improve this question





























    2















    I have many PCs & Macs in my household...all of them connected to a Windows 7 share.



    All of a sudden, one of my Windows 7 PCs can't connect to the share anymore. In fact, it can't connect to any computers on the network. The network drive can't be found. Oddly enough, the server is visible in the Network sidebar from Windows Explorer. However, clicking it displays an error dialog (the specified network provider name is invalid)



    What is even more odd is I can ping the server (using either the machine name or ip address) and it finds it just fine. But any attempt to reconnect to the server fails via `net use' or manually Windows Explorer.



    I've flushed the DNS cache, but that didn't fix the problem.



    I'm at a loss on what else I can try...can somebody offer some insight?










    share|improve this question



























      2












      2








      2








      I have many PCs & Macs in my household...all of them connected to a Windows 7 share.



      All of a sudden, one of my Windows 7 PCs can't connect to the share anymore. In fact, it can't connect to any computers on the network. The network drive can't be found. Oddly enough, the server is visible in the Network sidebar from Windows Explorer. However, clicking it displays an error dialog (the specified network provider name is invalid)



      What is even more odd is I can ping the server (using either the machine name or ip address) and it finds it just fine. But any attempt to reconnect to the server fails via `net use' or manually Windows Explorer.



      I've flushed the DNS cache, but that didn't fix the problem.



      I'm at a loss on what else I can try...can somebody offer some insight?










      share|improve this question
















      I have many PCs & Macs in my household...all of them connected to a Windows 7 share.



      All of a sudden, one of my Windows 7 PCs can't connect to the share anymore. In fact, it can't connect to any computers on the network. The network drive can't be found. Oddly enough, the server is visible in the Network sidebar from Windows Explorer. However, clicking it displays an error dialog (the specified network provider name is invalid)



      What is even more odd is I can ping the server (using either the machine name or ip address) and it finds it just fine. But any attempt to reconnect to the server fails via `net use' or manually Windows Explorer.



      I've flushed the DNS cache, but that didn't fix the problem.



      I'm at a loss on what else I can try...can somebody offer some insight?







      windows-7 network-shares






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Apr 11 '11 at 16:50









      Nate

      59931327




      59931327










      asked Apr 11 '11 at 4:29









      Tim ReddyTim Reddy

      188212




      188212






















          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          1














          Any updates on that machine lately? I have seen the "advanced sharing options" get reset before. Or perhaps Windows no longer thinks it's on your home network or that it's a public network. Goto the "Network and Sharing Center" and see if the network is identified as a "home" network. Then check out the "advanced sharing options" and see if "network discovery" is turned on. Other than that, could be a firewall issue. I recommend checking out the "event log" and see if there are any network related errors.



          You could also create a share on the broken machine and see if it is visible to the other computers, it might help point you in the right direction.



          Hope that helps.






          share|improve this answer
























          • ok...I read the event logs and it says that The Computer Browser service depends on LanmanServer. I tried to manually start Computer Browser in the Services but it failed. So apparently I lost LanmanServer somewhere...

            – Tim Reddy
            Apr 12 '11 at 1:15











          • I couldn't figure it out...considering this PC is my wife's internet PC, I just reinstalled Windows 7...it took less time to do that than figure out this problem...

            – Tim Reddy
            Apr 12 '11 at 4:34



















          1














          In control panel go to Network and Sharing Center, once it opens click "Change Adapter Settings" on the left side, what do you see in there?



          You network adapter that is being used to connect to the network should show in here, it will be either Wired or Wireless, let me know if you see multiple adapters for either wired or wireless before you continue below.



          Go to the toolbar > Advanced > Advanced Settings, a small window will open, select your adapter currently being used to connect to the network in the top pane, then be sure your bindings for File and Printer Sharing and Client for Microsoft networks boxes are all checked, if not check them and hit OK, close the window.



          If any boxes were Not checked and you checked them, reboot the PC and try to connect to the network.



