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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | Return of XP-Vista Networking HELL Its been about three months since I've given up trying to network my Vista machine with my XP machine, but I thought I would try it again. Some people were helping me, and I thank them, sorry for not updating my post, but there was nothing to update. Anyway here are my symptoms again: *Vista (Ultimate) machine cannot see XP (Home SP2) machine. *XP machine can see and access the Vista machine. *Xp machine shows up in the Vista Network Map, but not the Network Folder. *Both machines can ping each other. *I can access the XP machine via IP address, I can access the shared folder but not a shared printer. *IPConfig for Vista shows that NetBIOS over TCP/IP is disabled even though it is enabled in the Network Adaptor Properties dialog. (NetBIOS over TCP/IP always enabled, the middle radio button) Other information: *Everything worked as it should once apon a time, then it all went to Hell. It could have been an update, tweaking software, or antivirus setting, but I notcie too late to do anything about it. *I know it can't be that I don't have the same User/Password on both machines (I tried it anyway but it still didn't work), because it worked awhile back without having the same accounts on both machines. *I had Bitdefender 2008 on the Vista machine, the Firewall log had entries that the ports 138 and 139 were being refused, despite having the XP machine being on the trusted list (by its IP address). So I uninstalled the Antivirus, but the problem persists. *The XP machine has Zone Alarm Internet Security. *I have an Archos Media Player. It can act as a file server and can connect to a network like a regular computer. It can see the XP machine and the XP machine can see it. The Vista machine cannnot see it , and the Archos Media Player cannot see the Vista machine. The Vista machine and Archos Media Player can see each other when networking worked. I believe the OS is Linux based. *I have a Linksys WRT350N router. I can only conclude something is wrong with the Vista machine only, as all other devices are working like they should. I have the following settings in the Network and Sharing window in Vista: *Network: Private *Network Discovery: On *File Sharing: On *Public Folder Sharing: On (Read Only) *Password Protected Sharing: Off *Media Sharing: On I will post my IPConfig for my Vista machine in a reply. Thanks for reading this far at least, any help is appreciated. |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #2 (permalink) |
| | RE: Return of XP-Vista Networking HELL Have a read of it again! What to do with XP is at the bottom! http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/l.../bb727037.aspx Have a read of the above link re Vista File and Printer Sharing. Permissions/Share info is there as well. If using Norton, McAfee, Trend Micro I.S., make sure file and printer sharing is enabled in THEIR firewall (or LAN allowed, depending on how their Exceptions are worded in their Firewall) 1st thing to do is make sure that the Workgroup Name of ALL the computers is the SAME. In Vista Network and Sharing: Network Discovery: ON (So it can see the other computers) Network set to Private (Public is for hotspots, airports, etc) File Sharing: ON Public Folder Sharing: ON (Vista’s Public Folder is the same as XP’s Shared Docs) Password Protected: OFF (unless you want to set up identical usernames and passwords (passwords can be different) on ALL computers in your Network) If you have it ON, you will be asked for a username and password when you try to access a Vista computer from an XP computer, or a Vista computer. Also, run the XP’s Home or Small Office Network File and Printer Sharing Wizard to include Vista in your “New” Network, even if you had an XP Network set up prior to adding a Vista computer to it(redoing the Wizard seems to work for XP machines!). In “My Network Places”: “Set up a Home or Small Office Network” OR under Accessories > Communications > Network Setup Wizard > Allow File and Printer Sharing. -- Mick Murphy - Qld - Australia "Sid" wrote: Quote: > Its been about three months since I've given up trying to network my Vista > machine with my XP machine, but I thought I would try it again. > > Some people were helping me, and I thank them, sorry for not updating my > post, but there was nothing to update. > > Anyway here are my symptoms again: > > *Vista (Ultimate) machine cannot see XP (Home SP2) machine. > *XP machine can see and access the Vista machine. > *Xp machine shows up in the Vista Network Map, but not the Network Folder. > *Both machines can ping each other. > *I can access the XP machine via IP address, I can access the shared folder > but not a shared printer. > *IPConfig for Vista shows that NetBIOS over TCP/IP is disabled even though > it is enabled in the Network Adaptor Properties dialog. (NetBIOS