Mount network drive outside home network

I have two usb external hard drives connected to my airport base station.
I would like to know how to access these drives when I am outside my home network. 
I already have a dyndns account setup that I can use to access my public folder. 
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks.

I hope this article helps:
http://knol.google.com/k/anonymous/how-to-share-disks-over-wan-for-apple/15hj80w 9xa614/2#

Similar Messages

  • Auto mounting hard drive across a small home network

    Hi,
    How do you setup a Power Mac 6500 running Mac OS 9.1 to automatically mount it's hard drive at startup onto a PowerMac G4 running Mac OSX 10.2.8? I have a small network at home that I'd like to cross-mount hard drives across.
    I can mount the volume just fine manually from either machine. I just don't know the GUI or command on 9.1 to do the mounting automatically at startup.
    Any ideas, or suggestions would be greatly appreciated!
    Ed

    Here's the (partial) answer I was looking for.
    To go from a remote machine --> 6500, do the following:
    1) Open "Chooser".
    2) Select "Apple Share".
    3) Type in the DNS name of the computer you want to mount onto the 6500 in the box labeled "Server IP Address". If TCP/IP isn't active, then type in the numerical IP address.
    4) When prompted, type in the password for your keychain, and then the account name and password on the remote machine that you want to automount.
    5) Then select the drive (share), or shares, you wish to mount.
    6) To automount at startup, check the box "Allow at Startup".
    To get the share on the remote machine to automount at Startup, your keychain must be readable by the AppleShare application at Startup (ie. the "Allow access without warning" box on the keychain should be checked).
    To go in the other direction, ie. 6500 --> Remote machine:
    To automount the 6500's hard drive onto a G4, one needs to do that configuration on the G4, via NetInfo or launchd, depending upon the version of Mac OSX. These get into UNIX networking commands, which is probably outside the main scope of this forum. I'm working on getting the UNIX boxes configured now. If anyone would like to know the commands, just post back here.
    I found out how to use the "Chooser" on Mac OS9.x platforms from p. 68 of the Apple manual "Mac OSX Server: File Services Administration for 10.4 or later".
    The Apple Technical Note 1111 on programmatic mounting of shares under AppleShare is also useful.
    Ed

  • Fast User Switching with Mounted Network Drive?

    I have a headless G4 Cube running 10.5.8 with a 2TB firewire drive plugged in for storage accessable to any of my macs here at home. I can access it fine with my 2 desktops over ethernet and wirelessly. Recently we decided to consolidate our 2 desktops into one using the muliple users feature. Seems to work fine, and both accounts can access the shared drive. They are logging in with the cube's admin credentials, and the shared drive is set to ignore permissions. I have the drive set to mount on login with a startup item in the system login items prefs. As long as I logout before switching users, everything is good.
    The problem arises with Fast User Switching which we'd love to be able to use. I can't figure out how to connect to the drive in one account without the 2nd account then seeing it as a volume without proper permissions, then that account creates a new volume mount for it (which doesn't work with iTunes properly and seems to cause other wierd issues).
    Example: So say 'user1' logs in, mounts the drive 'Jukebox'. everything seems OK so far. 'Jukebox' is on the desktop and iTunes finds the music. Now I fast user switch to 'user2' and there is a 'Jukebox' on the desktop with the red minus icon indicating I don't have permissions to access it. If I then browse the network and mount the drive, I end up with ANOTHER 'Jukebox' on the desktop. BUT iTunes doesn't see it properly. If I look in the /Volumes/ folder with the Terminal, I see a mountpoint for 'Jukebox' (with the owner of 'user1' group 'staff') and now a new mountpoint called 'Jukebox-1' (with the owner of 'user2' group 'staff').
    It seems when you mount a AFP drive, it creates the Volume with the current user and staff group, but switching to another user then can't access that when it sees it in the /Volumes folder. You try to mount again and it creates a NEW mountpoint, names it with a '-1' at the end and you can use that (but iTunes cant).
    So... how does one use a shared drive that you want on BOTH users desktops with Fast User Switching turned on? Is there a way to have the drive mounted BEFORE either user logs in, such that it will be seen as any other local drive (which doesn't have the issue)??
    Or is there some other way I can attach to the network volume in each account on login so both have access to music and videos with full permissions?
    I'm really stumped here after 2 hrs of googling, searching here and trying things.
    TIA