          .
          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer































            1














            I had this same issue. Symptoms were I could see the systems inside the Network list in Explorer, but when ever I tried to connect to one I was given a "The specified network provider name is invalid" error.



            My own laptop was in there and gave the same error.



            Because Peer Networking Grouping service would not start, I deleted the contents of %windir%ServiceProfilesLocalServiceAppDataRoamingPeerNetworking



            The error I got was The Peer Networking Grouping service depends on the Peer Name Resolution Protocol service which failed to start because of the following error:
            %%-2140993535



            Then I started the services: Peer Name Resolution Protocol, Peer Networking Grouping, Peer Networking Identity Manager



            Then I needed to uninstall Client for Microsoft Networks from my primary network adapter, reboot, and reinstall it.



            Everything works as expected now.






            share|improve this answer

































              0














              Well, I have to record this here as it was a strange one. I found my fix here: https://www.megaleecher.net/Fix_Windows_Cannot_Access_Error. In my case, a disk recovery program, Diskinternals EFS Recovery, had replaced the "ProviderOrder" entry under registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlNetworkProviderOrder with the value "cbfsconnect2017-0". Once I put back the Windows default, "RDPNP,LanmanWorkstation,webclient" things immediately started working again (without a reboot unlike what that post says, but no guarantees - you may have to reboot).



              The really strange thing was that I could do a "Start, Run" and connect to any folder that was at least two folders deep (It would auto complete folder names as I typed \ServerNameetc.). E.g. I could connect to \ServerNameShareNameSubfolder but not \ServerName or \ServerNameShareName) and when I viewed the address bar in Windows File Explorer, it looked like "> Network > ServerName > \ServerNameShareName > FolderName" (yes, with the slashes) instead of "> Network > ServerName > ShareName > FolderName"



              When I clicked to the right of the address (to copy it out) it showed as "\ServerNameShareNameSubfolder". Once I got to the subfolder I could then navigate up a folder to the root share (either with Alt+Up Arrow or clicking "\ServerNameShareName" in the address bar). But I still couldn't get all the way up to see a list of the server shares without receiving an error.



              Other Google search terms for this are "The network is not present or not started." (it switched between that error and "the specified network provider name is invalid") and "System error 1222 has occurred. The network is not present or not started." (which I received when running "net use" from a command prompt).






              share|improve this answer


























              • To their credit, DiskInternals responded to my support ticket, saying "CBFS is a 3-rd party driver used in our products. It seems like there is indeed an error in our uninstall script, which doesn't invokes CBFS uninstallation correctly. Developers should fix it soon."

                – csrowell
                Feb 1 at 15:23











              Your Answer








              StackExchange.ready(function() {
              var channelOptions = {
              tags: "".split(" "),
              id: "3"
              };
              initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

              StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
              // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
              if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
              StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
              createEditor();
              });
              }
              else {
              createEditor();
              }
              });

              function createEditor() {
              StackExchange.prepareEditor({
              heartbeatType: 'answer',
              autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
              convertImagesToLinks: true,
              noModals: true,
              showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
              reputationToPostImages: 10,
              bindNavPrevention: true,
              postfix: "",
              imageUploader: {
              brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
              contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
              allowUrls: true
              },
              onDemand: true,
              discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
              ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
              });


              }
              });














              draft saved

              draft discarded


















              StackExchange.ready(
              function () {
              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f269281%2funable-to-connect-a-wndows-7-pc-to-a-windows-7-share-anymore%23new-answer', 'question_page');
              }
              );

              Post as a guest















              Required, but never shown

























              4 Answers
              4






              active

              oldest

              votes








              4 Answers
              4






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              1














              Any updates on that machine lately? I have seen the "advanced sharing options" get reset before. Or perhaps Windows no longer thinks it's on your home network or that it's a public network. Goto the "Network and Sharing Center" and see if the network is identified as a "home" network. Then check out the "advanced sharing options" and see if "network discovery" is turned on. Other than that, could be a firewall issue. I recommend checking out the "event log" and see if there are any network related errors.



