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I'm having an issue trying to access administrative shares on my Windows 8 PC from my MacBook Air running OSX 10.8.2.

Here is the process, errors and background info:

  1. On the MacBook, Go menu > Connect to Server > Server Address: smb://megaman/c$ > Connect
  2. Connect as: Registered User > Name: Zach; Password: my password [This is an admin account on the Windows 8 PC]
  3. "There was a problem connecting to the server "megaman". You do not have permission to access this server.

Ok, fine....So as a sanity check, I make sure the administrative share (c$) exists on the Windows8 PC, and that the 'Zach' account is a member of the Administrators group. That all checks out. Next, I create a new share of the 'c' drive on the Windows 8 PC and in the share settings, only give the user account 'Zach' Full permissions.

I run back through steps 1-3, but this time I just enter 'smb://megaman' for the server address. I get the 'Select the volumes you want to mount on "megaman"' dialog box on the MacBook and 'c' is listed as a share. I select 'c' and click OK. The share mounts without error.

I've also tried mounting the c$ share via command line and get a "Permission denied" error. I've tried disabling the firewall, but this doesn't make any difference. I've tried deleting and recreating the administrative share, and also creating a new admin account on the Windows 8 PC, but none of those make any difference either.

Perhaps it's a setting in local security policy on the Windows 8 PC? I can't say for sure, but my guess is that this issue began with Windows 8, since I used to be able to access the c$ share when my PC ran Windows 7.

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  • Love the "Megaman" name for your server! Commented Oct 10, 2013 at 17:55
  • I just had this issue with my Windows 7 PC
    – 166_MMX
    Commented Jan 4, 2017 at 10:25

1 Answer 1

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Administrative shares have been disabled in Windows Vista and later versions of Windows for security reasons.

According to Microsoft Support Knowledge Base article 947232, you can do one of the following:

  1. Create your own shares with the appropriate permissions (recommended);

  2. Run the Microsoft Fix It to perform an automatic workaround; or

  3. Add to the Registry subkey HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System a DWORD (32-bit) Value LocalAccountTokenFilterPolicy entry with the value data of 1.

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    Yep, you nailed it. Read up on the KB article and creating the LocalAccountTokenFilterPolicy entry does let me access the administrative shares. Thanks.
    – zsaltzman
    Commented Feb 18, 2013 at 0:37

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