    I've not had any luck with the suggestions in the link either.
    Here's two other approaches I've tried and failed with:
    1. Creating a new share point on the cube itself so that one user can mount it as a different volume. Then the issue is that I still don't have a volume named "Jukebox" available to each user when switching. I DO have access now to the data from both accounts, but under 2 different mount points (volume names) and the xml file for iTunes is hard coded with the path for each mp3 including the "Jukebox" volume name... so no go.
    2. Tried figuring out a way I could script a mounting of the share with the terminal thinking I could then run that shell script at startup. Can't seem to get the sytax right. If I create a directory in /Volumes and mount and afp share to it, it takes on the ownership of root/wheel which I can't access in the finder and can't seem to change.
    BUT I'll keep playing with both these ideas a bit... the first one might be overcome with a bit of logic and the 2nd if I can get the syntax right to mount the share with afp_mount and give it the correct ownership/permissions such that when a user logs in she/he sees the volume on the desktop and has full r/w access to it.
    thanks again. if you offhand know the syntax for that, let me know

  • Mounting network drive

    Okay, I am posing this request to figure out how to do the following:
    I have a network drive that I want to use to store my itunes library. I need to mount the drive so that my computer sees it when it boots up and can access the files. I also want to avoid having the computer open a finder window at start up. Can anyone please give me a step by step of how to do this? I am new to Macs so more simple steps would be better.

    Once the drive is mounted and it is showing on your desktop open system preferences-->accounts--> your user account
    click the login items tab
    drag n drop the mounted volume onto the login items window.
    If the network volume requires a user name and password then be sure to add this to your keychain then you wont be prompted to enter the password at login.

  • Mount network drives

    Hi,
    How can I create a script that will connect to a windows server with a username and password and mount network drives on my desktop, and how do I set this script to automatically run when I login?

    Hey guys. I'm glad I found this post. I'm trying for the same result. I currently work at a school in which every teacher has a computer that connects to the local network by signing in with a username and password. However, my computer has fried and they can't get me a new one until... well... whenever. I've brought my MacBook Pro in and have connected to the internet which is great but I need to access a network (H:) drive in order to update progress reports and report cards.
    I don't know much and the IT guy is impossible to reach and hasn't returned any emails. I just need to connect to that one folder. I was assuming and ftp or and smb would do the trick but I have no idea what server I would need to try and access through the finder, applescript, or terminal. I did an ipconfig on another teachers computer and got a few ip's as well as the folder's location on the network 'server_4\folder' (H:) if that helps. I've tried connected by ftp through the finder to all of the ip's and have gotten an error saying that I can't connect. I have also did a whatsmyip.com search for my root ip address and have tried the same approach. For some reason, it connects by says my username and password were incorrect.
    Well that's about everything. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

  • How to mount network drive on boot up

    I'd like to mount a network drive on my OS X v10.6 system during the *boot sequence* so that the drive is available to Time Machine to write its backups there. I can mount the drive manually and know how to add it to an user account's loginn items so that it gets mounted when that user logs in. But I want it always mounted regardless of which user is logged in or even if no user is logged in. That way TM can run whenever it needs to.
    So how can I mount the network drive during boot up?
    The network drive is on a machine running OS X v10.5.
    This related thread was my original question in the Time Machine forum: http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=2807393&tstart=0
    Message was edited by: NikD

    not sure it will work for you but you could try this:
    if you are comfortable with AppleScript, you could edit this script to suit your situation:
    try
    mount volume "afp://<devicename>.local/<volumename>" as user name "<accountname>" with password "<accountpassword>"
    end try
    this script just places the drive's icon on the desktop.
    save it as an application and add that to the account's login items.
    credit for the script goes to Tesserax.

