Ubuntu can see network work group but can't see Ubuntu from windows












4















Sorry to be a complete noob, just installed Ubuntu and I'm trying to get things up and running.



Goal: To connect several drives to my Ubuntu, very old, laptop. This will act as a NAS serving up music, video, and documents for my in home, windows WORKGROUP.



Where I am now:



Ubuntu is running on my laptop. I've installed updates and believe I'm current (but don't know how to check/confirm).



Samba is installed on the Ubuntu laptop. I followed the instructions from many on-line sites and best I can tell it seems to be running correctly. I can see all my windows machines from Home -> browse network -> windows network -> WORKGROUP. All three other computers that are on the workgroup appear and I'm able to go in and see files and such.



So far so good. But that is where I run into trouble.



Remember the point of this fun is to have the Ubuntu box serving the stuff, however...



None of my windows machines can see the Ubuntu laptop on the network. When I go in to My Computer -> Network I see my other two Windows machines but not the Ubuntu laptop. This is happening on both Win 7 and Win 8. Right now it is all hard wired, so wireless is not an issue.



After multiple refreshes, trying all kinds of things, lost sleep the past few nights, and pulling out lots of hair, I've broken down and decided to ask for help. Ya it's a first step.



Anyways, I've looked all over and can't find anything that can help on-line. I must have messed something simple up, so simple that no one bothers to mention it in their walk through. At least I hope so.



Any help you could offer would be, well, helpful.



EDIT #1:



user68186 - I went through the link you provided. I added a new share through the Samba GUI: /home/steve/1-share
I checked all the permissions (of course the screens look a bit different) but it loks like everything is correct.



I get stuck here:
Step 3. Go to the Windows on the desktop computer and open Windows Explorer, Click on the triangle next to Network on the left panel. From the drop-down list you should be able to select the name of the laptop computer running Ubuntu.



Um, the laptop is just not listed there.



EDIT #2:



Also, I can not see the laptop if I type the IP address into Firefox. "Firefox can't establish a connection to the server at 192.168.1.XXX" (where XXX is the last 3 numbers of course)



EDIT #3:



Thanks Dan, so I typed "192.168.1.xxxhome/steve/Public" into explorer (this folder is shared in the Samba Server Configuration) and I get the message "Windows cannot access 192.168.1.xxxhome/steve/Public". Just cause I don't know the formats better I also tried "192.168.1.xxxhomestevePublic" too but get the same message. Also tried "192.168.1.109steve-xxx" and get the same message.



It seems Windows really can't see the laptop.










share|improve this question

























  • You have to share at least one folder in Ubuntu for Windows to see it. See askubuntu.com/questions/310180/…

    – user68186
    Aug 7 '13 at 19:44













  • Is the workgroup of the Ubuntu machine set to WORKGROUP?

    – Dan
    Aug 7 '13 at 20:42











  • Hi, Yes, the workgroup in Ubuntu's Samba config file is set to WORKGROUP.

    – Steve182231
    Aug 7 '13 at 20:45











  • Try restarting both machines to make sure new settings are loaded.

    – user68186
    Aug 7 '13 at 21:49











  • I did a full power off and then power on. Still no joy.

    – Steve182231
    Aug 7 '13 at 23:16
















4















Sorry to be a complete noob, just installed Ubuntu and I'm trying to get things up and running.



Goal: To connect several drives to my Ubuntu, very old, laptop. This will act as a NAS serving up music, video, and documents for my in home, windows WORKGROUP.



Where I am now:



Ubuntu is running on my laptop. I've installed updates and believe I'm current (but don't know how to check/confirm).



Samba is installed on the Ubuntu laptop. I followed the instructions from many on-line sites and best I can tell it seems to be running correctly. I can see all my windows machines from Home -> browse network -> windows network -> WORKGROUP. All three other computers that are on the workgroup appear and I'm able to go in and see files and such.



So far so good. But that is where I run into trouble.