              You could also create a share on the broken machine and see if it is visible to the other computers, it might help point you in the right direction.



              Hope that helps.






              share|improve this answer
























              • ok...I read the event logs and it says that The Computer Browser service depends on LanmanServer. I tried to manually start Computer Browser in the Services but it failed. So apparently I lost LanmanServer somewhere...

                – Tim Reddy
                Apr 12 '11 at 1:15











              • I couldn't figure it out...considering this PC is my wife's internet PC, I just reinstalled Windows 7...it took less time to do that than figure out this problem...

                – Tim Reddy
                Apr 12 '11 at 4:34
















              1














              Any updates on that machine lately? I have seen the "advanced sharing options" get reset before. Or perhaps Windows no longer thinks it's on your home network or that it's a public network. Goto the "Network and Sharing Center" and see if the network is identified as a "home" network. Then check out the "advanced sharing options" and see if "network discovery" is turned on. Other than that, could be a firewall issue. I recommend checking out the "event log" and see if there are any network related errors.



              You could also create a share on the broken machine and see if it is visible to the other computers, it might help point you in the right direction.



              Hope that helps.






              share|improve this answer
























              • ok...I read the event logs and it says that The Computer Browser service depends on LanmanServer. I tried to manually start Computer Browser in the Services but it failed. So apparently I lost LanmanServer somewhere...

                – Tim Reddy
                Apr 12 '11 at 1:15











              • I couldn't figure it out...considering this PC is my wife's internet PC, I just reinstalled Windows 7...it took less time to do that than figure out this problem...

                – Tim Reddy
                Apr 12 '11 at 4:34














              1












              1








              1







              Any updates on that machine lately? I have seen the "advanced sharing options" get reset before. Or perhaps Windows no longer thinks it's on your home network or that it's a public network. Goto the "Network and Sharing Center" and see if the network is identified as a "home" network. Then check out the "advanced sharing options" and see if "network discovery" is turned on. Other than that, could be a firewall issue. I recommend checking out the "event log" and see if there are any network related errors.



              You could also create a share on the broken machine and see if it is visible to the other computers, it might help point you in the right direction.



              Hope that helps.






              share|improve this answer













              Any updates on that machine lately? I have seen the "advanced sharing options" get reset before. Or perhaps Windows no longer thinks it's on your home network or that it's a public network. Goto the "Network and Sharing Center" and see if the network is identified as a "home" network. Then check out the "advanced sharing options" and see if "network discovery" is turned on. Other than that, could be a firewall issue. I recommend checking out the "event log" and see if there are any network related errors.



              You could also create a share on the broken machine and see if it is visible to the other computers, it might help point you in the right direction.



              Hope that helps.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Apr 11 '11 at 5:54









              lysdexiclysdexic

              22614




              22614













              • ok...I read the event logs and it says that The Computer Browser service depends on LanmanServer. I tried to manually start Computer Browser in the Services but it failed. So apparently I lost LanmanServer somewhere...

                – Tim Reddy
                Apr 12 '11 at 1:15











              • I couldn't figure it out...considering this PC is my wife's internet PC, I just reinstalled Windows 7...it took less time to do that than figure out this problem...

                – Tim Reddy
                Apr 12 '11 at 4:34



















              • ok...I read the event logs and it says that The Computer Browser service depends on LanmanServer. I tried to manually start Computer Browser in the Services but it failed. So apparently I lost LanmanServer somewhere...

                – Tim Reddy
                Apr 12 '11 at 1:15











              • I couldn't figure it out...considering this PC is my wife's internet PC, I just reinstalled Windows 7...it took less time to do that than figure out this problem...

                – Tim Reddy
                Apr 12 '11 at 4:34

















              ok...I read the event logs and it says that The Computer Browser service depends on LanmanServer. I tried to manually start Computer Browser in the Services but it failed. So apparently I lost LanmanServer somewhere...

