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| Welcome to Windows Vista Forums. Our forum is dedicated to helping you find solutions with any problems, errors or issues you are experiencing with Windows Vista. The Vista forum also covers news and updates and has an extensive Windows Vista tutorial section that covers a wide range of tips and tricks. |
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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | Connecting to a Network Attached Storage device I have a Buffalo Terastation on my network. My older XP computer, all the Macs and Linux machines connect to it using standard Windows networking protocols (SMB). In Vista RTM, the device shows up in the network display and the shares on it also appear. However if I try to connect to a share to read or write, I am prompted with a login box that wants to either use the form username@domain (no domain here - workgroup only) or \domain\username. In XP I would simply enter the username on the NAS and the password, no autocompletion or inclusion of domain/workgroup name would happen and the connection would be immediate. The Vista RTM machine is configured to be part of the same workgroup as every other computer on the network. Topology is all computers and devices connect to a gigabit hub/switch, no VLANs or other complexities. The computer I am using for Vista RTM is a Thinkpad T43P in a dock. I know it connects because I have multiple drives for it. Native XP, SUSE Linux drives when installed connect properly so I know the issue is not hardware. I would appreciate some guidance in how to connect to the network share so I can try moving some files onto the Vista machine to complete some testing. Cheers |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: Connecting to a Network Attached Storage device Hello, Please try this: - Click Start - Click Control Panel - Click System and Maintenance - Click Administrative Tools - Double-Click Local Security Policy - In the left pane, click the triangle next to Local Policy - In the left pane, click Security Options - In the right pane near the bottom, double-click "Network security: LAN manager authentication level" - Click the drop-down box, and click "Send LM & NTLM - use NTLMv2 session security if negotiated" - Click OK -- - JB Windows Vista Support Faq http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: Connecting to a Network Attached Storage device Thank you very much Jimmy. I have not had time to go through the security docs for Vista and as you may have gathered am not an AD guy. I would not have found this and that would have reduced my assessment of Vista. Great work and thanks again. Ross "Jimmy Brush" wrote: > Hello, > > Please try this: > > - Click Start > - Click Control Panel > - Click System and Maintenance > - Click Administrative Tools > - Double-Click Local Security Policy > - In the left pane, click the triangle next to Local Policy > - In the left pane, click Security Options > - In the right pane near the bottom, double-click "Network security: LAN > manager authentication level" > - Click the drop-down box, and click "Send LM & NTLM - use NTLMv2 session > security if negotiated" > - Click OK > > -- > - JB > > Windows Vista Support Faq > http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| | Re: Connecting to a Network Attached Storage device |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| | Re: Connecting to a Network Attached Storage device I am having this same problem. When I follow your instructions the drop down list is not active. Is there another setting I have to activate to enable this? "Jimmy Brush" wrote: > Hello, > > Please try this: > > - Click Start > - Click Control Panel > - Click System and Maintenance > - Click Administrative Tools > - Double-Click Local Security Policy > - In the left pane, click the triangle next to Local Policy > - In the left pane, click Security Options > - In the right pane near the bottom, double-click "Network security: LAN > manager authentication level" > - Click the drop-down box, and click "Send LM & NTLM - use NTLMv2 session > security if negotiated" > - Click OK > > -- > - JB > > Windows Vista Support Faq > http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| | Re: Connecting to a Network Attached Storage device Is your computer part of a domain? - JB |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| | Re: Connecting to a Network Attached Storage device I'm having the same issue and have tried the fix below with no success. I have double checked all settings on the Storage Drive, as well as my domain credentials. I am able to access it with no issues on my XP machine but when attempting to access with the Vista machine just get a User name and password login box, have tried all combinations of login/passwords with no luck, it does not even seem to be trrying to authenticate because there are no security violations showing up. Any other ideas? "Jimmy Brush" wrote: > Hello, > > Please try this: > > - Click Start > - Click Control Panel > - Click System and Maintenance > - Click Administrative Tools > - Double-Click Local Security Policy > - In the left pane, click the triangle next to Local Policy > - In the left pane, click Security Options > - In the right pane near the bottom, double-click "Network security: LAN > manager authentication level" > - Click the drop-down box, and click "Send LM & NTLM - use NTLMv2 session > security if negotiated" > - Click OK > > -- > - JB > > Windows Vista Support Faq > http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| | Re: Connecting