Sharing folder between two local users on different machines












0















I'm having a problem that seems trivial, and it used to work just a few weeks ago...



I have two computers on a larger domain. On both computers I have local users with admin privileges.



I want to share one folder on one computer and have it accessible on the other. Seems easy, but it doesn't work.



It does work if I access the folder with a domain-connected user, but not with a local user.



Any ideas? The computer sharing the folder is Win10, and it's not accessible with either Win7 or Win10 machines.










share|improve this question























  • Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?

    – grawity
    Jan 30 at 10:02
















0















I'm having a problem that seems trivial, and it used to work just a few weeks ago...



I have two computers on a larger domain. On both computers I have local users with admin privileges.



I want to share one folder on one computer and have it accessible on the other. Seems easy, but it doesn't work.



It does work if I access the folder with a domain-connected user, but not with a local user.



Any ideas? The computer sharing the folder is Win10, and it's not accessible with either Win7 or Win10 machines.










share|improve this question























  • Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?

    – grawity
    Jan 30 at 10:02














0












0








0








I'm having a problem that seems trivial, and it used to work just a few weeks ago...



I have two computers on a larger domain. On both computers I have local users with admin privileges.



I want to share one folder on one computer and have it accessible on the other. Seems easy, but it doesn't work.



It does work if I access the folder with a domain-connected user, but not with a local user.



Any ideas? The computer sharing the folder is Win10, and it's not accessible with either Win7 or Win10 machines.










share|improve this question














I'm having a problem that seems trivial, and it used to work just a few weeks ago...



I have two computers on a larger domain. On both computers I have local users with admin privileges.



I want to share one folder on one computer and have it accessible on the other. Seems easy, but it doesn't work.



It does work if I access the folder with a domain-connected user, but not with a local user.



Any ideas? The computer sharing the folder is Win10, and it's not accessible with either Win7 or Win10 machines.







windows-7 windows-10 windows-domain






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jan 30 at 9:50









bjarvenbjarven

1011




1011













  • Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?

    – grawity
    Jan 30 at 10:02



















  • Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?

    – grawity
    Jan 30 at 10:02

















Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?

– grawity
Jan 30 at 10:02





Does your domain deploy any policies which would disable NTLM and enforce Kerberos authentication?

– grawity
Jan 30 at 10:02










1 Answer
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You may be running into the old gotcha that Windows really has two incompatible
sets of network shares for administrators and non-administrators.
Depending on whether the share was created in Administrator mode,
a Windows explorer that is not run in the same mode might not see it.
In addition, network shares established during startup are created in
non-administrator mode.



To work around this problem, set to 1 the EnableLinkedConnections registry value,
of type DWORD, under the registry key
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem.



This is further described in the Microsoft article
Some Programs Cannot Access Network Locations When UAC Is Enabled :




This value enables Windows Vista and Windows 7 to share network connections between the filtered access token and the full administrator access token for a member of the Administrators group.







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    You may be running into the old gotcha that Windows really has two incompatible
    sets of network shares for administrators and non-administrators.
    Depending on whether the share was created in Administrator mode,
    a Windows explorer that is not run in the same mode might not see it.
    In addition, network shares established during startup are created in
    non-administrator mode.



    To work around this problem, set to 1 the EnableLinkedConnections registry value,
    of type DWORD, under the registry key
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem.



    This is further described in the Microsoft article
    Some Programs Cannot Access Network Locations When UAC Is Enabled :




    This value enables Windows Vista and Windows 7 to share network connections between the filtered access token and the full administrator access token for a member of the Administrators group.







    share|improve this answer




























      0














      You may be running into the old gotcha that Windows really has two incompatible
      sets of network shares for administrators and non-administrators.
      Depending on whether the share was created in Administrator mode,
      a Windows explorer that is not run in the same mode might not see it.
      In addition, network shares established during startup are created in
      non-administrator mode.



      To work around this problem, set to 1 the EnableLinkedConnections registry value,
      of type DWORD, under the registry key
      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem.



      This is further described in the Microsoft article
      Some Programs Cannot Access Network Locations When UAC Is Enabled :




      This value enables Windows Vista and Windows 7 to share network connections between the filtered access token and the full administrator access token for a member of the Administrators group.







      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        You may be running into the old gotcha that Windows really has two incompatible
        sets of network shares for administrators and non-administrators.
        Depending on whether the share was created in Administrator mode,
        a Windows explorer that is not run in the same mode might not see it.
        In addition, network shares established during startup are created in
        non-administrator mode.



        To work around this problem, set to 1 the EnableLinkedConnections registry value,
        of type DWORD, under the registry key
        HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem.



        This is further described in the Microsoft article
        Some Programs Cannot Access Network Locations When UAC Is Enabled :




        This value enables Windows Vista and Windows 7 to share network connections between the filtered access token and the full administrator access token for a member of the Administrators group.







        share|improve this answer













        You may be running into the old gotcha that Windows really has two incompatible
        sets of network shares for administrators and non-administrators.
        Depending on whether the share was created in Administrator mode,
        a Windows explorer that is not run in the same mode might not see it.
        In addition, network shares established during startup are created in
        non-administrator mode.



        To work around this problem, set to 1 the EnableLinkedConnections registry value,
        of type DWORD, under the registry key
        HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem.



        This is further described in the Microsoft article
        Some Programs Cannot Access Network Locations When UAC Is Enabled :




        This value enables Windows Vista and Windows 7 to share network connections between the filtered access token and the full administrator access token for a member of the Administrators group.








        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jan 30 at 10:08









        harrymcharrymc

        260k14271574




        260k14271574






























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