over TCP/IP > always enabled, the middle radio button) > > Other information: > *Everything worked as it should once apon a time, then it all went to Hell. > It could have been an update, tweaking software, or antivirus setting, but I > notcie too late to do anything about it. > *I know it can't be that I don't have the same User/Password on both > machines (I tried it anyway but it still didn't work), because it worked > awhile back without having the same accounts on both machines. > *I had Bitdefender 2008 on the Vista machine, the Firewall log had entries > that the ports 138 and 139 were being refused, despite having the XP machine > being on the trusted list (by its IP address). So I uninstalled the > Antivirus, but the problem persists. > *The XP machine has Zone Alarm Internet Security. > *I have an Archos Media Player. It can act as a file server and can connect > to a network like a regular computer. It can see the XP machine and the XP > machine can see it. The Vista machine cannnot see it , and the Archos Media > Player cannot see the Vista machine. The Vista machine and Archos Media > Player can see each other when networking worked. I believe the OS is Linux > based. > *I have a Linksys WRT350N router. > > I can only conclude something is wrong with the Vista machine only, as all > other devices are working like they should. > I have the following settings in the Network and Sharing window in Vista: > *Network: Private > *Network Discovery: On > *File Sharing: On > *Public Folder Sharing: On (Read Only) > *Password Protected Sharing: Off > *Media Sharing: On > > I will post my IPConfig for my Vista machine in a reply. Thanks for reading > this far at least, any help is appreciated. |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #3 (permalink) |
| | RE: Return of XP-Vista Networking HELL Dear Sid, I've already posted this under a thread called 'authentification mystery', but as it was originated some weeks ago it's a bit hard to find. Thus this is a complete cite of that enty and I hope it might help. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Uuups -- after several weeks I finally found two small registry patches that solved the problem thanks to the hints on PChuck's Network: (a) (That's possible the most important one when using fixed IPs) Got to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \ System \ CurrentControlSet \ Control \ Lsa \ There you either find or have to create "LMCompatibilityLevel" as REG_DWORD. Enter 1 as value on all computers in your network. That instructs your computer to use NTLMv2, where possible, but to also accept older auth methods. (b) (Important if you use a DHCP server to assign the IP addresses of your workstations) Got to: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \ SYSTEM \ CurrentControlSet \ Services \ Tcpip \ Parameters \ Interfaces \ {GUID} (where {GUID} means your active network card, just bwrowse through your few entries till you got it) There you either find or have to create "DhcpConnForceBroadcastFlag" as REG_DWORD Enter a value of 0 -- this way Vista does not use DHCP broadcast if your router doesn't support it. After a restart I could connect to my XP Pro SP3 workstations again. Sincerely, Therese |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #4 (permalink) |
| | RE: Return of XP-Vista Networking HELL TT, Thanks for the suggestions, unfortunately they did not work. Do you by chance have any other ideas? I think its a a problem with NEtBIOS over TCP/IP. Why, even though I have it enabled, does it come out as disabled in the ipconfig /all? Thanks again. "TT" wrote: Quote: > Dear Sid, > > I've already posted this under a thread called 'authentification mystery', > but as it was originated some weeks ago it's a bit hard to find. Thus this is > a complete cite of that enty and I hope it might help. > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > Uuups -- after several weeks I finally found two small registry patches that > solved the problem thanks to the hints on PChuck's Network: > > (a) (That's possible the most important one when using fixed IPs) Got to > > HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \ System \ CurrentControlSet \ Control \ Lsa \ > > There you either find or have to create "LMCompatibilityLevel" as REG_DWORD. > > Enter 1 as value on all computers in your network. That instructs your > computer to use NTLMv2, where possible, but to also accept older auth methods. > > > (b) (Important if you use a DHCP server to assign the IP addresses of your > workstations) Got to: > HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \ SYSTEM \ CurrentControlSet \ Services \ Tcpip \ > Parameters \ Interfaces \ {GUID} > > (where {GUID} means your active network card, just bwrowse through your few > entries till you got it) > > There you either find or have to create "DhcpConnForceBroadcastFlag" as > REG_DWORD > > Enter a value of 0 -- this way Vista does not use DHCP broadcast if your > router doesn't support it. > > > After a restart I could connect to my XP Pro SP3 workstations again. > > Sincerely, > > Therese > > |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #5 (permalink) |