  • Mounting networked drive via terminal

    Hello
    I ordered an SSD for my macbook pro yesterday, which I was planning on installing when it got here today. I use a shared folder on a windows PC for time machine, and after backing up over the network for the last time last night I decided to pop my os x disk in to make sure that I knew how to restore once I had the new hard drive in.
    Well I was able to connect to my wireless network, but when I choose restore using time machine, the button "connect to network drive" is greyed.
    I think I need to mount the drive via the terminal, but I've been unable to do that. In OSX i was connecting to smb://192.168.1.102 and mounting the "MacBook Pro Time Machine" share(I since added a share simply named "mbptm" to avoid spaces. I opened a terminal, and made a directory /Volumes/TimeMachine, this seemed to work. I then tried:
    # mount -t smb smb://192.168.1.102/mbptm /Volumes/TimeMachine
    This gives the error:
    mount: exec /System/Library/Filesystems/smb.fs/Contents/Resources/mount_smb for /Volumes/TimeMachine: No such file or directory
    I tried with afp instead of smb (which I dont think will work because its an NTFS windows drive) and got:
    AFPMountURL returned error -1069, errono is -1069
    If anyone has any ideas I'd appreciate it. I don't have an external hard drive handy. The computer name of the windows PC is MEDIACENTER-PC, and the share gives access to "Everyone", so no username/password should be required

    I think i've found a clever way to circumvent this problem.
    What if i repartition my original hard drive into three. leave one partition for my current stuff, a second partition for the time machine back up, and a third partition as a bootable image of my OSX install DVD. Then I will temporarily disconnect my dvd drive and hook up the SSD and the HDD simultaneously, boot using the OSX install partition, and restore the time machine image to the SSD...
    Does anyone see a problem with that? (I realize this isn't the correct forum for that anymore)

  • Mounting Network Drives

    I have created a workflow that includes "Get Specified Servers" connectng to: "afp://SS-SERVER.local." followed by another action to "Connect to Servers". This works beautifully until I'm prompted with the various drives I wish to mount.
    I can of course select the drives and mount them, but does anyone know how I might "instruct" the Automator to completed the tasks of; Clicking "Connect", selecting the Drives I wish to mount, and then clicking "OK"?
    I read a few threads in the "Apple Script" discussion but I'm not too familiar with apple script. Can anyone help?

    I haven't tried connecting to a server in a long while, but I'm trying to test this out. Hopefully someone else can shed some more light for you than I can.
    I was under the impression you can specify the drive, or perhaps the folder, within the server address by appending a "/" and the name of it. If so, then that would allow you set the drive to connect to within the address.
    One tip that might help you figure this out is to not try to emulate your physical actions, for example don't try to get Automator to click this or click that in dialogs. Focus on results.
    So, in this case, what you need is to have the workflow connect to a server and mount the drive. That's it. There should be nothing to do with clicking this or that because Automator wouldn't be going through dialogs since the actions for Automator allow it to perform its tasks. That is, when you run a workflow, you typically won't see dialogs because Automator isn't a human being that needs dialogs to interface with the computer. Dialogs and windows are for humans. Just a tip that might help you with other workflows.
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  • Mount network volume: different users same credentials, see different shares

    A set of network volumes on a NAS need to periodically be backed up to a local USB disk. Manually, I can mount most shares (from a Finder window). In a shell script I can list all files due (find) and use that list for backing up to a local USB volume (cpio). So far so good. However, I need to mount these network volumes first. The mount command doesn't seem to work for me.
    How do I mount a network volume in a shell script?
    Also I noticed that if under fast user switching user A logs in with credentials uName and uPassword, the NAS shows 6 shares to choose from. When user B on the same machine logs in with the same credentials uName and uPassword, only 5 shares are visible and one is not shown. It looks as if the credentials do not uniquely determine the volumes offered for mounting. Also, when user B mounts a share, it appears to be owned by user A (who is logged in but has not mounted any share on the NAS) rather than owned by B or by uName...
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    How can one uniquely determine the identity of the volume? Network volumes don't show UUIDs and the name given in the /Volume/ folder can change, as is discussed in message 11871367.

    eljonco wrote:
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    Actually, only option 1 is ruled out. That Finder list is simply not reliable. It is likely cached somewhere and could be restored by deleting some hidden preference file. It regularly causes people to freak out when they see some sharepoint listed on a network that they have long since left.
    If you did Go > Connect to Server in the Finder and typed in the location, you could still create an alias.
    Once mounted one of 5 shares as uName with uPassword, an ls -al /Volumes shows the local drives and
    drwx------@ 11 B staff <date> sharename
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    #+auto_home     # Use directory service
    # Get /home records synthesized from user records
    #+/usr/libexec/od_user_homes
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    Now unmount the drive.
    The Finder mounts all go into /Volumes and, as you have discovered, can get themselves confused. This automount will be at "/home/drive5". All you have to do is enter that folder in the Finder and it will be automatically mounted. If you haven't used it for a while, it will be unmounted automatically.
    You may have to play around with this a little. I don't have any network AFP share that I need to mount on a regular basis, so those parameters may need to be adjusted somewhat.

