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| /home/USER/experiment u123456 PASSWORD | | /home/USER/experiment u123456 PASSWORD |
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− | = Nautilus = | + | == Nautilus == |
| Type ctrl-L to open the address bar. Type the address: davs://u123456@exp.socsci.ru.nl/experiment/webdav.php. A popup will appear for the password. | | Type ctrl-L to open the address bar. Type the address: davs://u123456@exp.socsci.ru.nl/experiment/webdav.php. A popup will appear for the password. |
| | | |
− | = Dolphin = | + | == Dolphin == |
| Click the address bar. Type the address: webdavs://u123456@exp.socsci.ru.nl/experiment/webdav.php. A popup will appear for the password. | | Click the address bar. Type the address: webdavs://u123456@exp.socsci.ru.nl/experiment/webdav.php. A popup will appear for the password. |
| | | |
− | = Cyberduck = | + | = Microsoft Windows = |
− | If you use Microsoft windows, Cyberduck is probably the best choice for mounting a webdav resource. See the image for how to enter information about the mount. | + | One can use the Microsoft Windows '''Map Network Drive''' feature to assign a drive letter. No special Windows program is needed to do this. It is an operating system feature. Note that there are quite a few [https://sabre.io/dav/clients/windows/ issues]. If you use Microsoft Windows it is usually a better idea to use an external program for accessing a webdav drive. Among other things, if the mount is not in the root directory of the server (http://example.com/mydir) but at a deeper level (http://example.com/superdir/mydir) using the microsoft operating system feature will probably not work. |
| + | [[File:Map windows webdav.png|thumb|Mapping a network drive in Microsoft Windows]] |
| + | |
| + | == Cyberduck == |
| + | If you use Microsoft windows, Cyberduck is the most popular way to mount a webdav resource. See the image for how to enter information about the mount. |
| [[File:Mount webdav cyberduck.png|thumb|Mounting a webdav filesystem in cyberduck]] | | [[File:Mount webdav cyberduck.png|thumb|Mounting a webdav filesystem in cyberduck]] |
| | | |
− | = Microsoft Windows = | + | == KS2 drive == |
− | One can use the Microsoft Windows """Map Network Drive""" feature to assign a drive letter. No special Windows program is needed to do this. It is an operating system feature. Note that there are quite a few [https://sabre.io/dav/clients/windows/ issues]. If you use Microsoft Windows it is usually a better idea to use an external program for accessing a webdav drive. Among other things, if the mount is not in the root directory of the server (http://example.com/mydir) but at a deeper level (http://example.com/superdir/mydir) using the microsoft operating system feature will probably not work.
| + | If you want data to be synchronized automatically you can use |
− | [[File:Map windows webdav.png|thumb|Mapping a network drive in Microsoft Windows]]
| + | [https://github.com/FrKaram/KS2.Drive KS2 drive]. It is the same program that Utrecht university calls Yoda drive and for which the Donders Institute has an |
| + | [https://data.donders.ru.nl/doc/help/user-manual/transfer-data/YodaDrive.html?3&highlight=yoda intranet page]. It integrates nicely with the classical Windows system with drive letters. |
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| = Mac OSX = | | = Mac OSX = |
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| [[File:Finder connecttoserver login.jpg|thumb|Mapping a network drive in OSX using Finder]] | | [[File:Finder connecttoserver login.jpg|thumb|Mapping a network drive in OSX using Finder]] |
| | | |
− | = References = | + | Alternatively Cyberduck (see Windows) also works for OSX. |
| + | |
| + | == References == |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SabreDAV | | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SabreDAV |