Remember the point of this fun is to have the Ubuntu box serving the stuff, however...



None of my windows machines can see the Ubuntu laptop on the network. When I go in to My Computer -> Network I see my other two Windows machines but not the Ubuntu laptop. This is happening on both Win 7 and Win 8. Right now it is all hard wired, so wireless is not an issue.



After multiple refreshes, trying all kinds of things, lost sleep the past few nights, and pulling out lots of hair, I've broken down and decided to ask for help. Ya it's a first step.



Anyways, I've looked all over and can't find anything that can help on-line. I must have messed something simple up, so simple that no one bothers to mention it in their walk through. At least I hope so.



Any help you could offer would be, well, helpful.



EDIT #1:



user68186 - I went through the link you provided. I added a new share through the Samba GUI: /home/steve/1-share
I checked all the permissions (of course the screens look a bit different) but it loks like everything is correct.



I get stuck here:
Step 3. Go to the Windows on the desktop computer and open Windows Explorer, Click on the triangle next to Network on the left panel. From the drop-down list you should be able to select the name of the laptop computer running Ubuntu.



Um, the laptop is just not listed there.



EDIT #2:



Also, I can not see the laptop if I type the IP address into Firefox. "Firefox can't establish a connection to the server at 192.168.1.XXX" (where XXX is the last 3 numbers of course)



EDIT #3:



Thanks Dan, so I typed "192.168.1.xxxhome/steve/Public" into explorer (this folder is shared in the Samba Server Configuration) and I get the message "Windows cannot access 192.168.1.xxxhome/steve/Public". Just cause I don't know the formats better I also tried "192.168.1.xxxhomestevePublic" too but get the same message. Also tried "192.168.1.109steve-xxx" and get the same message.



It seems Windows really can't see the laptop.










share|improve this question

























  • You have to share at least one folder in Ubuntu for Windows to see it. See askubuntu.com/questions/310180/…

    – user68186
    Aug 7 '13 at 19:44













  • Is the workgroup of the Ubuntu machine set to WORKGROUP?

    – Dan
    Aug 7 '13 at 20:42











  • Hi, Yes, the workgroup in Ubuntu's Samba config file is set to WORKGROUP.

    – Steve182231
    Aug 7 '13 at 20:45











  • Try restarting both machines to make sure new settings are loaded.

    – user68186
    Aug 7 '13 at 21:49











  • I did a full power off and then power on. Still no joy.

    – Steve182231
    Aug 7 '13 at 23:16














4












4








4


2






Sorry to be a complete noob, just installed Ubuntu and I'm trying to get things up and running.



Goal: To connect several drives to my Ubuntu, very old, laptop. This will act as a NAS serving up music, video, and documents for my in home, windows WORKGROUP.



Where I am now:



Ubuntu is running on my laptop. I've installed updates and believe I'm current (but don't know how to check/confirm).



Samba is installed on the Ubuntu laptop. I followed the instructions from many on-line sites and best I can tell it seems to be running correctly. I can see all my windows machines from Home -> browse network -> windows network -> WORKGROUP. All three other computers that are on the workgroup appear and I'm able to go in and see files and such.



So far so good. But that is where I run into trouble.



Remember the point of this fun is to have the Ubuntu box serving the stuff, however...



None of my windows machines can see the Ubuntu laptop on the network. When I go in to My Computer -> Network I see my other two Windows machines but not the Ubuntu laptop. This is happening on both Win 7 and Win 8. Right now it is all hard wired, so wireless is not an issue.



After multiple refreshes, trying all kinds of things, lost sleep the past few nights, and pulling out lots of hair, I've broken down and decided to ask for help. Ya it's a first step.



Anyways, I've looked all over and can't find anything that can help on-line. I must have messed something simple up, so simple that no one bothers to mention it in their walk through. At least I hope so.



Any help you could offer would be, well, helpful.



