Cannot map Synology WebDAV (HTTPS) share on Windows











up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1












I've tried everything from this post that applied as well as the answers from this post.



I can connect successfully with Kodi on Android as well as NetDrive on Windows.



I cannot connect with Kodi on Windows or by trying to map the drive to a letter or add a network location on Windows.



Path formulas I've tried:




  • https://blah.domain.net:custom_port

  • https://blah.domain.net:custom_port/share

  • \blah.domain.net:custom_port@SSLshare

  • \blah.domain.net@SSL:custom_portshare


I am very much in need of a free and or native mapping approach. From what I gather this may not be possible natively due to a crippled/bugged Windows authentication issue.



I am only concerned with Windows 7+.



I also ran through this:




You have to install your self-signed certificate first. Run Internet
Explorer with administrative rights (UAC won’t work!):




  • Enter your WebDAV URL

  • Click on Continue to this website (not recommended)

  • Click on Certificate Error in the red colored address bar

  • Click on View certificates

  • In the Certificate dialog, press Install Certificate

  • In the Certificate Import Wizard, click Next

  • On page 2 of the wizard, select Place all certificates in the following store and click Browse;

  • In the Select Certificate Store dialog, select Trusted Root Certification Authorities, click OK

  • In the wizard, click Next, click Finish

  • If a security message pops up, choose Yes











share|improve this question




























    up vote
    1
    down vote

    favorite
    1












    I've tried everything from this post that applied as well as the answers from this post.



    I can connect successfully with Kodi on Android as well as NetDrive on Windows.



    I cannot connect with Kodi on Windows or by trying to map the drive to a letter or add a network location on Windows.



    Path formulas I've tried:




    • https://blah.domain.net:custom_port

    • https://blah.domain.net:custom_port/share

    • \blah.domain.net:custom_port@SSLshare

    • \blah.domain.net@SSL:custom_portshare


    I am very much in need of a free and or native mapping approach. From what I gather this may not be possible natively due to a crippled/bugged Windows authentication issue.



    I am only concerned with Windows 7+.



    I also ran through this:




    You have to install your self-signed certificate first. Run Internet
    Explorer with administrative rights (UAC won’t work!):




    • Enter your WebDAV URL

    • Click on Continue to this website (not recommended)

    • Click on Certificate Error in the red colored address bar

    • Click on View certificates

    • In the Certificate dialog, press Install Certificate

    • In the Certificate Import Wizard, click Next

    • On page 2 of the wizard, select Place all certificates in the following store and click Browse;

    • In the Select Certificate Store dialog, select Trusted Root Certification Authorities, click OK

    • In the wizard, click Next, click Finish

    • If a security message pops up, choose Yes











    share|improve this question


























      up vote
      1
      down vote

      favorite
      1









      up vote
      1
      down vote

      favorite
      1






      1





      I've tried everything from this post that applied as well as the answers from this post.



      I can connect successfully with Kodi on Android as well as NetDrive on Windows.



      I cannot connect with Kodi on Windows or by trying to map the drive to a letter or add a network location on Windows.



      Path formulas I've tried:




      • https://blah.domain.net:custom_port

      • https://blah.domain.net:custom_port/share

      • \blah.domain.net:custom_port@SSLshare

      • \blah.domain.net@SSL:custom_portshare


      I am very much in need of a free and or native mapping approach. From what I gather this may not be possible natively due to a crippled/bugged Windows authentication issue.



      I am only concerned with Windows 7+.



      I also ran through this:




      You have to install your self-signed certificate first. Run Internet
      Explorer with administrative rights (UAC won’t work!):




      • Enter your WebDAV URL

      • Click on Continue to this website (not recommended)

      • Click on Certificate Error in the red colored address bar

      • Click on View certificates

      • In the Certificate dialog, press Install Certificate

      • In the Certificate Import Wizard, click Next

      • On page 2 of the wizard, select Place all certificates in the following store and click Browse;

      • In the Select Certificate Store dialog, select Trusted Root Certification Authorities, click OK

      • In the wizard, click Next, click Finish

      • If a security message pops up, choose Yes











      share|improve this question















      I've tried everything from this post that applied as well as the answers from this post.



      I can connect successfully with Kodi on Android as well as NetDrive on Windows.



      I cannot connect with Kodi on Windows or by trying to map the drive to a letter or add a network location on Windows.



