|
Dang!! Please disregard my reply below, and for that matter, my whole problem. The fix identified in the original post did indeed fix my problem, once I ended netserver and restarted it!! Thank you to the original poster for beating IBM to the punch on notifying me. Roger Boucher Standard Pacific Corp. rboucher@stanpac.com 714-668-4326 -----Original Message----- From: Roger Boucher Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 1999 9:18 AM To: 'MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com' Subject: RE: NetServer: Accessing files with unmatched passwords Not exactly. I was told that with Windows NT you can have different userids on the network and the 400 and it will prompt you for the login to the 400. This is working correctly on the NT machine I tried. But for Windows 95/98 you MUST have the same userid on the AS/400 that you use to sign onto the network in order to access the AS/400 server from the network side. If you have the same userid, but a different password, it will prompt you for the correct password. This is not working, whether I put in the AS/400 password, or the network password, I get an invalid password error. Roger Boucher Standard Pacific Corp. rboucher@stanpac.com 714-668-4326 -----Original Message----- From: Evan Harris [mailto:spanner@ihug.co.nz] Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 1999 12:18 AM To: MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com Subject: RE: NetServer: Accessing files with unmatched passwords Roger Boucher wrote: >I am having a problem that is either the same, or similar (and IBM has been >working on it for a couple of days). This hasn't fixed it for me though. >May I ask, are you on Windows 95? 98? NT? or something else? When the >password was different (and the thing wasn't working) was it prompting you >to enter a password for resource \\YourServerNameHere\IPC$ ?? > >I'm on Windows 98 and when the password is not the same, I get prompted as >described above but it won't take the valid password once entered. > This kind of drove me nuts, until I relaized that the password it wanted was for my Windows login user profile, which just hapened to exist on the AS/400. By this I mean, I had a log on on the PC that was KRUSTYC (the network administrators profile naming convention) and on the AS/400 I used CLOWNK (my profile naming convention). As it happened I had created a KRUSTYC at some stage and that was the profile that NetServer was trying to log on to, not the one i expected it to use (i.e. my "normal" AS/400 signon Hope this assists Cheers Evan Harris +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +---
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
This mailing list archive is Copyright 1997-2024 by midrange.com and David Gibbs as a compilation work. Use of the archive is restricted to research of a business or technical nature. Any other uses are prohibited. Full details are available on our policy page. If you have questions about this, please contact [javascript protected email address].
Operating expenses for this site are earned using the Amazon Associate program and Google Adsense.