Samba File Server not Working on Windows 10





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since yesterday my Filesharing on Windows doesn't work. And the problem might that the SmbServer is not running at all. If I check netstat there is no process running on Port 445. Do you have an idea how to solve this.



It isnt even possible to access the files on the same pc. With "\192.168.1.103" where 192.168.1.103 is the IP address










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    since yesterday my Filesharing on Windows doesn't work. And the problem might that the SmbServer is not running at all. If I check netstat there is no process running on Port 445. Do you have an idea how to solve this.



    It isnt even possible to access the files on the same pc. With "\192.168.1.103" where 192.168.1.103 is the IP address










    share|improve this question

























      1












      1








      1








      since yesterday my Filesharing on Windows doesn't work. And the problem might that the SmbServer is not running at all. If I check netstat there is no process running on Port 445. Do you have an idea how to solve this.



      It isnt even possible to access the files on the same pc. With "\192.168.1.103" where 192.168.1.103 is the IP address










      share|improve this question














      since yesterday my Filesharing on Windows doesn't work. And the problem might that the SmbServer is not running at all. If I check netstat there is no process running on Port 445. Do you have an idea how to solve this.



      It isnt even possible to access the files on the same pc. With "\192.168.1.103" where 192.168.1.103 is the IP address







      windows windows-10 samba services






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      share|improve this question











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      asked Feb 5 at 18:29









      Jonathan WJonathan W

      61




      61






















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          Which network profile are you using in Windows 10? I would try the following




          1. Open Settings.

          2. List item

          3. Click Network & Internet.

          4. The list of network and Internet related settings appears.

          5. Click Ethernet or Wi-Fi, depending on the type of network you’re
            connected to.


          6. Information about the network you’re connected to appears.


          7. If you’re connected to a wired network, click the name of the
            network you’re connected to. If you’re connected to a wireless
            network, click Advanced Options under the list of available wireless
            networks.

          8. The list of settings available for your network connection is shown.
            Set the Find Devices and Content switch to Off or On, depending on
            whether or not you want to turn on sharing.


          Another option would be to check your windows firewall settings to make sure that you are allowing incoming traffic over SMB. I believe the built in firewall rule you want to enable is called File and Printer Sharing (SMB In).



          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer
























          • Firewall seems to be okay, even if the firewall is disabled it wont work. And File Sharing is enabled

            – Jonathan W
            Feb 5 at 20:07











          • What happens if you right click on a file or folder, go to properties, manually share the folder then attempt to access it via \ipaddresssharedfolder. I would expect to get some sort of an error when trying to add a shared folder if SMB was somehow disabled? Is the machine on a domain by any chance?

            – Richie086
            Feb 6 at 19:58











          • Could you post the output of netstat -an in your original post?

            – Richie086
            Feb 6 at 19:59












          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

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          0














          Which network profile are you using in Windows 10? I would try the following




          1. Open Settings.

          2. List item

          3. Click Network & Internet.

          4. The list of network and Internet related settings appears.

          5. Click Ethernet or Wi-Fi, depending on the type of network you’re
            connected to.


          6. Information about the network you’re connected to appears.


          7. If you’re connected to a wired network, click the name of the
            network you’re connected to. If you’re connected to a wireless
            network, click Advanced Options under the list of available wireless
            networks.

          8. The list of settings available for your network connection is shown.
            Set the Find Devices and Content switch to Off or On, depending on
            whether or not you want to turn on sharing.


          Another option would be to check your windows firewall settings to make sure that you are allowing incoming traffic over SMB. I believe the built in firewall rule you want to enable is called File and Printer Sharing (SMB In).



          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer
























          • Firewall seems to be okay, even if the firewall is disabled it wont work. And File Sharing is enabled

            – Jonathan W
            Feb 5 at 20:07











          • What happens if you right click on a file or folder, go to properties, manually share the folder then attempt to access it via \ipaddresssharedfolder. I would expect to get some sort of an error when trying to add a shared folder if SMB was somehow disabled? Is the machine on a domain by any chance?

            – Richie086
            Feb 6 at 19:58











          • Could you post the output of netstat -an in your original post?

            – Richie086
            Feb 6 at 19:59
















          0














          Which network profile are you using in Windows 10? I would try the following




          1. Open Settings.

          2. List item

          3. Click Network & Internet.

          4. The list of network and Internet related settings appears.

          5. Click Ethernet or Wi-Fi, depending on the type of network you’re
            connected to.


          6. Information about the network you’re connected to appears.


          7. If you’re connected to a wired network, click the name of the
            network you’re connected to. If you’re connected to a wireless
            network, click Advanced Options under the list of available wireless
            networks.

          8. The list of settings available for your network connection is shown.
            Set the Find Devices and Content switch to Off or On, depending on
            whether or not you want to turn on sharing.