to a Network Attached Storage device When the login box appears enter your workgroup name and username in the username box in this format 'WORKGRROUP\username' and the password as normal. Obviously enter your real workgroup and password name in place of the examples but keep the Workgroup name in capitals. Why Vista requires this when XP/Linux don't I have no idea but I need to do this to acces my NAS and it's a PITA. Also I've found that even if you map a drive and choose to use different credentials (in order to add the workgroup name) whenever I want to access files on the mapped drive it often prompts me to re-enter the credential (the first time only) even though I chose to remember them. Strange (and a pain) but it works for me. "Brytowski" <Brytowski@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:01E29C35-3CE6-4E0B-8785-931CD0A6173A@microsoft.com... > I'm having the same issue and have tried the fix below with no success. I > have double checked all settings on the Storage Drive, as well as my > domain > credentials. I am able to access it with no issues on my XP machine but > when > attempting to access with the Vista machine just get a User name and > password > login box, have tried all combinations of login/passwords with no luck, it > does not even seem to be trrying to authenticate because there are no > security violations showing up. Any other ideas? > > "Jimmy Brush" wrote: > >> Hello, >> >> Please try this: >> >> - Click Start >> - Click Control Panel >> - Click System and Maintenance >> - Click Administrative Tools >> - Double-Click Local Security Policy >> - In the left pane, click the triangle next to Local Policy >> - In the left pane, click Security Options >> - In the right pane near the bottom, double-click "Network security: LAN >> manager authentication level" >> - Click the drop-down box, and click "Send LM & NTLM - use NTLMv2 session >> security if negotiated" >> - Click OK >> >> -- >> - JB >> >> Windows Vista Support Faq >> http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| | Re: Connecting to a Network Attached Storage device Ian, Thanks for the response, but that does not seem to be working either. I have tried all plausible configurations of the **\** my PC name the domain name, administrator rights etc. I am curreclty connected to a domain and I can access all my servers without issue it only appears to be this NAS that I cannot access. I have talked with networking support and they also did not have any clues to this, they are going to try to upgrade the firmware on the drive iteself but all security settings seem to be set to the correct levels/security for this to work. There is NO user name and password set on the drive, we tried to set one up and test but that also did not work. This functionality works perfectly fine with XP Thanks "Ian Bryden" wrote: > When the login box appears enter your workgroup name and username in the > username box in this format 'WORKGRROUP\username' and the password as > normal. > > Obviously enter your real workgroup and password name in place of the > examples but keep the Workgroup name in capitals. > > Why Vista requires this when XP/Linux don't I have no idea but I need to do > this to acces my NAS and it's a PITA. Also I've found that even if you map a > drive and choose to use different credentials (in order to add the workgroup > name) whenever I want to access files on the mapped drive it often prompts > me to re-enter the credential (the first time only) even though I chose to > remember them. > > Strange (and a pain) but it works for me. > > > "Brytowski" <Brytowski@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:01E29C35-3CE6-4E0B-8785-931CD0A6173A@microsoft.com... > > I'm having the same issue and have tried the fix below with no success. I > > have double checked all settings on the Storage Drive, as well as my > > domain > > credentials. I am able to access it with no issues on my XP machine but > > when > > attempting to access with the Vista machine just get a User name and > > password > > login box, have tried all combinations of login/passwords with no luck, it > > does not even seem to be trrying to authenticate because there are no > > security violations showing up. Any other ideas? > > > > "Jimmy Brush" wrote: > > > >> Hello, > >> > >> Please try this: > >> > >> - Click Start > >> - Click Control Panel > >> - Click System and Maintenance > >> - Click Administrative Tools > >> - Double-Click Local Security Policy > >> - In the left pane, click the triangle next to Local Policy > >> - In the left pane, click Security Options > >> - In the right pane near the bottom, double-click "Network security: LAN > >> manager authentication level" > >> - Click the drop-down box, and click "Send LM & NTLM - use NTLMv2 session > >> security if negotiated" > >> - Click OK > >> > >> -- > >> - JB > >> > >> Windows Vista Support Faq > >> http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ > > |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Vista Ultimate x64 | I had this same Issue with my Buffalo. My PC's are all connected to a domain. Because the Buffalo NAS device can't join a domain thats running in 2003 Native mode i connected it to a workgroup with the same name as my domain. Now this is fine for all my machines as they authenticate using the format "machinename\username". On Vista it seems I can't do it this way unless I login locally. So to fix it I had to change the Buffalo NAS workgroup membership to a different name. Now when I use "workgroup\username" all is fine. |
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