Fildelning For Mac

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Hello Apple Community. I am using my Airport Time Capsule 2TB mainly as a wireless router, but i have also been using it as a file server (backup). My computer is a windows 10 desktop, i dont use any timemachine (apple) or file history (microsoft) for backup, i manually backup the files i want from my two separate internal hard drives.

Now to my problem, when i want to delete a specific folder on my time capsule, it just doesnt work, and when i go into the folder properties i see that its 'read only' but then i just uncheck it and all its sub folders, but it doesnt seem to work either. Does anyone out there know what to do? My computer is a windows 10 desktop, i dont use any timemachine (apple) or file history (microsoft) for backup, i manually backup the files i want from my two separate internal hard drives. The Time Capsule's internal hard drive has a single partition, by default named: Data.

How is it that you have 'two separate internal drives' with your Time Capsule? This drive is also formatted for HFS+ by default, but can be accessed either via the AFP or SMB file protocols. Now to my problem, when i want to delete a specific folder on my time capsule, it just doesnt work, and when i go into the folder properties i see that its 'read only' but then i just uncheck it and all its sub folders, but it doesnt seem to work either. Which 'Secured Shared Disks' option in the AirPort Utility for Windows are you sharing out the Time Capsule's internal drive?. With accounts. With a disk password.

With a device password. How is it that you have 'two separate internal drives' with your Time Capsule? The two separate internal drives are in his computer. П˜ x81 A bit much Christmas cheer. Now to my problem, when i want to delete a specific folder on my time capsule, it just doesnt work, and when i go into the folder properties i see that its 'read only' but then i just uncheck it and all its sub folders, but it doesnt seem to work either. It really isn't a great product for use on Windows.

But we found a way to use it. That is hugely superior to what you are attempting. Possible to create a windows VHD file on the TC. Format it GUID/NTFS and mount it to the windows computer. Windows believes it is NTFS formatted. From Finder it looks like a single large file just like sparsebundle.

For

This is hugely better than Windows seeing the TC as FAT32 format and bringing all kinds of issues into it. The only problem was the loss of the connection during hibernation.

But Tesserax has some scripts which might help. The only formats that work are HFS+ and FAT32. For the Mac FAT32 is useless. So the internal disk of the TC is formatted HFS+. Today, yesterday and forever more. You can certainly plug a USB drive into the TC and use FAT32 on that. To share files between Mac and PC is becoming less easy unless you do it directly.

Fildelning For Macbook Pro

Without fooling around with the TC in the middle. The problem you found with permissions is how Mac works to protect its files.

Fildelning

Even if you have read and write permissions according to windows or Mac. The reality now seems to be folders created by the Mac are controlled by the Mac that created them.

For windows I am sure. In the past it has ignored permissions pretty much. Going back to the problem. You never explained that it was to share files with Mac. A backup file server is a lot different to using it as file server that is actually sharing. From the Mac can you delete the files or folder that is an issue?? Did you create the folder from Mac or PC.

Because the sub-folders should also carry the same permissions? I would think creating it from the PC would be OK. Unless your Mac messed it up.

Fildelning For Mac Os

Create a new folder in the main directory from windows. Plus a few folders under the main one. Put a few files in them.

Fildelning

Then see what happens on the Mac. Do you have full read and write permissions?? Can you delete the folders? Try the same thing. This time from the Mac side. Can windows read and write to the directories? Msi onboard vga drivers for mac download.

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I've seen all of these.file sharing related UDP-137, UDP-138, TCP-139,TCP-445 And possibly TCP port 135, though that may be something to do with something called 'RPC'. 1 on an windows 7 machine all of those are listening. Some are related to NETBIOS so you can do start.

Compname This site If the server has NBT enabled, it listens on UDP ports 137, 138, and on TCP ports 139, 445. If it has NBT disabled, it listens on TCP port 445 only. And this site mentions 'In Windows 2000/XP/2003, Microsoft added the possibility to run SMB directly over TCP/IP, without the extra layer of NetBT.

For this they use TCP port 445. ' So in 2K,XP,2003.and I suppose Win 7,8, it is possible to run file sharing on only port 445 But you'd be doing start. Ip rather than start. Compname 1. @MaQleod The term 'file sharing' is pretty well known to users of windows, and doesn't mean FTP or SSH. It's an option in Windows called 'File Sharing'.

There are a multitude of expressions associated with it, such as turn file sharing on, or enable file sharing or make sure the firewall is allowing file sharing through. Maybe SMB is an even more technical term, but 'windows file sharing' or 'file sharing in windows', is specific assuming they are using their terminology correctly. It doesn't look like Win7 has a built in SSH server. – Jun 8 '14 at 1:50.

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