WebDAV folder from command line  
Author Message
Rishi





PostPosted: Thu Feb 19 13:27:23 CST 2004 Top

Windows XP Network >> WebDAV folder from command line This is related to my last question, but slightly
different. On Microsoft's support web site, I find this
quotation:

====
Windows clients (Windows 2000 and Windows XP): Connect to
a WebDAV directory by adding the directory to the list of
Network Places and display the contents as if it were part
of the same file system on your local computer. Once
connected, you can drag and drop files, retrieve and
modify file properties, and complete many other file-
system tasks. You can also connect using the command-line
client (known as WebDAV Redirector). This client allows
you to use existing applications across the Web and share
files through firewalls and proxy servers.
====

How do you "connect using the command-line client known as
WebDAV Redirector"? Is there a webdav executable? How do
you reference the WebDAV folder? What's the syntax?

WebClient services are running.

Thanks,

Windows XP1242  
 
 
Marc





PostPosted: Thu Feb 19 13:27:23 CST 2004 Top

Windows XP Network >> WebDAV folder from command line You use "net use * http://servername/sharename" from a command line.

--

Thanks,
Marc Reynolds
Microsoft Technical Support

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.


"Dan Martin" <EMail@HideDomain.com> wrote in message
news:1254601c3f6f7$1760a2f0$EMail@HideDomain.com...
> This is related to my last question, but slightly
> different. On Microsoft's support web site, I find this
> quotation:
>
> ====
> Windows clients (Windows 2000 and Windows XP): Connect to
> a WebDAV directory by adding the directory to the list of
> Network Places and display the contents as if it were part
> of the same file system on your local computer. Once
> connected, you can drag and drop files, retrieve and
> modify file properties, and complete many other file-
> system tasks. You can also connect using the command-line
> client (known as WebDAV Redirector). This client allows
> you to use existing applications across the Web and share
> files through firewalls and proxy servers.
> ====
>
> How do you "connect using the command-line client known as
> WebDAV Redirector"? Is there a webdav executable? How do
> you reference the WebDAV folder? What's the syntax?
>
> WebClient services are running.
>
> Thanks,
>
>
>


 
 
Dan





PostPosted: Sat Feb 21 07:12:50 CST 2004 Top

Windows XP Network >> WebDAV folder from command line I have tried this on several different computers and it
doesn't work. I always get error 67. I can map to
\\servername\\folder just fine, but
http://servername/folder gets error 67.


>-----Original Message-----
>You use "net use * http://servername/sharename" from a
command line.
>
>--
>
>Thanks,
>Marc Reynolds
>Microsoft Technical Support
>
>This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and
confers no rights.
>
>
>"Dan Martin" <EMail@HideDomain.com> wrote
in message
>news:1254601c3f6f7$1760a2f0$EMail@HideDomain.com...
>> This is related to my last question, but slightly
>> different. On Microsoft's support web site, I find this
>> quotation:
>>
>> ====
>> Windows clients (Windows 2000 and Windows XP): Connect
to
>> a WebDAV directory by adding the directory to the list
of
>> Network Places and display the contents as if it were
part
>> of the same file system on your local computer. Once
>> connected, you can drag and drop files, retrieve and
>> modify file properties, and complete many other file-
>> system tasks. You can also connect using the command-
line
>> client (known as WebDAV Redirector). This client allows
>> you to use existing applications across the Web and
share
>> files through firewalls and proxy servers.
>> ====
>>
>> How do you "connect using the command-line client known
as
>> WebDAV Redirector"? Is there a webdav executable? How
do
>> you reference the WebDAV folder? What's the syntax?
>>
>> WebClient services are running.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>.
>