On Mon, 19 May 2008 20:11:43 -0300, "Fernando Ronci"
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>Hello,
>
>In order to support a legacy application I have to grant read/write access
>to the whole shared C: drive of a Windows XP Professional SP2 machine acting
>as a file server, including the C:\Windows folder. In other words, the
>clients (which are also Win XP Pro SP2 btw) mapping the C:\ drive on the
>host machine need to read files in the Windows folder of that machine.
>Everything is OK except that access to the Windows folder is denied. I
>understand that this is due to XP's security policies nonetheless.
>To overcome that restriction, I added an admin-type account on the file
>server for each workstation that needs this sort of elevated access level.
>Those accounts are the same case and have the same passwords as their
>counterparts on the workstations. This, however, didn't make any difference
>as access to the <mapped_drive>:\Windows folder is still denied.
>
>So my question is: In an scenario like this, how do I grant access to the
>C:\Windows folder on the file server so that the workstations can access the
>files in it?
To allow networked access to the Windows folder, disable simple file
sharing on the host machine:
1. Open My Computer.
2. Click Tools > Folder Options > View.
3. Scroll to the end of the advanced settings.
4. Un-check "Use simple file sharing (recommended)".
--
Best Wishes,
Steve Winograd, MS-MVP (Windows Networking)
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