EDIT #1:



user68186 - I went through the link you provided. I added a new share through the Samba GUI: /home/steve/1-share
I checked all the permissions (of course the screens look a bit different) but it loks like everything is correct.



I get stuck here:
Step 3. Go to the Windows on the desktop computer and open Windows Explorer, Click on the triangle next to Network on the left panel. From the drop-down list you should be able to select the name of the laptop computer running Ubuntu.



Um, the laptop is just not listed there.



EDIT #2:



Also, I can not see the laptop if I type the IP address into Firefox. "Firefox can't establish a connection to the server at 192.168.1.XXX" (where XXX is the last 3 numbers of course)



EDIT #3:



Thanks Dan, so I typed "192.168.1.xxxhome/steve/Public" into explorer (this folder is shared in the Samba Server Configuration) and I get the message "Windows cannot access 192.168.1.xxxhome/steve/Public". Just cause I don't know the formats better I also tried "192.168.1.xxxhomestevePublic" too but get the same message. Also tried "192.168.1.109steve-xxx" and get the same message.



It seems Windows really can't see the laptop.










share|improve this question
















Sorry to be a complete noob, just installed Ubuntu and I'm trying to get things up and running.



Goal: To connect several drives to my Ubuntu, very old, laptop. This will act as a NAS serving up music, video, and documents for my in home, windows WORKGROUP.



Where I am now:



Ubuntu is running on my laptop. I've installed updates and believe I'm current (but don't know how to check/confirm).



Samba is installed on the Ubuntu laptop. I followed the instructions from many on-line sites and best I can tell it seems to be running correctly. I can see all my windows machines from Home -> browse network -> windows network -> WORKGROUP. All three other computers that are on the workgroup appear and I'm able to go in and see files and such.



So far so good. But that is where I run into trouble.



Remember the point of this fun is to have the Ubuntu box serving the stuff, however...



None of my windows machines can see the Ubuntu laptop on the network. When I go in to My Computer -> Network I see my other two Windows machines but not the Ubuntu laptop. This is happening on both Win 7 and Win 8. Right now it is all hard wired, so wireless is not an issue.



After multiple refreshes, trying all kinds of things, lost sleep the past few nights, and pulling out lots of hair, I've broken down and decided to ask for help. Ya it's a first step.



Anyways, I've looked all over and can't find anything that can help on-line. I must have messed something simple up, so simple that no one bothers to mention it in their walk through. At least I hope so.



Any help you could offer would be, well, helpful.



EDIT #1:



user68186 - I went through the link you provided. I added a new share through the Samba GUI: /home/steve/1-share
I checked all the permissions (of course the screens look a bit different) but it loks like everything is correct.



I get stuck here:
Step 3. Go to the Windows on the desktop computer and open Windows Explorer, Click on the triangle next to Network on the left panel. From the drop-down list you should be able to select the name of the laptop computer running Ubuntu.



Um, the laptop is just not listed there.



EDIT #2:



Also, I can not see the laptop if I type the IP address into Firefox. "Firefox can't establish a connection to the server at 192.168.1.XXX" (where XXX is the last 3 numbers of course)



EDIT #3:



Thanks Dan, so I typed "192.168.1.xxxhome/steve/Public" into explorer (this folder is shared in the Samba Server Configuration) and I get the message "Windows cannot access 192.168.1.xxxhome/steve/Public". Just cause I don't know the formats better I also tried "192.168.1.xxxhomestevePublic" too but get the same message. Also tried "192.168.1.109steve-xxx" and get the same message.



It seems Windows really can't see the laptop.







networking windows-7 samba






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 8 '13 at 13:51







Steve182231

















asked Aug 7 '13 at 19:41









Steve182231Steve182231

21113




21113













  • You have to share at least one folder in Ubuntu for Windows to see it. See askubuntu.com/questions/310180/…

    – user68186
    Aug 7 '13 at 19:44













  • Is the workgroup of the Ubuntu machine set to WORKGROUP?

