Error Reconnecting Smb1
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Mount Smb Share Mac Terminal
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Mavericks brought a slight change that has caused some problems for certain users in mixed PC and Mac
Mac There Was A Problem Connecting To The Server Smb
environments. Without getting too geeky, Apple adjusted the default protocol for SMB (Samba, yosemite smb3 the Windows file sharing ability) from SMB1 to SMB2, and the SMB2 implementation apparently carries a bug which osx smb3 is incompatible with many NAS (Network Attached Storage) devices, and some versions of Windows. The issue is pretty obvious when you encounter it: Many Windows PC's, NAS drives, and Linux machines https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/3035936 won't access or mount from the Mac, and instead will try to connect or mount forever and ultimately time out, preventing connections, mapped drives, and general access. Fortunately there's a very easy workaround to connect to SMB and NAS shares from OS X Mavericks, OS X Yosemite, and OS X El Capitan: From the OS X Finder, hit Command+K to summon "Go To http://osxdaily.com/2013/10/30/connect-smb-nas-network-shares-os-x-mavericks/ Server" as usual In the "Server Address" field, enter the IP to connect to with the cifs:// prefix as follows: cifs://127.0.0.1 Connect to the SMB, NAS, or Windows share as usual Yes it really is as simple as specifying the protocol to be cifs:// rather than smb://, which if you've ever mounted Samba shares from the command line you've probably already used cifs before. If you're wondering why this works, it's because using CIFS connects with SMB1 rather than the (currently) buggy implementation of SMB2. The result; cross-platform network shares functioning as usual. I ran into this last night and it was fairly frustrating to experience, but a big thanks Todd Pilgrams on the Apple Discussion Boards who discovered the simple workaround a few days ago. Because there are tons of Mac-to-PC networks out there, this will probably be a frequently encountered issue for many Mavericks users. With that said, going the other way around and file sharing from Mac OS X to Windows continues to work exactly as intended, though it should be noted that OS X Mavericks has seamlessly moved all network-based Mac-to
you mount the drive yourself in OSX on /Volumes/XXX. We hope to do this internally in a future build. This will use the latest SMB http://community.roonlabs.com/t/best-practice-for-smb-mounts-on-yosemite-as-it-relates-to-roon/682 protocol, which includes real-time file monitoring and many reliability updates. On Windows, we already do this. Do you happen to have a reference to the preferred way to do this on Yosemite? http://arstechnica.com/civis/viewtopic.php?t=1179519 I've switched to NFS out of frustration with SMB shares disappearing and randomly getting prompted for credentials. Any reason not to use NFS, from Roon's perspective? danny (Danny Dulai) 2015-05-14 19:24:22 UTC connect to #2 It was originally in a document they published as a overview to Mavericks pre-release. The document is old and no longer on Apple's website. However, a quick google search for "apple afp smb2" shows that the press went nuts about this back in summer of 2013. I found this nugget from the release: SMB2SMB2 is the new default protocol for sharing files in connect to smb OS X Mavericks. SMB2 is superfast, increases security, and improves Windows compatibility.• Efficient. SMB2 features Resource compounding, allowing multiple requests to be sent in a single request. In addition, SMB2 can use large reads and writes to make better use of faster networks as well as large MTU support for blazing speeds on 10 Gigabit Ethernet. It aggressively caches file and folder properties and uses opportu- nistic locking to enable better caching of data. It’s even more reliable, thanks to the ability to transparently reconnect to servers in the event of a temporary disconnect.• Secure. SMB2 supports Extended Authentication Security using Kerberos and NTLMv2.• Compatible. SMB2 is automatically used to share files between two Mac computers running OS X Mavericks, or when a Windows client running Vista, Windows 7, or Windows 8 connects to your Mac. Mavericks maintains support for AFP and SMB network file-sharing protocols, automatically selecting the appropriate protocolas needed. It should also be noted that AFP has not been improved since Snow Leopard. soundserge 2015-05-14 20:04:47 UTC #3 Thanks. I've read more about this AFP/SMB business than I ever cared to. What I haven't found is some
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