      Path formulas I've tried:




      • https://blah.domain.net:custom_port

      • https://blah.domain.net:custom_port/share

      • \blah.domain.net:custom_port@SSLshare

      • \blah.domain.net@SSL:custom_portshare


      I am very much in need of a free and or native mapping approach. From what I gather this may not be possible natively due to a crippled/bugged Windows authentication issue.



      I am only concerned with Windows 7+.



      I also ran through this:




      You have to install your self-signed certificate first. Run Internet
      Explorer with administrative rights (UAC won’t work!):




      • Enter your WebDAV URL

      • Click on Continue to this website (not recommended)

      • Click on Certificate Error in the red colored address bar

      • Click on View certificates

      • In the Certificate dialog, press Install Certificate

      • In the Certificate Import Wizard, click Next

      • On page 2 of the wizard, select Place all certificates in the following store and click Browse;

      • In the Select Certificate Store dialog, select Trusted Root Certification Authorities, click OK

      • In the wizard, click Next, click Finish

      • If a security message pops up, choose Yes








      windows ssl https synology webdav






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:14









      Community

      1




      1










      asked Apr 8 '15 at 16:49









      Enigma

      2,31183359




      2,31183359






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          1
          down vote













          Not really the answer I was looking for and I would still like to find a real answer but for the time being I am mapping an SFTP share using the free SFTP Net Drive tool by Eldos which works well enough and should be about as secure as WebDAV HTTPS would be.



          Update:



          SFTP was also a rather dysfunctional solution.






          share|improve this answer






























            up vote
            1
            down vote













            Your issue seems to be that you use self-signed certificates, which require to somehow install your own root certificate to make it trusted by Windows. And that's the buggy part in Windows.



            Instead, it is simpler to circumvent this by installing "already trusted" LetsEncrypt certificates on your Synology WebDAV device – at least with the current software "Disk Station Manager" (DSM) 6.2.1, but probably also earlier versions.



            Here's a process how to use your Synology WebDAV device using custom Dynamic DNS (DDNS) and LetsEncrypt certificates. You could choose from any of the standard DDNS providers in the DSM interface, but the solution here is cheaper: just the cost of the domain itself.





            1. Register an account at a DNS hoster that provides Dynamic DNS for free, add a domain to that account, and enable Dynamic DNS for one of its subdomains.



              For example, this is possible with dd24.com as follows. You create DDNS subcomains for your domain under "Domains → My Domains → [select domain] → DynamicDNS".




            2. Use these instructions by Synology (in section "Setting Up a Customized DDNS Provider") to configure your DDNS domain for your WebDAV device. In the case of d24.com. the correct DDNS update URL format to enter would be one of these two (following documentation by dd24.com and the Synology help page linked above):



              https://dynamicdns.key-systems.net/update.php?hostname=__HOSTNAME__&password=__PASSWORD__&ip=auto
              https://dynamicdns.key-systems.net/update.php?hostname=__HOSTNAME__&password=__PASSWORD__&ip=__MYIP__


            3. Use these instructions by Synology (in section "Certificates from Let's Encrypt") to configure your WebDAV enabled device with LetsEncrypt certificates that are automatically updated every 90 days. These certificates will be served for WebDAV access for sure, because it uses the same port as HTTPS (i.e. 443).







            share|improve this answer





















            • I've personally lost all interest and need for WebDAV so I can't test or mark as accepted. I've upvoted and if someone else can vouch for this as a viable solution, I'll mark as accepted.
              – Enigma
              Dec 7 at 16:46


















            up vote
            0
            down vote













            I also have big problems with this. Nothing I do works, eventhough several youtube tutorials show how to do it in win10.



            NetDrive2 works though. After trial you can only map 1 share and limited to 100k/sec, But I don't need to do actual file transfers from server just manage the files so that's fine for me.
            Besides you can compliment it integrated google drive app for windows and windows integrated feature to map SFTP works also just fine.



            But somehow WebDAV seems to be a mystery unsolved for many, many users outthere.
            I'd love to know what these 3rd party apps do to circumvent the obstacles we face in windows 10.






            share|improve this answer





















            • Please don't leave answers stating that you have the same problem as the one described in the question. If you have sufficient reputation, you may upvote the question. Alternatively, "star" it as a favorite and you will be notified of any new answers.
              – DavidPostill
              May 11 '16 at 11:12











            Your Answer








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            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes








            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes








            up vote
            1
            down vote













            Not really the answer I was looking for and I would still like to find a real answer but for the time being I am mapping an SFTP share using the free SFTP Net Drive tool by Eldos which works well enough and should be about as secure as WebDAV HTTPS would be.



