Mapping a drive letter on the Meridian Enterprise server to a vault location makes it possible to share the drive with network users. The users may then access documents in that location with Windows Explorer and not require Meridian software. Sharing a mapped drive can be configured either during the mapping process from within the New Drive Wizard, or later from the Shares list as described in Creating a share. Users can access the drive by name in a URL or map a drive letter of their own computers to the share as usual.
Warning THIS IS A DEPRECATED FEATURE
Note vault security that has been set on folders will override any security set on the share through Windows. This prevents unauthorized access to documents. Because Meridian enforces many more security privileges than Windows does, the resulting behavior in Windows Explorer may not be intuitive to users. In this respect, using Windows Explorer as a Meridian client should only be considered for read-only purposes, and has very limited functionality.
Tip A mapped drive is sometimes useful for performing administrative or programming tasks since the contents of the drive’s location can be accessed with the operating system’s command-prompt commands.
To map a drive to a vault location:
Option | Description |
---|---|
Do not share this drive |
Does not share the new drive letter. |
Share this drive |
Shares the drive letter using the following options. |
Share name |
Type a descriptive name for the share, for example, the vault or work area name. |
Comment |
Type an optional comment describing the source and purpose of the share, if desired. |
Maximum allowed |
Limits the number of users that can connect to the share to the maximum allowed for the operating system version. |
Allow n Users |
Limits the number of users that can connect to the share to the selected number. |
Permissions |
NTFS file permissions do not affect the share. Permissions are controlled by the Meridian roles assigned to the mapped vault location. |
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