              – Tim Reddy
              Apr 12 '11 at 1:15





              ok...I read the event logs and it says that The Computer Browser service depends on LanmanServer. I tried to manually start Computer Browser in the Services but it failed. So apparently I lost LanmanServer somewhere...

              – Tim Reddy
              Apr 12 '11 at 1:15













              I couldn't figure it out...considering this PC is my wife's internet PC, I just reinstalled Windows 7...it took less time to do that than figure out this problem...

              – Tim Reddy
              Apr 12 '11 at 4:34





              I couldn't figure it out...considering this PC is my wife's internet PC, I just reinstalled Windows 7...it took less time to do that than figure out this problem...

              – Tim Reddy
              Apr 12 '11 at 4:34













              1














              In control panel go to Network and Sharing Center, once it opens click "Change Adapter Settings" on the left side, what do you see in there?



              You network adapter that is being used to connect to the network should show in here, it will be either Wired or Wireless, let me know if you see multiple adapters for either wired or wireless before you continue below.



              Go to the toolbar > Advanced > Advanced Settings, a small window will open, select your adapter currently being used to connect to the network in the top pane, then be sure your bindings for File and Printer Sharing and Client for Microsoft networks boxes are all checked, if not check them and hit OK, close the window.



              If any boxes were Not checked and you checked them, reboot the PC and try to connect to the network.



              .
              enter image description here






              share|improve this answer




























                1














                In control panel go to Network and Sharing Center, once it opens click "Change Adapter Settings" on the left side, what do you see in there?



                You network adapter that is being used to connect to the network should show in here, it will be either Wired or Wireless, let me know if you see multiple adapters for either wired or wireless before you continue below.



                Go to the toolbar > Advanced > Advanced Settings, a small window will open, select your adapter currently being used to connect to the network in the top pane, then be sure your bindings for File and Printer Sharing and Client for Microsoft networks boxes are all checked, if not check them and hit OK, close the window.



                If any boxes were Not checked and you checked them, reboot the PC and try to connect to the network.



                .
                enter image description here






                share|improve this answer


























                  1












                  1








                  1







                  In control panel go to Network and Sharing Center, once it opens click "Change Adapter Settings" on the left side, what do you see in there?



                  You network adapter that is being used to connect to the network should show in here, it will be either Wired or Wireless, let me know if you see multiple adapters for either wired or wireless before you continue below.



                  Go to the toolbar > Advanced > Advanced Settings, a small window will open, select your adapter currently being used to connect to the network in the top pane, then be sure your bindings for File and Printer Sharing and Client for Microsoft networks boxes are all checked, if not check them and hit OK, close the window.



                  If any boxes were Not checked and you checked them, reboot the PC and try to connect to the network.



                  .
                  enter image description here






                  share|improve this answer













                  In control panel go to Network and Sharing Center, once it opens click "Change Adapter Settings" on the left side, what do you see in there?



                  You network adapter that is being used to connect to the network should show in here, it will be either Wired or Wireless, let me know if you see multiple adapters for either wired or wireless before you continue below.



                  Go to the toolbar > Advanced > Advanced Settings, a small window will open, select your adapter currently being used to connect to the network in the top pane, then be sure your bindings for File and Printer Sharing and Client for Microsoft networks boxes are all checked, if not check them and hit OK, close the window.



                  If any boxes were Not checked and you checked them, reboot the PC and try to connect to the network.



                  .
                  enter image description here







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Apr 11 '11 at 15:42









                  MoabMoab

                  51.1k1494160




                  51.1k1494160























                      1














                      I had this same issue. Symptoms were I could see the systems inside the Network list in Explorer, but when ever I tried to connect to one I was given a "The specified network provider name is invalid" error.



                      My own laptop was in there and gave the same error.