            Update:



            SFTP was also a rather dysfunctional solution.






            share|improve this answer



























              up vote
              1
              down vote













              Not really the answer I was looking for and I would still like to find a real answer but for the time being I am mapping an SFTP share using the free SFTP Net Drive tool by Eldos which works well enough and should be about as secure as WebDAV HTTPS would be.



              Update:



              SFTP was also a rather dysfunctional solution.






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                1
                down vote










                up vote
                1
                down vote









                Not really the answer I was looking for and I would still like to find a real answer but for the time being I am mapping an SFTP share using the free SFTP Net Drive tool by Eldos which works well enough and should be about as secure as WebDAV HTTPS would be.



                Update:



                SFTP was also a rather dysfunctional solution.






                share|improve this answer














                Not really the answer I was looking for and I would still like to find a real answer but for the time being I am mapping an SFTP share using the free SFTP Net Drive tool by Eldos which works well enough and should be about as secure as WebDAV HTTPS would be.



                Update:



                SFTP was also a rather dysfunctional solution.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Nov 3 '15 at 21:46

























                answered Apr 8 '15 at 18:51









                Enigma

                2,31183359




                2,31183359
























                    up vote
                    1
                    down vote













                    Your issue seems to be that you use self-signed certificates, which require to somehow install your own root certificate to make it trusted by Windows. And that's the buggy part in Windows.



                    Instead, it is simpler to circumvent this by installing "already trusted" LetsEncrypt certificates on your Synology WebDAV device – at least with the current software "Disk Station Manager" (DSM) 6.2.1, but probably also earlier versions.



                    Here's a process how to use your Synology WebDAV device using custom Dynamic DNS (DDNS) and LetsEncrypt certificates. You could choose from any of the standard DDNS providers in the DSM interface, but the solution here is cheaper: just the cost of the domain itself.





                    1. Register an account at a DNS hoster that provides Dynamic DNS for free, add a domain to that account, and enable Dynamic DNS for one of its subdomains.



                      For example, this is possible with dd24.com as follows. You create DDNS subcomains for your domain under "Domains → My Domains → [select domain] → DynamicDNS".




                    2. Use these instructions by Synology (in section "Setting Up a Customized DDNS Provider") to configure your DDNS domain for your WebDAV device. In the case of d24.com. the correct DDNS update URL format to enter would be one of these two (following documentation by dd24.com and the Synology help page linked above):



                      https://dynamicdns.key-systems.net/update.php?hostname=__HOSTNAME__&password=__PASSWORD__&ip=auto
                      https://dynamicdns.key-systems.net/update.php?hostname=__HOSTNAME__&password=__PASSWORD__&ip=__MYIP__


                    3. Use these instructions by Synology (in section "Certificates from Let's Encrypt") to configure your WebDAV enabled device with LetsEncrypt certificates that are automatically updated every 90 days. These certificates will be served for WebDAV access for sure, because it uses the same port as HTTPS (i.e. 443).







                    share|improve this answer





















                    • I've personally lost all interest and need for WebDAV so I can't test or mark as accepted. I've upvoted and if someone else can vouch for this as a viable solution, I'll mark as accepted.
                      – Enigma
                      Dec 7 at 16:46















                    up vote
                    1
                    down vote













                    Your issue seems to be that you use self-signed certificates, which require to somehow install your own root certificate to make it trusted by Windows. And that's the buggy part in Windows.



                    Instead, it is simpler to circumvent this by installing "already trusted" LetsEncrypt certificates on your Synology WebDAV device – at least with the current software "Disk Station Manager" (DSM) 6.2.1, but probably also earlier versions.



                    Here's a process how to use your Synology WebDAV device using custom Dynamic DNS (DDNS) and LetsEncrypt certificates. You could choose from any of the standard DDNS providers in the DSM interface, but the solution here is cheaper: just the cost of the domain itself.





                    1. Register an account at a DNS hoster that provides Dynamic DNS for free, add a domain to that account, and enable Dynamic DNS for one of its subdomains.



                      For example, this is possible with dd24.com as follows. You create DDNS subcomains for your domain under "Domains → My Domains → [select domain] → DynamicDNS".




