2011-06-26, 21:14
@ sbentin:
Thank you so much, that indeed solved the problem!!! But I don't get it, how does that even make sense?!? I had tried adding a NFS share in the conventional Windows manner, i.e: \\192.168.1.5\test....but that didn't work, so I figured I'd start at the basic bottom with regular (non-shared) folders, thinking that would be the safest way to rule out any sharing/permissions issues.
Just to clarify, instead of adding a shared Windows folder as \\192.168.1.5\test, you need to add it as followed:
smb://192.168.1.5/test
Adding a regular Windows folder as c:\test doesn't seem to work. Why in hell you need to use the Samba sharing format is beyond me, but oh well...atleast I got it working now.
One thing though: The library now populates nicely to my other PC's, but the source folders do not. Is this normal behaviour? Do they need to be added manually, and won't that screw things up again as it'll rescrape the contents?
Thank you so much, that indeed solved the problem!!! But I don't get it, how does that even make sense?!? I had tried adding a NFS share in the conventional Windows manner, i.e: \\192.168.1.5\test....but that didn't work, so I figured I'd start at the basic bottom with regular (non-shared) folders, thinking that would be the safest way to rule out any sharing/permissions issues.
Just to clarify, instead of adding a shared Windows folder as \\192.168.1.5\test, you need to add it as followed:
smb://192.168.1.5/test
Adding a regular Windows folder as c:\test doesn't seem to work. Why in hell you need to use the Samba sharing format is beyond me, but oh well...atleast I got it working now.
One thing though: The library now populates nicely to my other PC's, but the source folders do not. Is this normal behaviour? Do they need to be added manually, and won't that screw things up again as it'll rescrape the contents?