                      Because Peer Networking Grouping service would not start, I deleted the contents of %windir%ServiceProfilesLocalServiceAppDataRoamingPeerNetworking



                      The error I got was The Peer Networking Grouping service depends on the Peer Name Resolution Protocol service which failed to start because of the following error:
                      %%-2140993535



                      Then I started the services: Peer Name Resolution Protocol, Peer Networking Grouping, Peer Networking Identity Manager



                      Then I needed to uninstall Client for Microsoft Networks from my primary network adapter, reboot, and reinstall it.



                      Everything works as expected now.






                      share|improve this answer






























                        1














                        I had this same issue. Symptoms were I could see the systems inside the Network list in Explorer, but when ever I tried to connect to one I was given a "The specified network provider name is invalid" error.



                        My own laptop was in there and gave the same error.



                        Because Peer Networking Grouping service would not start, I deleted the contents of %windir%ServiceProfilesLocalServiceAppDataRoamingPeerNetworking



                        The error I got was The Peer Networking Grouping service depends on the Peer Name Resolution Protocol service which failed to start because of the following error:
                        %%-2140993535



                        Then I started the services: Peer Name Resolution Protocol, Peer Networking Grouping, Peer Networking Identity Manager



                        Then I needed to uninstall Client for Microsoft Networks from my primary network adapter, reboot, and reinstall it.



                        Everything works as expected now.






                        share|improve this answer




























                          1












                          1








                          1







                          I had this same issue. Symptoms were I could see the systems inside the Network list in Explorer, but when ever I tried to connect to one I was given a "The specified network provider name is invalid" error.



                          My own laptop was in there and gave the same error.



                          Because Peer Networking Grouping service would not start, I deleted the contents of %windir%ServiceProfilesLocalServiceAppDataRoamingPeerNetworking



                          The error I got was The Peer Networking Grouping service depends on the Peer Name Resolution Protocol service which failed to start because of the following error:
                          %%-2140993535



                          Then I started the services: Peer Name Resolution Protocol, Peer Networking Grouping, Peer Networking Identity Manager



                          Then I needed to uninstall Client for Microsoft Networks from my primary network adapter, reboot, and reinstall it.



                          Everything works as expected now.






                          share|improve this answer















                          I had this same issue. Symptoms were I could see the systems inside the Network list in Explorer, but when ever I tried to connect to one I was given a "The specified network provider name is invalid" error.



                          My own laptop was in there and gave the same error.



                          Because Peer Networking Grouping service would not start, I deleted the contents of %windir%ServiceProfilesLocalServiceAppDataRoamingPeerNetworking



                          The error I got was The Peer Networking Grouping service depends on the Peer Name Resolution Protocol service which failed to start because of the following error:
                          %%-2140993535



                          Then I started the services: Peer Name Resolution Protocol, Peer Networking Grouping, Peer Networking Identity Manager



                          Then I needed to uninstall Client for Microsoft Networks from my primary network adapter, reboot, and reinstall it.



                          Everything works as expected now.







                          share|improve this answer














                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer








                          edited Aug 6 '13 at 18:43









                          Canadian Luke

                          18k3090147




                          18k3090147










                          answered Aug 6 '13 at 17:43









                          Joseph LennoxJoseph Lennox

                          1113




                          1113























                              0














                              Well, I have to record this here as it was a strange one. I found my fix here: https://www.megaleecher.net/Fix_Windows_Cannot_Access_Error. In my case, a disk recovery program, Diskinternals EFS Recovery, had replaced the "ProviderOrder" entry under registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlNetworkProviderOrder with the value "cbfsconnect2017-0". Once I put back the Windows default, "RDPNP,LanmanWorkstation,webclient" things immediately started working again (without a reboot unlike what that post says, but no guarantees - you may have to reboot).



