Frank
asked on
dri ve Z: refers to a location that is unavailable. it could be on hard drive on this computer, or on a network. Check to make sure that the disk is properly inserted, ot that you are connected
Hi all,
when a user try to connect to his mapped drive he receive this message:
- drive Z: refers to a location that is unavailable. it could be on hard drive on this computer, or on a network. Check to make sure that the disk is properly inserted, ot that you are connected to the internet or your network, and then try again. If it still cannot be located, the information might have been moved to a different location.
same error when it use the unc path.
The user has got full access on the ntfs permission on the folder.
There is no problem regarding the name resolution and the network connection are fine.
Im trying to figure out what it is ..does anybody have some suggestions ?
server windows 2008 r2
image001.jpg
when a user try to connect to his mapped drive he receive this message:
- drive Z: refers to a location that is unavailable. it could be on hard drive on this computer, or on a network. Check to make sure that the disk is properly inserted, ot that you are connected to the internet or your network, and then try again. If it still cannot be located, the information might have been moved to a different location.
same error when it use the unc path.
The user has got full access on the ntfs permission on the folder.
There is no problem regarding the name resolution and the network connection are fine.
Im trying to figure out what it is ..does anybody have some suggestions ?
server windows 2008 r2
image001.jpg
Check share permissions as well.
It looks like this location was set as share and someone removed it from shared group.
Double check if this folder you're talking about is still shared on your server.
Double check if this folder you're talking about is still shared on your server.
ASKER
Many thanks to everybody The share is active
I will check if there is an issue related with windows 10 on the user side
I will check if there is an issue related with windows 10 on the user side
Open cmd.exe and run NET USE T: /Delete for ALL drive mappings . When done, type NET USE to ensure nothing is left.
Now shut down (not restart), start up, and test . See if you can map the drive.
Now shut down (not restart), start up, and test . See if you can map the drive.
ASKER
thanks folks.. it was the explorer of the windows 10 crashing
I am investigating the issue
and we find out later that the logon script was doing NET USE T: /Delete for ALL drive mappings during the logon
I am investigating the issue
and we find out later that the logon script was doing NET USE T: /Delete for ALL drive mappings during the logon
ASKER CERTIFIED SOLUTION
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@Francesco - Thanks and I was happy to help.
ASKER
is not a dfs