Connect to Filespace - Linux

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Revision as of 21:48, 24 April 2010 by Ketste11 (Talk | contribs) (Read/Write Access)

These instructions are for the GNOME desktop.

On-Campus Access

  1. Go to 'Places' , then 'Connect to Server'.
  2. Select 'Windows share' under 'Service type'.
  3. Type in the name of the server you want to connect to in the 'Server:' field
    • examples:
    • smb://hurricane for faculty and staff file server
    • smb://orca for students and academic file shares (programs, groups, research, student)
  4. Type in the name of the share or folder in the 'Share' field
    • examples:
    • Hurricane users: select the first letter of your last name, or workgroup share
    • Orca users: select programs (for academic programs), groups, research or students
  5. Click Connect!

Off-Campus Access

Read Only Access

  1. In a web browser go to the share you want to connect to
  2. login when prompted using your Evergreen username and password

Read/Write Access

  1. Install davfs2, either through your package manager or by building from the source found at http://sourceforge.net/projects/dav/files/
    • (For Ubuntu/Debian, use Synaptic, or simply type: sudo apt-get install davfs2 into your terminal
  2. Open a Terminal and become root (sudo -i) for the following commands.
  3. Create a mount point for the share you want to connect to.
    • Example: mkdir /mnt/my_mount
  4. In a web browser go to the share you want to connect to
  5. Right click on the folder that you want and copy the link.
  6. Type this command into your Terminal:
    • mount.davfs -ouid=username,gid=groupname https://serverpath/folder /mnt/my_mount
      replacing the following:
    • "username" with your own local username
    • "groupname" with your groupname (find out by typing: id -n -g)
    • "https://serverpath/folder" with the link you copied above
    • and "/mnt/my_mount" with the directory you created as a mount point above
  7. You will be prompted for a username and password. These will be your evergreen.edu credentials.
  8. Once this is done, you'll have read and write access to your share
    • This is not a permanent mount.
    • You have several options if you'd like your Linux installation to recognize your Evergreen file space.
      1. Make an /etc/fstab entry to automatically mount at boot or on demand
      2. Use your Desktop Environment's (Gnome, KDE, etc.) tools to mount as a network share
      3. more detail to come...