Re: Moving shared folder to new drive



Wouldn't I have to recreate the permissions on the shares?


Jerold Schulman wrote:
> On 15 Nov 2005 16:00:09 -0800, "mackdaddy315" <mackdaddy315@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> >Hello folks is there a way to move shares from one drive to another on
> >the same server without having to recreate the share / permissions?
> >This is a Windows 2003 Enterprise server.
>
> Use regedit to navigate to
> HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\lanmanserver\Shares
>
> Double-click the share name. Change the path in the REG_MULTI_SZ string.
> Restart.
>
> Jerold Schulman
> Windows Server MVP
> JSI, Inc.
> http://www.jsiinc.com
> http://www.jsifaq.com

.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Re: Moving shared folder to new drive
    ... No. Transfering that key and security sub-key also maps the share permissions permissions. ... >Wouldn't I have to recreate the permissions on the shares? ... >> Jerold Schulman ... >> Windows Server MVP ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.file_system)
  • Re: How Move Roaming Profile Folder To New Drive
    ... Keep in mind that you also need to recreate respective shares (and ... assign permissions on the share level - assuming that you restrict access ... Profiles shares to a new disk array. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.file_system)
  • Re: Converting to Dynamic disc looses shares
    ... now one of the three shares is invisible to end users. ... The server shows ... Delete the share then recreate ... the share permissions to "Full Access" for everyone. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.file_system)
  • Re: Replicating files from old to new AD domain controller
    ... I could just copy all the files and recreate the shares but I ... would loose all the permissions. ...
    (microsoft.public.win2000.active_directory)
  • Moving shared folder to new drive
    ... Hello folks is there a way to move shares from one drive to another on ... the same server without having to recreate the share / permissions? ... This is a Windows 2003 Enterprise server. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.file_system)