    – Dan
    Aug 7 '13 at 20:42











  • Hi, Yes, the workgroup in Ubuntu's Samba config file is set to WORKGROUP.

    – Steve182231
    Aug 7 '13 at 20:45











  • Try restarting both machines to make sure new settings are loaded.

    – user68186
    Aug 7 '13 at 21:49











  • I did a full power off and then power on. Still no joy.

    – Steve182231
    Aug 7 '13 at 23:16



















  • You have to share at least one folder in Ubuntu for Windows to see it. See askubuntu.com/questions/310180/…

    – user68186
    Aug 7 '13 at 19:44













  • Is the workgroup of the Ubuntu machine set to WORKGROUP?

    – Dan
    Aug 7 '13 at 20:42











  • Hi, Yes, the workgroup in Ubuntu's Samba config file is set to WORKGROUP.

    – Steve182231
    Aug 7 '13 at 20:45











  • Try restarting both machines to make sure new settings are loaded.

    – user68186
    Aug 7 '13 at 21:49











  • I did a full power off and then power on. Still no joy.

    – Steve182231
    Aug 7 '13 at 23:16

















You have to share at least one folder in Ubuntu for Windows to see it. See askubuntu.com/questions/310180/…

– user68186
Aug 7 '13 at 19:44







You have to share at least one folder in Ubuntu for Windows to see it. See askubuntu.com/questions/310180/…

– user68186
Aug 7 '13 at 19:44















Is the workgroup of the Ubuntu machine set to WORKGROUP?

– Dan
Aug 7 '13 at 20:42





Is the workgroup of the Ubuntu machine set to WORKGROUP?

– Dan
Aug 7 '13 at 20:42













Hi, Yes, the workgroup in Ubuntu's Samba config file is set to WORKGROUP.

– Steve182231
Aug 7 '13 at 20:45





Hi, Yes, the workgroup in Ubuntu's Samba config file is set to WORKGROUP.

– Steve182231
Aug 7 '13 at 20:45













Try restarting both machines to make sure new settings are loaded.

– user68186
Aug 7 '13 at 21:49





Try restarting both machines to make sure new settings are loaded.

– user68186
Aug 7 '13 at 21:49













I did a full power off and then power on. Still no joy.

– Steve182231
Aug 7 '13 at 23:16





I did a full power off and then power on. Still no joy.

– Steve182231
Aug 7 '13 at 23:16










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















3














My Windows 10 machine could not see my Ubuntu box until I disabled the Ubuntu firewall (sudo ufw disable). Then, in the Windows 10 search box, I entered \ubuntu-machine-name and that worked. (Before accessing the Internet on your Ubuntu box, enable the Ubuntu firewall (sudo ufw enable)).






share|improve this answer

































    1














    I have a similar setup with a Ubuntu machine crammed full of drives in a LAN with Windoze machines. Each drive has a shared folder on it.



    When I look under "Network" on the windoze machines the Ubuntu machine does not show up. Until I type "\ubuntu-machine-name" into the Search box on the windows machine. A file Explorer window opens with the shared folders in it, and the Ubuntu machine is then listed under Network. I can create shortcuts to the shared folders if I like. When I close the file explorer window, the ubuntu machine disappears from the Network listing, but the shortcuts still work.






    share|improve this answer































      1














      Ubuntu 18.x, select or create a folder, right click on it and select LOCAL NETWORK SHARE. Make sure ALLOW OTHERS TO CREATE..... and GUEST ACCESS (FOR PEOPLE.... is checked. Then click on CREATE SHARE. From a Windows machine, click on START, type in '\computer_name' followed by the return key. It should show you the shared folders. You can then map to it. If it doesn't find it or gives you a 'rights' issue, reboot the windows machine. I tried this in a VM with networking as 'bridged' so it stays on the local network. I was able to access it from another machine, but the VM gave me rights issues. After a 'reboot' of the VM, all is working.






      share|improve this answer































        0














        You never told us which version of Windows you're using.



