Re: Cannot Get Any Peer to Peer Non-Domain Networking to Work
- From: "Will" <westes-usc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 16 Sep 2007 23:22:12 -0700
"Steve Winograd [MVP]" <bc070521m@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:7efre3p7e9ro0iuqf160p12vs78es0lk2e@xxxxxxxxxx
In article <MKKdnWfQ77hgDXDbnZ2dnUVZ_q6hnZ2d@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Will"Windows
<westes-usc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I am having problems getting Windows XP client A to use a share on
withXP server B. I have read through the excellent knowledgebase 103390:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/103390
and that gives a lot of clues about the algorithm Microsoft is using to
establish SMB connections, but I'm still not able to get it to work.
Some background tasks I have performed so far:
1) I create a common local user account foo on both computers A and B,
sameidentical password
2) I do not have either computer in a domain. I did put them in the
ofworkgroup.
3) In desperation, I enabled the Guest account on computer B since that
account appears to offer some alternative anonymous SMB capability when
authentication fails.
I have tried issuing these commands from the client computer A:, and all
"Fake"them are failing with the 1326 authentication failure message:
net use t: \\computer-b\c$
net use t: \\computer-b\c$ /user:foo
The first command prompts for a user account and I supply foo, but after
supplying password I still get 1326. The second command prompts for
password and then gives the 1326.
Knowledgebase 103390 makes clear that the prompts for userid may be a
onthrown by Windows to prevent a hacker from reverse engineering security
workthe target. Unfortunately, it's also preventing me from getting into my
own computer.
Any advice on how to make this most basic peer to peer networking work is
appreciated. I probably just need to change the value of a few registry
keys set to higher security settings, but I would like to get this to
Iwith the maximum possible security possible for peer to peer networking.
workwould strongly like to forbid anonymous browsing and would like it to
with a specific user account.
Please reply to this message in the news group (not by E-mail) with
more information to help other people understand the problem:
1. Does computer B run Windows XP Home Edition? Home Edition doesn't
create administrative shares such as C$. You would have to manually
create that share.
Both computers run Windows XP Professional.
2. If computer B runs Windows XP Professional, is simple file sharing
enabled or disabled?
Simple file sharing is disabled on both machines and I would like to keep it
that way. I prefer to use NTFS permissions to limit access to the disk.
3. How did you enable the Guest account on computer B? The Guest
account setting in Control Panel > User Accounts has nothing to do
with networking -- it determines whether you can log on as Guest at
computer B's local keyboard.
Then how do you explain the algorithm in Microsoft Knowledgebase 103390
which includes such lines as:
If the guest account is enabled
The command completed successfully.
If the guest account is disabled
(* See Note a).
The user is prompted for a password.
System error 1326 has occurred. Logon failure:
unknown user name or bad password.
Such lines certainly suggest that the command is executing in a security
context of the Guest user account if authentication to a specific user is
failing. If it does not mean that, then what do the algorithm lines above
mean?
4. What happens when you run this command on computer A?
net view \\computer-b
I get a 1326 error.
5. What happens when you type this in the Start > Run box on computer
A?
\\computer-b
"The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect."
6. If #5 shows a list of computer B's shared folders, what happens if
you click one of them?
Did you perhaps mean to ask me to type \\computer-b in the edit text of the
Explorer application? When I type this in Explorer it just hangs.
--
Will
.
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