                    2. Use these instructions by Synology (in section "Setting Up a Customized DDNS Provider") to configure your DDNS domain for your WebDAV device. In the case of d24.com. the correct DDNS update URL format to enter would be one of these two (following documentation by dd24.com and the Synology help page linked above):



                      https://dynamicdns.key-systems.net/update.php?hostname=__HOSTNAME__&password=__PASSWORD__&ip=auto
                      https://dynamicdns.key-systems.net/update.php?hostname=__HOSTNAME__&password=__PASSWORD__&ip=__MYIP__


                    3. Use these instructions by Synology (in section "Certificates from Let's Encrypt") to configure your WebDAV enabled device with LetsEncrypt certificates that are automatically updated every 90 days. These certificates will be served for WebDAV access for sure, because it uses the same port as HTTPS (i.e. 443).







                    share|improve this answer





















                    • I've personally lost all interest and need for WebDAV so I can't test or mark as accepted. I've upvoted and if someone else can vouch for this as a viable solution, I'll mark as accepted.
                      – Enigma
                      Dec 7 at 16:46













                    up vote
                    1
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    1
                    down vote









                    Your issue seems to be that you use self-signed certificates, which require to somehow install your own root certificate to make it trusted by Windows. And that's the buggy part in Windows.



                    Instead, it is simpler to circumvent this by installing "already trusted" LetsEncrypt certificates on your Synology WebDAV device – at least with the current software "Disk Station Manager" (DSM) 6.2.1, but probably also earlier versions.



                    Here's a process how to use your Synology WebDAV device using custom Dynamic DNS (DDNS) and LetsEncrypt certificates. You could choose from any of the standard DDNS providers in the DSM interface, but the solution here is cheaper: just the cost of the domain itself.





                    1. Register an account at a DNS hoster that provides Dynamic DNS for free, add a domain to that account, and enable Dynamic DNS for one of its subdomains.



                      For example, this is possible with dd24.com as follows. You create DDNS subcomains for your domain under "Domains → My Domains → [select domain] → DynamicDNS".




                    2. Use these instructions by Synology (in section "Setting Up a Customized DDNS Provider") to configure your DDNS domain for your WebDAV device. In the case of d24.com. the correct DDNS update URL format to enter would be one of these two (following documentation by dd24.com and the Synology help page linked above):



                      https://dynamicdns.key-systems.net/update.php?hostname=__HOSTNAME__&password=__PASSWORD__&ip=auto
                      https://dynamicdns.key-systems.net/update.php?hostname=__HOSTNAME__&password=__PASSWORD__&ip=__MYIP__


                    3. Use these instructions by Synology (in section "Certificates from Let's Encrypt") to configure your WebDAV enabled device with LetsEncrypt certificates that are automatically updated every 90 days. These certificates will be served for WebDAV access for sure, because it uses the same port as HTTPS (i.e. 443).







                    share|improve this answer












                    Your issue seems to be that you use self-signed certificates, which require to somehow install your own root certificate to make it trusted by Windows. And that's the buggy part in Windows.



                    Instead, it is simpler to circumvent this by installing "already trusted" LetsEncrypt certificates on your Synology WebDAV device – at least with the current software "Disk Station Manager" (DSM) 6.2.1, but probably also earlier versions.



                    Here's a process how to use your Synology WebDAV device using custom Dynamic DNS (DDNS) and LetsEncrypt certificates. You could choose from any of the standard DDNS providers in the DSM interface, but the solution here is cheaper: just the cost of the domain itself.





                    1. Register an account at a DNS hoster that provides Dynamic DNS for free, add a domain to that account, and enable Dynamic DNS for one of its subdomains.



                      For example, this is possible with dd24.com as follows. You create DDNS subcomains for your domain under "Domains → My Domains → [select domain] → DynamicDNS".




                    2. Use these instructions by Synology (in section "Setting Up a Customized DDNS Provider") to configure your DDNS domain for your WebDAV device. In the case of d24.com. the correct DDNS update URL format to enter would be one of these two (following documentation by dd24.com and the Synology help page linked above):



                      https://dynamicdns.key-systems.net/update.php?hostname=__HOSTNAME__&password=__PASSWORD__&ip=auto
                      https://dynamicdns.key-systems.net/update.php?hostname=__HOSTNAME__&password=__PASSWORD__&ip=__MYIP__


                    3. Use these instructions by Synology (in section "Certificates from Let's Encrypt") to configure your WebDAV enabled device with LetsEncrypt certificates that are automatically updated every 90 days. These certificates will be served for WebDAV access for sure, because it uses the same port as HTTPS (i.e. 443).








