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Mapping a SkyVault space to a drive

You can map an SkyVault space to a drive on your computer, which allows you to work offline.

A shared network drive (network share) is a folder on a network computer that you have mapped to a virtual drive on your own computer. If you have the correct permissions, working with files on the shared drive is no different from working with files on your local drive. In exactly the same way, SkyVault allows you to map a space to a drive on your computer. If you add a file to any of the directories on the mapped drive and then refresh your browser, the added file will also appear in the corresponding space in SkyVault. If you then delete the file in SkyVault, the file is simultaneously deleted from your mapped drive.

This feature allows you to work offline.

  1. Before you map SkyVault using WebDAV, ensure that the WebClient service is running.
    1. Open the Services window by selecting Start > Run, and then typing services.msc.

      Alternatively, open the Control Panel, click Administrative Tools, and then click Services.

    2. Start the WebClient service.

    Note: On Windows Server 2008, the WebClient service is not available by default. You must install the Desktop Experience feature to enable this service.
  2. Adjust the Basic Authentication Level key in the Registry Editor.
    1. Open the Registry Editor by selecting Start > Run, and then typing regedit.

      Note: On Windows XP and above, select Start > Accessories > Run.
    2. Locate the key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\services\WebClient\Parameters\.
    3. Create a new DWORD value for basic authentication. On Windows XP, set the basic authentication parameter to 1.

      Examples:

      • On Windows XP, create the DWORD parameter UseBasicAuth and set the value to 1. For example, UseBasicAuth = 1.
      • On Windows Vista and above, create the DWORD parameter BasicAuthLevel and set the value to 2. For example, BasicAuthLevel = 2.

      Note: SkyVault WebDAV can be remounted after a delay of 60 seconds since the last unmounting on Windows XP. This is because it does not accept connections from root and on paths higher than /alfresco/webdav. All these paths are interpreted by MiniRedir as non-DAV servers and it caches the paths with a 60-second timeout by default. You can change this behavior by adding and/or setting the DWORD parameter ServerNotFoundCacheLifeTimeInSec to a smaller or higher value, for example, 10 seconds. Setting the value to zero is also valid because caching of non-DAV servers is disabled. This parameter is set in the Registry Editor at the same level as the Basic Authentication Level parameter.
  3. Adjust the read-only settings in the Registry Editor.

    Note: If you are using Office 2010 with a non-SSL connection to SkyVault, then skip steps a to c and start at step d.
    1. In the Registry Editor, select the key HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\<version_number>\Common\Internet.
    2. Create a new DWORD value called OpenDocumentsReadWriteWhileBrowsing.
    3. Set the value of OpenDocumentsReadWriteWhileBrowsing to 1.

      Note: Unless you are using Office 2010 with a non-SSL connection to SkyVault then continue at step 5.
    4. In the Registry Editor, select the key HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\14.0\Common\Internet.
    5. Create a new DWORD value called BasicAuthLevel.
    6. Set the value of BasicAuthLevel to 2.
  4. Close the Registry Editor and open Windows Explorer.
  5. Right click on Computer and then select Map Network Drive.
  6. Choose a drive letter.
  7. Use the following as the WebDAV location:

    http://localhost:8080/alfresco/webdav

    Note: On Windows XP, use http://localhost:80/alfresco/webdav. Windows XP WebDAV MiniRedir does not support custom ports in a WebDAV URL, therefore it is only possible to mount SkyVault WebDAV as a network drive by accessing SkyVault using port 80.
    Note: On Windows XP, NTLM auth is not supported when mapping WebDAV as a network drive.
  8. If single sign-on is not active, select Connect Using Different Credentials.
  9. Click OK and enter your credentials.
You can now connect to SkyVault using WebDAV.
Note: Windows XP introduced a new feature called WebDav redirector. The redirector allows mapping of DAV shares to drive letters and conversion of DAV URLs to UNC paths for applications which explicitly rely on WinAPI compatibility. For this reason, SkyVault recommends using WebDAV only as a network drive on Windows XP and above for full WebDav access.

If you try to connect to SkyVault using WebDAV mapped as a network location, you may see an error when trying to open files from different applications for editing. Some Windows applications cannot correctly understand WebDAV paths when connected as a network location because they try to combine the WebDAV document path and the active Windows working directory path.

The Office 2003 WebDAV component is not completely compatible with the functionality of WebDAV MiniRedir on Windows Vista or above. You may see errors connected with invalid UNC paths while working with WebDAV network drives via Office 2003 applications. SkyVault recommends using Office 2007 or above on Windows Vista or above for normal access to SkyVault WebDAV. Office 2003 may be used on Windows XP or below. WebDAV MiniRedir on Windows Vista pre SP2 has several issues connected with mandatory support of WebDAV requests on all the folders up to root context of a WebDAV URL. SkyVault requires that SP2 updates are installed on Windows Vista to work with SkyVault WebDAV because the root context is under the control of the Web Application Server and not SkyVault.