                              The really strange thing was that I could do a "Start, Run" and connect to any folder that was at least two folders deep (It would auto complete folder names as I typed \ServerNameetc.). E.g. I could connect to \ServerNameShareNameSubfolder but not \ServerName or \ServerNameShareName) and when I viewed the address bar in Windows File Explorer, it looked like "> Network > ServerName > \ServerNameShareName > FolderName" (yes, with the slashes) instead of "> Network > ServerName > ShareName > FolderName"



                              When I clicked to the right of the address (to copy it out) it showed as "\ServerNameShareNameSubfolder". Once I got to the subfolder I could then navigate up a folder to the root share (either with Alt+Up Arrow or clicking "\ServerNameShareName" in the address bar). But I still couldn't get all the way up to see a list of the server shares without receiving an error.



                              Other Google search terms for this are "The network is not present or not started." (it switched between that error and "the specified network provider name is invalid") and "System error 1222 has occurred. The network is not present or not started." (which I received when running "net use" from a command prompt).






                              share|improve this answer


























                              • To their credit, DiskInternals responded to my support ticket, saying "CBFS is a 3-rd party driver used in our products. It seems like there is indeed an error in our uninstall script, which doesn't invokes CBFS uninstallation correctly. Developers should fix it soon."

                                – csrowell
                                Feb 1 at 15:23
















                              0














                              Well, I have to record this here as it was a strange one. I found my fix here: https://www.megaleecher.net/Fix_Windows_Cannot_Access_Error. In my case, a disk recovery program, Diskinternals EFS Recovery, had replaced the "ProviderOrder" entry under registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlNetworkProviderOrder with the value "cbfsconnect2017-0". Once I put back the Windows default, "RDPNP,LanmanWorkstation,webclient" things immediately started working again (without a reboot unlike what that post says, but no guarantees - you may have to reboot).



                              The really strange thing was that I could do a "Start, Run" and connect to any folder that was at least two folders deep (It would auto complete folder names as I typed \ServerNameetc.). E.g. I could connect to \ServerNameShareNameSubfolder but not \ServerName or \ServerNameShareName) and when I viewed the address bar in Windows File Explorer, it looked like "> Network > ServerName > \ServerNameShareName > FolderName" (yes, with the slashes) instead of "> Network > ServerName > ShareName > FolderName"



                              When I clicked to the right of the address (to copy it out) it showed as "\ServerNameShareNameSubfolder". Once I got to the subfolder I could then navigate up a folder to the root share (either with Alt+Up Arrow or clicking "\ServerNameShareName" in the address bar). But I still couldn't get all the way up to see a list of the server shares without receiving an error.



                              Other Google search terms for this are "The network is not present or not started." (it switched between that error and "the specified network provider name is invalid") and "System error 1222 has occurred. The network is not present or not started." (which I received when running "net use" from a command prompt).






                              share|improve this answer


























                              • To their credit, DiskInternals responded to my support ticket, saying "CBFS is a 3-rd party driver used in our products. It seems like there is indeed an error in our uninstall script, which doesn't invokes CBFS uninstallation correctly. Developers should fix it soon."

                                – csrowell
                                Feb 1 at 15:23














                              0












                              0








                              0







                              Well, I have to record this here as it was a strange one. I found my fix here: https://www.megaleecher.net/Fix_Windows_Cannot_Access_Error. In my case, a disk recovery program, Diskinternals EFS Recovery, had replaced the "ProviderOrder" entry under registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlNetworkProviderOrder with the value "cbfsconnect2017-0". Once I put back the Windows default, "RDPNP,LanmanWorkstation,webclient" things immediately started working again (without a reboot unlike what that post says, but no guarantees - you may have to reboot).



                              The really strange thing was that I could do a "Start, Run" and connect to any folder that was at least two folders deep (It would auto complete folder names as I typed \ServerNameetc.). E.g. I could connect to \ServerNameShareNameSubfolder but not \ServerName or \ServerNameShareName) and when I viewed the address bar in Windows File Explorer, it looked like "> Network > ServerName > \ServerNameShareName > FolderName" (yes, with the slashes) instead of "> Network > ServerName > ShareName > FolderName"



                              When I clicked to the right of the address (to copy it out) it showed as "\ServerNameShareNameSubfolder". Once I got to the subfolder I could then navigate up a folder to the root share (either with Alt+Up Arrow or clicking "\ServerNameShareName" in the address bar). But I still couldn't get all the way up to see a list of the server shares without receiving an error.