  • 12 hours...no result -- Mounting Network Disk

    I am writing to you in a frustrated mood.  But fortunately still sane.
    I am trying to remote access my Airpot Exrtreme usb drive on windows 7 and mac lion.
    I feel I am almost there, just can't get the little details.
    I am confused with the port mapping part of Airport Extreme.  I am not sure to use "personal file sharing", "windows sharing", "web sharing".
    Also, in windows, do I just mount the drive or do I need to add a "network place"
    I followed the instructions here:
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/15283514#15283514
    You do not need the AirPort Utility installed on your computer in order to access a shared drive from either a remote location or on the local network. This utility's primary purpose is for administering the base station.
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    Start the AirPort Utility > Select the AEBSn, and then, note the IP address shown.
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    Verify that Secure Shared Disks = With a disk password. (Recommended)
    Verify that AirPort Disks Guest Access = Not allowed. (Recommended)
    Select Advanced, and then, select the Port Mapping tab.
    Click the plus sign to add a new port mapping.
    For Service, select the "Personal File Sharing" option. (Note: This option would only allow Mac clients to access the AirPort Disks. If you want both Macs and PCs to connect, you would need to leave this field at its default value and enter the appropriate SMB ports to the mix of ports to be opened.)
    In the Public UDP Port(s) and Public TCP Port(s) boxes, type in a 4-digit port number (e.g., 8888) that you choose. In the Private IP Address box, type the internal IP address of your AEBSn that you wrote down in step 1. In the Private UDP Port(s) and Private TCP Port(s) boxes, type 548. Click Continue.
    In the Description box, type a descriptive name like "AirPort Disk File Sharing," and then, click Done.
    Click on Update.
    To connect to the shared AirPort Disk from a remote location using a Mac:
    From the Finder > Go > Connect to Server.
    Enter the DynDNS-provided Domain Name or Pubic (WAN-side) IP address of the AEBSn, followed by a colon and the Public port number that you choose in step 11 of the previous procedure. For example: afp://www.mydyndnsdomain.com:8888 or afp://123.456.789.123:8888
    Click Connect.
    You should be prompted for your user name and password. The user name can be anything you like; the password should be the Disk password for the AEBSn that you created in step 6 previously.
    Click Connect.
    Here are some screenshots"

  • In Nautilus, mounted network shares not showing up right away

    I've noticed a strange problem recently (last couple of weeks) where my mounted network shares don't always show up right away in Nautilus (side bar or desktop- like they used to). For example, if I manually mount an NFS share in CL to /media/files it won't pop up in Nautilus right away like it used to. It will only show up after several minutes or if I plug in a thumb drive to trigger it to refresh. Also, when my computer is in suspend and I resume it, all predefined network share mounts in fstab that are indeed mounted won't be present in Nautilus upon resuming from suspend (they did before).
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    Figured out the last filesystem upgrade from Decemeber is causing this. Bug posted- FS#27851.

  • How to mount network share on lion permanently

    I want to know how to mount a network share from my NAS on mountian lion.
    I have seen and tried the suggestions about using command+k or the "go connect to server" and mounting that way so the password for the share is put into the keychain, then dragging the now mounted share to the system preferences user login items.
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  • Mounted network resources in the sidebar

    Remember in Tiger, where after you added some network resources you have in your network, into the sidebar, and they STAYED there?!
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  • Auto-mount network volumes upon changing locations

    As I am shifting my Macbook between office and home and with working in office I need to access frequently into a few network locations which I ended up mounting them regularly manually.
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  • Automatically Mount USB Drive on TC

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    Open System Preferences, click on Accounts and then click on the Login Items tab.
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