syrys Posted May 16, 2016 Share Posted May 16, 2016 Hey Guys, Im new to unraid and having some issues with some applications not seeing my network drives. The specific application is Sickrage which i have installed within a windows VM. I also have a usershare called "Media" which the VM can see and is mounted as a Network Drive. However, sadly, the software (Sickrage in this case) cannot seem to see the network location \\UnraidName\Media nor the mounted network drive for that location (this is probably a issue with the said software). Anyway, what i was wondering is, is there any way to mount this Media User share as a drive (say D:\ drive) to my VM the same way i mounted my C:\ to install windows to it. Note: the Media user Share has all my media in it already, so i prefer not losing all of it by experiments (as i dont have other backups of it all). Quote Link to comment
itimpi Posted May 16, 2016 Share Posted May 16, 2016 In Windows you can always right-click on a share name and select the option to mount it as a drive. This is a standard feature of Windows and is not unRAID specific in any way. Quote Link to comment
syrys Posted May 16, 2016 Author Share Posted May 16, 2016 In Windows you can always right-click on a share name and select the option to mount it as a drive. This is a standard feature of Windows and is not unRAID specific in any way. Yup. But seems like programs running as windows services that are executed by the standard user (which ever the default is) does not seem to have access to access network locations nor the mapped network drives. However, they have access to normal drives. Quote Link to comment
itimpi Posted May 16, 2016 Share Posted May 16, 2016 In Windows you can always right-click on a share name and select the option to mount it as a drive. This is a standard feature of Windows and is not unRAID specific in any way. Yup. But seems like programs running as windows services that are executed by the standard user (which ever the default is) does not seem to have access to access network locations nor the mapped network drives. However, they have access to normal drives. Mapped drives are specific to a particular user I believe. In which case you would need to find out what user the service is operating under and make sure the mappings are set up for that user. Quote Link to comment
strike Posted May 16, 2016 Share Posted May 16, 2016 Just use the UNC path in sickrage. As in \\server\share. When you add a dir to sickrage where it says "root" you type in the UNC path. Remember to hit enter! Quote Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.