        If it's XP, Windows uses "secure file sharing" by default.



        This means Samba can't see the machines on the network.



        To fix, enable "simple file sharing."






        share|improve this answer































          0














          I had a similar problem until right now: I was able to connect to my Ubuntu machine through ssh and vnc, but I couldn't see the shared files in "Network" under Windows.



          Well, I still cant see them there but I was able to access them by typing



          \192.168.xxx.xx


          or



          \pc-name


          in windows explorer.






          share|improve this answer

































            0














            The recommend "sudo ufw disable" + switching to "Bridged" network connection on the VM worked for me. Thanks!






            share|improve this answer
























            • Saying thank you to Bill Overstreet for posting this answer is not an answer.

              – karel
              39 mins ago











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            6 Answers
            6






            active

            oldest

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            6 Answers
            6






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            3














            My Windows 10 machine could not see my Ubuntu box until I disabled the Ubuntu firewall (sudo ufw disable). Then, in the Windows 10 search box, I entered \ubuntu-machine-name and that worked. (Before accessing the Internet on your Ubuntu box, enable the Ubuntu firewall (sudo ufw enable)).






            share|improve this answer






























              3














              My Windows 10 machine could not see my Ubuntu box until I disabled the Ubuntu firewall (sudo ufw disable). Then, in the Windows 10 search box, I entered \ubuntu-machine-name and that worked. (Before accessing the Internet on your Ubuntu box, enable the Ubuntu firewall (sudo ufw enable)).






              share|improve this answer




























                3












                3








                3







                My Windows 10 machine could not see my Ubuntu box until I disabled the Ubuntu firewall (sudo ufw disable). Then, in the Windows 10 search box, I entered \ubuntu-machine-name and that worked. (Before accessing the Internet on your Ubuntu box, enable the Ubuntu firewall (sudo ufw enable)).






                share|improve this answer















                My Windows 10 machine could not see my Ubuntu box until I disabled the Ubuntu firewall (sudo ufw disable). Then, in the Windows 10 search box, I entered \ubuntu-machine-name and that worked. (Before accessing the Internet on your Ubuntu box, enable the Ubuntu firewall (sudo ufw enable)).







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Sep 21 '15 at 16:33









                Community

                1




                1










                answered Sep 21 '15 at 14:39









                Bill OverstreetBill Overstreet

                312




                312

























                    1














                    I have a similar setup with a Ubuntu machine crammed full of drives in a LAN with Windoze machines. Each drive has a shared folder on it.



                    When I look under "Network" on the windoze machines the Ubuntu machine does not show up. Until I type "\ubuntu-machine-name" into the Search box on the windows machine. A file Explorer window opens with the shared folders in it, and the Ubuntu machine is then listed under Network. I can create shortcuts to the shared folders if I like. When I close the file explorer window, the ubuntu machine disappears from the Network listing, but the shortcuts still work.






                    share|improve this answer




























                      1














                      I have a similar setup with a Ubuntu machine crammed full of drives in a LAN with Windoze machines. Each drive has a shared folder on it.



                      When I look under "Network" on the windoze machines the Ubuntu machine does not show up. Until I type "\ubuntu-machine-name" into the Search box on the windows machine. A file Explorer window opens with the shared folders in it, and the Ubuntu machine is then listed under Network. I can create shortcuts to the shared folders if I like. When I close the file explorer window, the ubuntu machine disappears from the Network listing, but the shortcuts still work.






                      share|improve this answer


























                        1












                        1








                        1







                        I have a similar setup with a Ubuntu machine crammed full of drives in a LAN with Windoze machines. Each drive has a shared folder on it.



                        When I look under "Network" on the windoze machines the Ubuntu machine does not show up. Until I type "\ubuntu-machine-name" into the Search box on the windows machine. A file Explorer window opens with the shared folders in it, and the Ubuntu machine is then listed under Network. I can create shortcuts to the shared folders if I like. When I close the file explorer window, the ubuntu machine disappears from the Network listing, but the shortcuts still work.