                              Other Google search terms for this are "The network is not present or not started." (it switched between that error and "the specified network provider name is invalid") and "System error 1222 has occurred. The network is not present or not started." (which I received when running "net use" from a command prompt).






                              share|improve this answer















                              Well, I have to record this here as it was a strange one. I found my fix here: https://www.megaleecher.net/Fix_Windows_Cannot_Access_Error. In my case, a disk recovery program, Diskinternals EFS Recovery, had replaced the "ProviderOrder" entry under registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlNetworkProviderOrder with the value "cbfsconnect2017-0". Once I put back the Windows default, "RDPNP,LanmanWorkstation,webclient" things immediately started working again (without a reboot unlike what that post says, but no guarantees - you may have to reboot).



                              The really strange thing was that I could do a "Start, Run" and connect to any folder that was at least two folders deep (It would auto complete folder names as I typed \ServerNameetc.). E.g. I could connect to \ServerNameShareNameSubfolder but not \ServerName or \ServerNameShareName) and when I viewed the address bar in Windows File Explorer, it looked like "> Network > ServerName > \ServerNameShareName > FolderName" (yes, with the slashes) instead of "> Network > ServerName > ShareName > FolderName"



                              When I clicked to the right of the address (to copy it out) it showed as "\ServerNameShareNameSubfolder". Once I got to the subfolder I could then navigate up a folder to the root share (either with Alt+Up Arrow or clicking "\ServerNameShareName" in the address bar). But I still couldn't get all the way up to see a list of the server shares without receiving an error.



                              Other Google search terms for this are "The network is not present or not started." (it switched between that error and "the specified network provider name is invalid") and "System error 1222 has occurred. The network is not present or not started." (which I received when running "net use" from a command prompt).







                              share|improve this answer














                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer








                              edited Jan 8 at 16:32

























                              answered Jan 8 at 16:17









                              csrowellcsrowell

                              17113




                              17113













                              • To their credit, DiskInternals responded to my support ticket, saying "CBFS is a 3-rd party driver used in our products. It seems like there is indeed an error in our uninstall script, which doesn't invokes CBFS uninstallation correctly. Developers should fix it soon."

                                – csrowell
                                Feb 1 at 15:23



















                              • To their credit, DiskInternals responded to my support ticket, saying "CBFS is a 3-rd party driver used in our products. It seems like there is indeed an error in our uninstall script, which doesn't invokes CBFS uninstallation correctly. Developers should fix it soon."

                                – csrowell
                                Feb 1 at 15:23

















                              To their credit, DiskInternals responded to my support ticket, saying "CBFS is a 3-rd party driver used in our products. It seems like there is indeed an error in our uninstall script, which doesn't invokes CBFS uninstallation correctly. Developers should fix it soon."

                              – csrowell
                              Feb 1 at 15:23





                              To their credit, DiskInternals responded to my support ticket, saying "CBFS is a 3-rd party driver used in our products. It seems like there is indeed an error in our uninstall script, which doesn't invokes CBFS uninstallation correctly. Developers should fix it soon."

                              – csrowell
                              Feb 1 at 15:23


















                              draft saved

                              draft discarded




















































                              Thanks for contributing an answer to Super User!


                              • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                              But avoid



                              • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                              • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                              To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                              draft saved


                              draft discarded














                              StackExchange.ready(
                              function () {
                              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f269281%2funable-to-connect-a-wndows-7-pc-to-a-windows-7-share-anymore%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                              }
                              );

                              Post as a guest















                              Required, but never shown





















































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown

































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown







                              Popular posts from this blog

                              Plaza Victoria

                              In PowerPoint, is there a keyboard shortcut for bulleted / numbered list?

                              How to put 3 figures in Latex with 2 figures side by side and 1 below these side by side images but in...