12-12-2017 11:44 AM - edited 03-17-2019 07:14 PM
Hello I am having a problem setting up a storage server for meeting server 2.8. I have setup a NFS Share on a Windows 2016 Server, setup as
"No server authentication "
" Enable unmapped user access "
" Allow anonymous access "
Anonymous UID -2
Anonymous GID -2
Also I have set both the NFS Share to ALL MACHINES - Read-Write - ANSI - Root Access Allowed and the NTFS Permissions are set to Allow Everyone
What I get when I try to add this server to the WebEx Meeting server is
" You do not have the privileges to read or write to your storage server. "
Has anybody else used a Windows server for the Share and had these issues?
06-01-2018 09:21 AM
Hi there,
I have the exact same problem with a Windows NFS server.
Did you finally solve it?
Thanks in advance
Regards
06-02-2018 06:20 AM
Hi there
can you try this
Hope this Helps
Cheers
Rath!
***Please rate helpful posts***
06-02-2018 07:15 AM
Thanks Rath, but i am using a windows server as NFS not Linux.
Regards
06-02-2018 07:37 AM
Oh yes, I had a customer with the exact issue but on a Linux based Storage. I did a reading of admin guide and just want to share this,
Did you check the TCP/UDP ports
Make sure that you configure your Unix access privilegesso that yoursystem can store user-generated content and system backups. (Applies to NFS storage.)
On Windows-based storage systems, enable the Network Access: Let Everyone permissions apply to
anonymous users setting. In addition, you must provide the Everyone user group read and write permissions for the NFS
Configure an NFS share:
Install NFS file services. (See Install NFS File Services.)
Step 1 | Launch File Explorer. |
Step 2 | Create a new directory for your NFS share. |
Step 3 | Right-click the directory and select Properties. |
Step 4 | Select the NFS Sharing tab. |
Step 5 | Select Manage NFS Sharing…. |
Step 6 | Check Share this folder and enter in Anonymous UID and Anonymous GID.
Anonymous UID defaults to –2. On 16-bit machines, this value can fail because anonymous (nfsnobody) UID –2 is equivalent to 65534 in 16-bit numbers. (See www.troubleshooters.com/linux/nfs.htm). |
Step 7 | Enter a Share name.
This is the name used when a user connects to this NFS share. |
Step 8 | Select Permissions. |
Step 9 | Select Add and enter the IP address or hostname of the client connections. |
Step 10 | Choose Read–Write access or Read-Only access and select OK. |
Step 11 | Select Apply > OK An NFS share is hosted on a Windows Server 2012 R2. |
Hope this Helps
Cheers
Rath!
***Please rate helpful posts***
06-06-2018 06:40 AM
Hi Rath, It worked after restarting the Windows server.
Thanks a lot
Regards
06-06-2018 07:10 AM
Cool, thats great to know.. :)
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