                        share|improve this answer













                        I have a similar setup with a Ubuntu machine crammed full of drives in a LAN with Windoze machines. Each drive has a shared folder on it.



                        When I look under "Network" on the windoze machines the Ubuntu machine does not show up. Until I type "\ubuntu-machine-name" into the Search box on the windows machine. A file Explorer window opens with the shared folders in it, and the Ubuntu machine is then listed under Network. I can create shortcuts to the shared folders if I like. When I close the file explorer window, the ubuntu machine disappears from the Network listing, but the shortcuts still work.







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered Aug 7 '14 at 19:13









                        Organic MarbleOrganic Marble

                        11.2k63458




                        11.2k63458























                            1














                            Ubuntu 18.x, select or create a folder, right click on it and select LOCAL NETWORK SHARE. Make sure ALLOW OTHERS TO CREATE..... and GUEST ACCESS (FOR PEOPLE.... is checked. Then click on CREATE SHARE. From a Windows machine, click on START, type in '\computer_name' followed by the return key. It should show you the shared folders. You can then map to it. If it doesn't find it or gives you a 'rights' issue, reboot the windows machine. I tried this in a VM with networking as 'bridged' so it stays on the local network. I was able to access it from another machine, but the VM gave me rights issues. After a 'reboot' of the VM, all is working.






                            share|improve this answer




























                              1














                              Ubuntu 18.x, select or create a folder, right click on it and select LOCAL NETWORK SHARE. Make sure ALLOW OTHERS TO CREATE..... and GUEST ACCESS (FOR PEOPLE.... is checked. Then click on CREATE SHARE. From a Windows machine, click on START, type in '\computer_name' followed by the return key. It should show you the shared folders. You can then map to it. If it doesn't find it or gives you a 'rights' issue, reboot the windows machine. I tried this in a VM with networking as 'bridged' so it stays on the local network. I was able to access it from another machine, but the VM gave me rights issues. After a 'reboot' of the VM, all is working.






                              share|improve this answer


























                                1












                                1








                                1







                                Ubuntu 18.x, select or create a folder, right click on it and select LOCAL NETWORK SHARE. Make sure ALLOW OTHERS TO CREATE..... and GUEST ACCESS (FOR PEOPLE.... is checked. Then click on CREATE SHARE. From a Windows machine, click on START, type in '\computer_name' followed by the return key. It should show you the shared folders. You can then map to it. If it doesn't find it or gives you a 'rights' issue, reboot the windows machine. I tried this in a VM with networking as 'bridged' so it stays on the local network. I was able to access it from another machine, but the VM gave me rights issues. After a 'reboot' of the VM, all is working.






                                share|improve this answer













                                Ubuntu 18.x, select or create a folder, right click on it and select LOCAL NETWORK SHARE. Make sure ALLOW OTHERS TO CREATE..... and GUEST ACCESS (FOR PEOPLE.... is checked. Then click on CREATE SHARE. From a Windows machine, click on START, type in '\computer_name' followed by the return key. It should show you the shared folders. You can then map to it. If it doesn't find it or gives you a 'rights' issue, reboot the windows machine. I tried this in a VM with networking as 'bridged' so it stays on the local network. I was able to access it from another machine, but the VM gave me rights issues. After a 'reboot' of the VM, all is working.







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered Jun 9 '18 at 0:21









                                Gary LuisGary Luis

                                111




                                111























                                    0














                                    You never told us which version of Windows you're using.



                                    If it's XP, Windows uses "secure file sharing" by default.



                                    This means Samba can't see the machines on the network.



                                    To fix, enable "simple file sharing."






                                    share|improve this answer




























                                      0














                                      You never told us which version of Windows you're using.



                                      If it's XP, Windows uses "secure file sharing" by default.



