Roland,
I'll try to answer all the questions...
1. don't remember what I was doing at the time, I know I've installed a few new programs
but didn't notice the problem until I installed some programs that needed the network to
be functioning. One thing I had to do for the latter was set up or change a user
profile on computer2 so that it's password matched that of computer1.
2. both using Win2000 Pro
3. protocols: Client for Microsoft Networks, File and Print Sharing for Microsoft
Networks, Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)
4. firewall only on the D-Link 604 router, although I did have ZoneAlarm on computer1
and disabled it a few days ago.
5. IDS? not sure what this stands for
6. I run Norton AV 2003 on computer1, but auto protect and email scanning are off.
Computer2 has Norton AV 2001, and also has Panda Titanium which I haven't used for a
week or two. Recently updated and began using Norton AV 2001 and stoppped using Panda.
Norton AV AutoProtect is not running.
7. NTFS...everything has been working fine with FAT32 and FAT16, there's a reason I
didn't want to use NTFS but I don't remember it.
8. I ran from computer1: net use \\192.168.0.100\ipc$''''/u'''' and got: " System Error
67 has occurred. The network name cannot be found."
I ran from computer2: net use \\192.168.0.101\ipc$''''/u'''' and got: System Error
53 has occurred. The network name cannot be found.
9. I ran from computer1 : net view : it shows all the correct shared resources on
computer2. (I'm running all these commands from computer1, it's computer 2 that won't
access computer1).
I ran from computer2: net view: and got "System error 53 has occurred. The network
path was not found"
10. I ran nbtstat -A 192.168.0.100 from computer1
I ran nbtstat -A 192.168.0.101 from computer2
both produced: Node IPAddress: (the opposite computers ipaddress) Scope Id: []
Host not found.
I ran nbtstat -a computer1
nbtstat -a computer2
both listed the Node IPAddress of the current computer
both produced the NetBios Remote Machine Table of the opposite computer
It's a lot of typing to list the entries (I've been on this message almost an hour now).
If they are important let me know and I'll type them out. They were almost identical(4
and 5 entries) although the computer1 entries had an additional workgroup called
...__MSBROWSE__<01> .
I'm going to have to stop now, thanks for all the suggestions...I hope there is an
answer in the results. Let me know what you think.
John
"Roland Hall" <nobody@nowhere> wrote in message
news:#(E-Mail Removed)...
> "jbclem1" wrote in message news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> : I have shares set up on various partitions(C,D,E, etc...) on both
> computers. I just
> : checked and they are still set correctly, with permissions given to
> "everyone". I don't
> : use NTFS. When you ask if I'm using the same account to login to computer
> 2 do you mean
> : the same user profile as the one under which I just checked the
> sharing...the answer is
> : yes, that's normally the only user profile I use.
> :
> : I just checked again on Computer 2 and doubleclicked Computers Near Me
> (in My Network
> : Places) and got this error message:
> :
> : Workgroup is not accessible
> : The network path was not found
> :
> : This seems to be something more basic than sharing...but how can the
> network path be
> : working in one direction but not the other?
>
> ...because the problem is probably authentication or perhaps something we
> hope it's not.
>
> First question: What you have changed or installed or updated? In fact,
> what were you doing right before it stopped working?
> Are both of these system W2K Pro?
> What protocols are you running?
> Personal firewalls?
> IDS?
> Router have a firewall? If so, which ports are open?
> Running Antivirus? If so, which one?
> Why are you NOT running NTFS?
> Have you tried connecting to the computer by IP? I don't mean ping.
> net use \\x.x.x.x\ipc$ "" /u: ""
> x.x.x.x = ip address of target system. You enter the command at the command
> line. You get there with Start/Run, type in cmd and press [ENTER].
> If you make a successful connection, type in this:
> net use [ENTER]
> [ENTER] = press the enter key. Do not type in [ENTER].
> If you see anything other than you anonymous connection you just made,
> please list it here.
> Then type in this:
> net view \\x.x.x.x [ENTER]
> x.x.x.x = ip address [ENTER] = press enter key.
> Please show your results.
> BTW... net view should show you the shares on the target system.
> You can also try:
> nbtstat -A x.x.x.x [ENTER]
> This will show you NetBIOS name table information.
> Please list it here.
> -A must be uppercase.
>
> --
> Roland Hall
> /* This information is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
> without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of merchantability
> or fitness for a particular purpose. */
> Online Support for IT Professionals -
> http://support.microsoft.com/service...p?fr=0&sd=tech
> How-to: Windows 2000 DNS:
> http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;EN-US;308201
>
>
> Does the router have a firewall?
>
>