          Another option would be to check your windows firewall settings to make sure that you are allowing incoming traffic over SMB. I believe the built in firewall rule you want to enable is called File and Printer Sharing (SMB In).



          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer
























          • Firewall seems to be okay, even if the firewall is disabled it wont work. And File Sharing is enabled

            – Jonathan W
            Feb 5 at 20:07











          • What happens if you right click on a file or folder, go to properties, manually share the folder then attempt to access it via \ipaddresssharedfolder. I would expect to get some sort of an error when trying to add a shared folder if SMB was somehow disabled? Is the machine on a domain by any chance?

            – Richie086
            Feb 6 at 19:58











          • Could you post the output of netstat -an in your original post?

            – Richie086
            Feb 6 at 19:59














          0












          0








          0







          Which network profile are you using in Windows 10? I would try the following




          1. Open Settings.

          2. List item

          3. Click Network & Internet.

          4. The list of network and Internet related settings appears.

          5. Click Ethernet or Wi-Fi, depending on the type of network you’re
            connected to.


          6. Information about the network you’re connected to appears.


          7. If you’re connected to a wired network, click the name of the
            network you’re connected to. If you’re connected to a wireless
            network, click Advanced Options under the list of available wireless
            networks.

          8. The list of settings available for your network connection is shown.
            Set the Find Devices and Content switch to Off or On, depending on
            whether or not you want to turn on sharing.


          Another option would be to check your windows firewall settings to make sure that you are allowing incoming traffic over SMB. I believe the built in firewall rule you want to enable is called File and Printer Sharing (SMB In).



          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer













          Which network profile are you using in Windows 10? I would try the following




          1. Open Settings.

          2. List item

          3. Click Network & Internet.

          4. The list of network and Internet related settings appears.

          5. Click Ethernet or Wi-Fi, depending on the type of network you’re
            connected to.


          6. Information about the network you’re connected to appears.


          7. If you’re connected to a wired network, click the name of the
            network you’re connected to. If you’re connected to a wireless
            network, click Advanced Options under the list of available wireless
            networks.

          8. The list of settings available for your network connection is shown.
            Set the Find Devices and Content switch to Off or On, depending on
            whether or not you want to turn on sharing.


          Another option would be to check your windows firewall settings to make sure that you are allowing incoming traffic over SMB. I believe the built in firewall rule you want to enable is called File and Printer Sharing (SMB In).



          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Feb 5 at 19:15









          Richie086Richie086

          3,61973255




          3,61973255













          • Firewall seems to be okay, even if the firewall is disabled it wont work. And File Sharing is enabled

            – Jonathan W
            Feb 5 at 20:07











          • What happens if you right click on a file or folder, go to properties, manually share the folder then attempt to access it via \ipaddresssharedfolder. I would expect to get some sort of an error when trying to add a shared folder if SMB was somehow disabled? Is the machine on a domain by any chance?

            – Richie086
            Feb 6 at 19:58











          • Could you post the output of netstat -an in your original post?

            – Richie086
            Feb 6 at 19:59



















          • Firewall seems to be okay, even if the firewall is disabled it wont work. And File Sharing is enabled

            – Jonathan W
            Feb 5 at 20:07











          • What happens if you right click on a file or folder, go to properties, manually share the folder then attempt to access it via \ipaddresssharedfolder. I would expect to get some sort of an error when trying to add a shared folder if SMB was somehow disabled? Is the machine on a domain by any chance?

            – Richie086
            Feb 6 at 19:58











          • Could you post the output of netstat -an in your original post?

            – Richie086
            Feb 6 at 19:59

















          Firewall seems to be okay, even if the firewall is disabled it wont work. And File Sharing is enabled

          – Jonathan W
          Feb 5 at 20:07





          Firewall seems to be okay, even if the firewall is disabled it wont work. And File Sharing is enabled

          – Jonathan W
          Feb 5 at 20:07













          What happens if you right click on a file or folder, go to properties, manually share the folder then attempt to access it via \ipaddresssharedfolder. I would expect to get some sort of an error when trying to add a shared folder if SMB was somehow disabled? Is the machine on a domain by any chance?

          – Richie086
          Feb 6 at 19:58





          What happens if you right click on a file or folder, go to properties, manually share the folder then attempt to access it via \ipaddresssharedfolder. I would expect to get some sort of an error when trying to add a shared folder if SMB was somehow disabled? Is the machine on a domain by any chance?

          – Richie086
          Feb 6 at 19:58













          Could you post the output of netstat -an in your original post?

          – Richie086
          Feb 6 at 19:59





          Could you post the output of netstat -an in your original post?

          – Richie086
          Feb 6 at 19:59


















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