                                      This means Samba can't see the machines on the network.



                                      To fix, enable "simple file sharing."






                                      share|improve this answer


























                                        0












                                        0








                                        0







                                        You never told us which version of Windows you're using.



                                        If it's XP, Windows uses "secure file sharing" by default.



                                        This means Samba can't see the machines on the network.



                                        To fix, enable "simple file sharing."






                                        share|improve this answer













                                        You never told us which version of Windows you're using.



                                        If it's XP, Windows uses "secure file sharing" by default.



                                        This means Samba can't see the machines on the network.



                                        To fix, enable "simple file sharing."







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered Aug 23 '13 at 20:35









                                        MajikMajik

                                        52238




                                        52238























                                            0














                                            I had a similar problem until right now: I was able to connect to my Ubuntu machine through ssh and vnc, but I couldn't see the shared files in "Network" under Windows.



                                            Well, I still cant see them there but I was able to access them by typing



                                            \192.168.xxx.xx


                                            or



                                            \pc-name


                                            in windows explorer.






                                            share|improve this answer






























                                              0














                                              I had a similar problem until right now: I was able to connect to my Ubuntu machine through ssh and vnc, but I couldn't see the shared files in "Network" under Windows.



                                              Well, I still cant see them there but I was able to access them by typing



                                              \192.168.xxx.xx


                                              or



                                              \pc-name


                                              in windows explorer.






                                              share|improve this answer




























                                                0












                                                0








                                                0







                                                I had a similar problem until right now: I was able to connect to my Ubuntu machine through ssh and vnc, but I couldn't see the shared files in "Network" under Windows.



                                                Well, I still cant see them there but I was able to access them by typing



                                                \192.168.xxx.xx


                                                or



                                                \pc-name


                                                in windows explorer.






                                                share|improve this answer















                                                I had a similar problem until right now: I was able to connect to my Ubuntu machine through ssh and vnc, but I couldn't see the shared files in "Network" under Windows.



                                                Well, I still cant see them there but I was able to access them by typing



                                                \192.168.xxx.xx


                                                or



                                                \pc-name


                                                in windows explorer.







                                                share|improve this answer














                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer








                                                edited Sep 29 '13 at 2:49









                                                Braiam

                                                52.1k20136222




                                                52.1k20136222










                                                answered Sep 29 '13 at 1:39









                                                Just1numberJust1number

                                                11




                                                11























                                                    0














                                                    The recommend "sudo ufw disable" + switching to "Bridged" network connection on the VM worked for me. Thanks!






                                                    share|improve this answer
























                                                    • Saying thank you to Bill Overstreet for posting this answer is not an answer.

                                                      – karel
                                                      39 mins ago
















                                                    0














                                                    The recommend "sudo ufw disable" + switching to "Bridged" network connection on the VM worked for me. Thanks!






                                                    share|improve this answer
























                                                    • Saying thank you to Bill Overstreet for posting this answer is not an answer.

                                                      – karel
                                                      39 mins ago














                                                    0












                                                    0








                                                    0







                                                    The recommend "sudo ufw disable" + switching to "Bridged" network connection on the VM worked for me. Thanks!






                                                    share|improve this answer













                                                    The recommend "sudo ufw disable" + switching to "Bridged" network connection on the VM worked for me. Thanks!







                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                    answered 1 hour ago









                                                    Doug NintzelDoug Nintzel

                                                    1614




                                                    1614













                                                    • Saying thank you to Bill Overstreet for posting this answer is not an answer.

                                                      – karel
                                                      39 mins ago



















                                                    • Saying thank you to Bill Overstreet for posting this answer is not an answer.

                                                      – karel
                                                      39 mins ago

















                                                    Saying thank you to Bill Overstreet for posting this answer is not an answer.

                                                    – karel
                                                    39 mins ago





                                                    Saying thank you to Bill Overstreet for posting this answer is not an answer.

                                                    – karel
                                                    39 mins ago


















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