| | RE: Return of XP-Vista Networking HELL I've tried resetting the Winsock and TCP/IP stacks using netsh. The XP machine became visible for awhile in the Vista Network folder, but I could still not access its resources. But then the Vista maching became invisible to the XP machine. Now its back to normal (XP can now see the Vista machine, but Vista cannot see XP) All I can say now is WTF!?! Any help is appreciated. "TT" wrote: Quote: > Dear Sid, > > I've already posted this under a thread called 'authentification mystery', > but as it was originated some weeks ago it's a bit hard to find. Thus this is > a complete cite of that enty and I hope it might help. > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > Uuups -- after several weeks I finally found two small registry patches that > solved the problem thanks to the hints on PChuck's Network: > > (a) (That's possible the most important one when using fixed IPs) Got to > > HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \ System \ CurrentControlSet \ Control \ Lsa \ > > There you either find or have to create "LMCompatibilityLevel" as REG_DWORD. > > Enter 1 as value on all computers in your network. That instructs your > computer to use NTLMv2, where possible, but to also accept older auth methods. > > > (b) (Important if you use a DHCP server to assign the IP addresses of your > workstations) Got to: > HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \ SYSTEM \ CurrentControlSet \ Services \ Tcpip \ > Parameters \ Interfaces \ {GUID} > > (where {GUID} means your active network card, just bwrowse through your few > entries till you got it) > > There you either find or have to create "DhcpConnForceBroadcastFlag" as > REG_DWORD > > Enter a value of 0 -- this way Vista does not use DHCP broadcast if your > router doesn't support it. > > > After a restart I could connect to my XP Pro SP3 workstations again. > > Sincerely, > > Therese > > |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #6 (permalink) |
| | RE: Return of XP-Vista Networking HELL People, I´ve had the same problem for loooong 8 months! I have a notebook with xp, a desktop with vista home premiun and a router. I´ve had read a lot of discussion groups, microsoft tech issues, try this, try that, dancing the rain dace, etc etc etc.... So, like you sad: a hell! But, until today! Thanks God! I executed this program http://www.snapfiles.com/reviews/Win...sockxpfix.html that soved my all connective problems with XP x Vista. Yes, I sad ALL. I read about it here: http://forums.speedguide.net/showthread.php?t=190294 Hope it helps you. Good lock! "Sid" wrote: Quote: > I've tried resetting the Winsock and TCP/IP stacks using netsh. > > The XP machine became visible for awhile in the Vista Network folder, but I > could still not access its resources. But then the Vista maching became > invisible to the XP machine. > > Now its back to normal (XP can now see the Vista machine, but Vista cannot > see XP) > > All I can say now is WTF!?! > > Any help is appreciated. > > "TT" wrote: > Quote: > > Dear Sid, > > > > I've already posted this under a thread called 'authentification mystery', > > but as it was originated some weeks ago it's a bit hard to find. Thus this is > > a complete cite of that enty and I hope it might help. > > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > > > Uuups -- after several weeks I finally found two small registry patches that > > solved the problem thanks to the hints on PChuck's Network: > > > > (a) (That's possible the most important one when using fixed IPs) Got to > > > > HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \ System \ CurrentControlSet \ Control \ Lsa \ > > > > There you either find or have to create "LMCompatibilityLevel" as REG_DWORD. > > > > Enter 1 as value on all computers in your network. That instructs your > > computer to use NTLMv2, where possible, but to also accept older auth methods. > > > > > > (b) (Important if you use a DHCP server to assign the IP addresses of your > > workstations) Got to: > > HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \ SYSTEM \ CurrentControlSet \ Services \ Tcpip \ > > Parameters \ Interfaces \ {GUID} > > > > (where {GUID} means your active network card, just bwrowse through your few > > entries till you got it) > > > > There you either find or have to create "DhcpConnForceBroadcastFlag" as > > REG_DWORD > > > > Enter a value of 0 -- this way Vista does not use DHCP broadcast if your > > router doesn't support it. > > > > > > After a restart I could connect to my XP Pro SP3 workstations again. > > > > Sincerely, > > > > Therese > > > > |
My System Specs![]() |
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