(OLDER) <- More Stuff -> (NEWER) (NEWEST)
Printer Friendly Version



We no longer offer ftp downloads. If there is a file you need referenced here, please contact me by email and I will get it to you.

Best of the Newsgroups: windows xp and visionfs


What is this stuff?

If this isn't exactly what you wanted, please try our Search (there's a LOT of techy and non-techy stuff here about Linux, Unix, Mac OS X and just computers in general!):



From: Tony Lawrence <tony@pcunix.com>
Subject: More XP problems
Date: Wed, 11 Dec 2002 07:02:37 -0500


I know I'll figure this out someday :-)



Yesterday I had someone with a new XP Pro box.  He already had an 
account for himself - "daryl" and used the same password as he uses on 
the Unix system.  I do not know the details about how that first account 
was set up (the person who did it was unavailable) but I suspect major 
funkiness.

As "daryl", he could not use Visionfs.  Very strangely, when I got 
there, it was showing the root folder - as though it thought he was root 
- but wouldn't allow him access to printers, vision tools, etc.  I tried:

changing his password
changing the visionfs password
changing the unix password
removing him entirely from vision and unix and then putting him back.
changing "daryl" to a different name in XP
mapping a network drive (it lets you specify a different user/password 
to use)


No change.  Put him back to "daryl".

Next I added a user "dave" on the XP machine and in Unix/Vision.  No 
access problems, but when I went back to look at "daryl" again, now 
"dave"'s home share  appeared instead of root's - but still no access.



I looked in the registry a bit and it looks to me like there have been 
more users on this machine than what I added.

I gave up, added a new user "darylm" to XP and to Unix/Vision and that 
all worked.

Something funky there.  Why "daryl" saw root in network neighborhood and 
why it changed to "dave" is very confusing.  Why (when logged in as 
"daryl") you can't connect a network drive even when specifying a valid 
name and password is scary.

Oh well :-)

(use start->run control userpasswords2 to fix this, see Network Neighborhood, Visionfs, Samba Authentication and all that

-- 

Tony Lawrence
Unix/Linux Support Tips, How-To's, Tests and more: http://aplawrence.com
Free Linux Skills Test: ftp://aplawrence.com/pub/linuxquestions.zip




Click here to add your comments



Don't miss responses! Subscribe to Comments by RSS or by Email

Click here to add your comments


If you want a picture to show with your comment, go get a Gravatar


ad


Auto FTP Manager

/Bofcusm/1860.html copyright 1997-2004 (various authors) All Rights Reserved

Have you tried Searching this site?

Unix/Linux/Mac OS X support by phone, email or on-site: Support Rates

This is a Unix/Linux resource website. It contains technical articles about Unix, Linux and general computing related subjects, opinion, news, help files, how-to's, tutorials and more. We appreciate comments and article submissions.

Publishing your articles here

Jump to Comments



Many of the products and books I review are things I purchased for my own use. Some were given to me specifically for the purpose of reviewing them. I resell or can earn commissions from the sale of some of these items. Links within these pages may be affiliate links that pay me for referring you to them. That's mostly insignificant amounts of money; whenever it is not I have made my relationship plain. I also may own stock in companies mentioned here. If you have any question, please do feel free to contact me.

Specific links that take you to pages that allow you to purchase the item I reviewed are very likely to pay me a commission. Many of the books I review were given to me by the publishers specifically for the purpose of writing a review. These gifts and referral fees do not affect my opinions; I often give bad reviews anyway.

We use Google third-party advertising companies to serve ads when you visit our website. These companies may use information (not including your name, address, email address, or telephone number) about your visits to this and other websites in order to provide advertisements about goods and services of interest to you. If you would like more information about this practice and to know your choices about not having this information used by these companies, click here.



More:
       - OSR5
       - Bofcusm


Unix/Linux Consultants

Skills Tests

Guest Post Here











My Favorites

Change Congress