In article <ede12182.0407280902.276e94b9 DeleteThis @posting.google.com>,
althornin DeleteThis @gmail.com (Althornin) wrote:
> > > cleaned it up since then but the older MAC's still cannot
> > > see the share. I have deleted the share, deleted File
> > Are your Mac OS X machines connecting via "afp://" or "smb://"? If SMB
> > then you're comparing Apples (pardon the pun) to oranges. If neither
> > your Mac OS 9 and Mac OS X machines connect via AFP then you probably
> > have a problem with File Services for Macintosh on the server. You can
> > try uninstalling and reinstalling them to see if that corrects the
> > problem.
> Bill, I think you've got it all wrong - the problem is (look at the
> other threads!) that while OS X clients CAN connect to Win2k servers
> using afp, OS 9 clients cannot. We need microsoft to actually look at
> this, please! It appears to be related to the recent slew of patches,
> but I am not sure.
Although I'm seeing more and more that Mac OS 9 machines are having
problems connecting after the patches you're referring to, I'll still
always ask about file sharing protocols (AFP vs. SMB) first.
Mac OS X has two ways of connecting to a server while Mac OS 9 has only
one. It's important and easy to eliminate the possibility that the Mac
OS X client is using SMB instead of AFP, which can give confusing
results. Knowing that AFP fails for both machines is a good indication
about where the problem lies. If AFP works for one Mac OS but not the
other then this definitely indicates something has been broken on the
server.
Recently, I've also become aware of problems that can be the result of
anti-virus software. This should either be disabled or uninstalled as
part of the troubleshooting process.
bill
--
William M. Smith
(Microsoft Interop MVP)<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
>> Stay informed about: Cannot connect to Win2K server with Mac OS less than X