Enable SMB file sharing on OS X - “Incorrect Password”
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I have a Mac running Snow Leopard connected to an Active Directory domain. I can share folders on the Mac and view files from Windows without problems.
When I try to enable my Mac account for write access through System Preferences, I'm prompted for my account's password. Even though I'm entering the right one, I get an "Incorrect Password" response. The same process works fine for the local Mac administrator account; it's the Active Directory account I'm having problems with.
I followed the advice on this page on apple.com without success: (I used the Mac to reset my domain password, and re-created my login keychain)
If you want to use a user account that existed before you installed Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther), you may need to reset the password for the account using Accounts preferences.
Can anyone suggest what might be wrong? Until I fix this I can't write to my Mac file share from Windows.
Edit: Although I never resolved the problem on Snow Leopard, it's fine on Lion.
macos networking osx-snow-leopard network-shares active-directory
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up vote
6
down vote
favorite
I have a Mac running Snow Leopard connected to an Active Directory domain. I can share folders on the Mac and view files from Windows without problems.
When I try to enable my Mac account for write access through System Preferences, I'm prompted for my account's password. Even though I'm entering the right one, I get an "Incorrect Password" response. The same process works fine for the local Mac administrator account; it's the Active Directory account I'm having problems with.
I followed the advice on this page on apple.com without success: (I used the Mac to reset my domain password, and re-created my login keychain)
If you want to use a user account that existed before you installed Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther), you may need to reset the password for the account using Accounts preferences.
Can anyone suggest what might be wrong? Until I fix this I can't write to my Mac file share from Windows.
Edit: Although I never resolved the problem on Snow Leopard, it's fine on Lion.
macos networking osx-snow-leopard network-shares active-directory
I've attached the answer for prosperity. I got hit with this bug in Mavericks and it took forever to stumble upon the fix. Hopefully this helps someone in the future.
– user99736
Dec 1 '13 at 4:23
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
I have a Mac running Snow Leopard connected to an Active Directory domain. I can share folders on the Mac and view files from Windows without problems.
When I try to enable my Mac account for write access through System Preferences, I'm prompted for my account's password. Even though I'm entering the right one, I get an "Incorrect Password" response. The same process works fine for the local Mac administrator account; it's the Active Directory account I'm having problems with.
I followed the advice on this page on apple.com without success: (I used the Mac to reset my domain password, and re-created my login keychain)
If you want to use a user account that existed before you installed Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther), you may need to reset the password for the account using Accounts preferences.
Can anyone suggest what might be wrong? Until I fix this I can't write to my Mac file share from Windows.
Edit: Although I never resolved the problem on Snow Leopard, it's fine on Lion.
macos networking osx-snow-leopard network-shares active-directory
I have a Mac running Snow Leopard connected to an Active Directory domain. I can share folders on the Mac and view files from Windows without problems.
When I try to enable my Mac account for write access through System Preferences, I'm prompted for my account's password. Even though I'm entering the right one, I get an "Incorrect Password" response. The same process works fine for the local Mac administrator account; it's the Active Directory account I'm having problems with.
I followed the advice on this page on apple.com without success: (I used the Mac to reset my domain password, and re-created my login keychain)
If you want to use a user account that existed before you installed Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther), you may need to reset the password for the account using Accounts preferences.
Can anyone suggest what might be wrong? Until I fix this I can't write to my Mac file share from Windows.
Edit: Although I never resolved the problem on Snow Leopard, it's fine on Lion.
macos networking osx-snow-leopard network-shares active-directory
macos networking osx-snow-leopard network-shares active-directory
edited Oct 5 '11 at 12:05
asked Dec 5 '09 at 15:42
Tim Robinson
404137
404137
I've attached the answer for prosperity. I got hit with this bug in Mavericks and it took forever to stumble upon the fix. Hopefully this helps someone in the future.
– user99736
Dec 1 '13 at 4:23
add a comment |
I've attached the answer for prosperity. I got hit with this bug in Mavericks and it took forever to stumble upon the fix. Hopefully this helps someone in the future.
– user99736
Dec 1 '13 at 4:23
I've attached the answer for prosperity. I got hit with this bug in Mavericks and it took forever to stumble upon the fix. Hopefully this helps someone in the future.
– user99736
Dec 1 '13 at 4:23
I've attached the answer for prosperity. I got hit with this bug in Mavericks and it took forever to stumble upon the fix. Hopefully this helps someone in the future.
– user99736
Dec 1 '13 at 4:23
add a comment |
1 Answer
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0
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Pardon me if I'm not getting this correctly, but the problem seems to be a blockage in the process of enabling write privileges on a folder. It appears that you have successfully turned on SMB sharing, and Windows users can connect, but whatever login account that you're using has read only privileges to the desired folder.
If that is the case, a relatively easy alternative might be to change the permissions on the desired folder with chmod in the Terminal using an ACL.
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
Pardon me if I'm not getting this correctly, but the problem seems to be a blockage in the process of enabling write privileges on a folder. It appears that you have successfully turned on SMB sharing, and Windows users can connect, but whatever login account that you're using has read only privileges to the desired folder.
If that is the case, a relatively easy alternative might be to change the permissions on the desired folder with chmod in the Terminal using an ACL.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Pardon me if I'm not getting this correctly, but the problem seems to be a blockage in the process of enabling write privileges on a folder. It appears that you have successfully turned on SMB sharing, and Windows users can connect, but whatever login account that you're using has read only privileges to the desired folder.
If that is the case, a relatively easy alternative might be to change the permissions on the desired folder with chmod in the Terminal using an ACL.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Pardon me if I'm not getting this correctly, but the problem seems to be a blockage in the process of enabling write privileges on a folder. It appears that you have successfully turned on SMB sharing, and Windows users can connect, but whatever login account that you're using has read only privileges to the desired folder.
If that is the case, a relatively easy alternative might be to change the permissions on the desired folder with chmod in the Terminal using an ACL.
Pardon me if I'm not getting this correctly, but the problem seems to be a blockage in the process of enabling write privileges on a folder. It appears that you have successfully turned on SMB sharing, and Windows users can connect, but whatever login account that you're using has read only privileges to the desired folder.
If that is the case, a relatively easy alternative might be to change the permissions on the desired folder with chmod in the Terminal using an ACL.
answered Oct 2 '10 at 6:29
Theo Belk
60047
60047
add a comment |
add a comment |
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I've attached the answer for prosperity. I got hit with this bug in Mavericks and it took forever to stumble upon the fix. Hopefully this helps someone in the future.
– user99736
Dec 1 '13 at 4:23