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So why can't I share links?īecause you don't access the file through smb://server-foo/share-bar/filename.txt (ignoring authentication). The last line confirms it - "Network Share" is already mounted and can't be mounted again. dev/disk3s2 on /Volumes/FreeAgent Go (hfs, local, nodev, nosuid, journaled, on /Volumes/Network Share (smbfs, nodev, nosuid, mounted by allan)
Mac mount synology drive for mac#
dev/disk4s2 on /Volumes/My Passport for Mac (hfs, local, nodev, nosuid, journaled) dev/disk5s1 on /Volumes/MUSIC (msdos, local, nodev, nosuid, noowners)
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Map auto_home on /home (autofs, automounted, nobrowse) Map -hosts on /net (autofs, nosuid, automounted, nobrowse) Issuing the mount command gives us: $ mount
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When I try to mount again using "Connect to Server" ( ⌘ Command K and just connecting directly to the server with no share specified, you can see that it's greyed out. Using my SMB mounts on a Synology Diskstation, as another example, I have the share "Network Share" already mounted. If that name exists, you will get the following path /Volumes/Video(1) and if that exists, (2) and so on. Using your example, the first time you send the link smb://HAL9000/Video, it will issue the following command: `mount_smbfs /Volumes/Video` When Finder "sees" the smb:// it invokes the mount_smbfs command behind the scenes and creates a mount point in the /Volumes/ sub-folder. In Windows, you can "map" a network drive to a share, but in Unix, you have to mount it. The UNC share isn't " mounted" like it is in Unix where " everything's a file". SMB or Server Message Block is a Microsoft Windows technology so it stands to reason that sharing links to SMB shares (or as Microsoft calls them, network shares) is baked into the OS. Unfortunately, this is not how macOS works.