                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Dec 7 at 2:05









                    tanius

                    4201513




                    4201513












                    • I've personally lost all interest and need for WebDAV so I can't test or mark as accepted. I've upvoted and if someone else can vouch for this as a viable solution, I'll mark as accepted.
                      – Enigma
                      Dec 7 at 16:46


















                    • I've personally lost all interest and need for WebDAV so I can't test or mark as accepted. I've upvoted and if someone else can vouch for this as a viable solution, I'll mark as accepted.
                      – Enigma
                      Dec 7 at 16:46
















                    I've personally lost all interest and need for WebDAV so I can't test or mark as accepted. I've upvoted and if someone else can vouch for this as a viable solution, I'll mark as accepted.
                    – Enigma
                    Dec 7 at 16:46




                    I've personally lost all interest and need for WebDAV so I can't test or mark as accepted. I've upvoted and if someone else can vouch for this as a viable solution, I'll mark as accepted.
                    – Enigma
                    Dec 7 at 16:46










                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote













                    I also have big problems with this. Nothing I do works, eventhough several youtube tutorials show how to do it in win10.



                    NetDrive2 works though. After trial you can only map 1 share and limited to 100k/sec, But I don't need to do actual file transfers from server just manage the files so that's fine for me.
                    Besides you can compliment it integrated google drive app for windows and windows integrated feature to map SFTP works also just fine.



                    But somehow WebDAV seems to be a mystery unsolved for many, many users outthere.
                    I'd love to know what these 3rd party apps do to circumvent the obstacles we face in windows 10.






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • Please don't leave answers stating that you have the same problem as the one described in the question. If you have sufficient reputation, you may upvote the question. Alternatively, "star" it as a favorite and you will be notified of any new answers.
                      – DavidPostill
                      May 11 '16 at 11:12















                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote













                    I also have big problems with this. Nothing I do works, eventhough several youtube tutorials show how to do it in win10.



                    NetDrive2 works though. After trial you can only map 1 share and limited to 100k/sec, But I don't need to do actual file transfers from server just manage the files so that's fine for me.
                    Besides you can compliment it integrated google drive app for windows and windows integrated feature to map SFTP works also just fine.



                    But somehow WebDAV seems to be a mystery unsolved for many, many users outthere.
                    I'd love to know what these 3rd party apps do to circumvent the obstacles we face in windows 10.






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • Please don't leave answers stating that you have the same problem as the one described in the question. If you have sufficient reputation, you may upvote the question. Alternatively, "star" it as a favorite and you will be notified of any new answers.
                      – DavidPostill
                      May 11 '16 at 11:12













                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote









                    I also have big problems with this. Nothing I do works, eventhough several youtube tutorials show how to do it in win10.



                    NetDrive2 works though. After trial you can only map 1 share and limited to 100k/sec, But I don't need to do actual file transfers from server just manage the files so that's fine for me.
                    Besides you can compliment it integrated google drive app for windows and windows integrated feature to map SFTP works also just fine.



                    But somehow WebDAV seems to be a mystery unsolved for many, many users outthere.
                    I'd love to know what these 3rd party apps do to circumvent the obstacles we face in windows 10.






                    share|improve this answer












                    I also have big problems with this. Nothing I do works, eventhough several youtube tutorials show how to do it in win10.



                    NetDrive2 works though. After trial you can only map 1 share and limited to 100k/sec, But I don't need to do actual file transfers from server just manage the files so that's fine for me.
                    Besides you can compliment it integrated google drive app for windows and windows integrated feature to map SFTP works also just fine.



                    But somehow WebDAV seems to be a mystery unsolved for many, many users outthere.
                    I'd love to know what these 3rd party apps do to circumvent the obstacles we face in windows 10.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered May 10 '16 at 13:18









                    David Larsen

                    1




                    1












                    • Please don't leave answers stating that you have the same problem as the one described in the question. If you have sufficient reputation, you may upvote the question. Alternatively, "star" it as a favorite and you will be notified of any new answers.
                      – DavidPostill
                      May 11 '16 at 11:12


















                    • Please don't leave answers stating that you have the same problem as the one described in the question. If you have sufficient reputation, you may upvote the question. Alternatively, "star" it as a favorite and you will be notified of any new answers.
                      – DavidPostill
                      May 11 '16 at 11:12
















                    Please don't leave answers stating that you have the same problem as the one described in the question. If you have sufficient reputation, you may upvote the question. Alternatively, "star" it as a favorite and you will be notified of any new answers.
                    – DavidPostill
                    May 11 '16 at 11:12




                    Please don't leave answers stating that you have the same problem as the one described in the question. If you have sufficient reputation, you may upvote the question. Alternatively, "star" it as a favorite and you will be notified of any new answers.
                    – DavidPostill
                    May 11 '16 at 11:12


















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