Can someone look at the messages below? What are the NTFS
permissions he talks about, and where are they? I've
already configured the IIS manager.
I have a virtual directory and in IIS manager all
subfolders and itself
Anonymous has access. But in NTFS permissions I have
given only two
accounts permissions in some of these folders; System;
Administrator. If
someone on the Internet tried to access these folders they
get the prompt
you mention. So in your case I'd look at the permissions
in IIS manager AND
the NTFS permissions.
--
George Hester
__________________________________
"Gemini Man" <gfgeminiman019@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:059701c35e33$99bbf180$a301280a@phx.gbl...
> Hey I'm just gonna post my old message.
>
> Ok I've already done that. WHen I was looking at my IIS
> console though next to my computer name there is a
heading
> that says "local" and in the same column as my computer
it
> says "yes". COuld this be the problem and how would I go
> about fixing it.
>
>
> >-----Original Message-----
> >Did you enable "Anonymous Authentication" in the IIS MMC
> Snapin for the
> >website in question?
> >(website properties -> directory security -> anonymous -
>
> edit button ->
> >check enable anonymous authentication).
> >
> >The user account that's specified there (usually
> IUSR_<machinename>), does
> >it have RX NTFS permissions to the files in your
website?
> >
> >Cheers
> >Ken
> >
> >"Gemini Man" <gfgeminiman019@yahoo.com> wrote in message
> >news:008501c35d60$845a2650$a001280a@phx.gbl...
> >: Yo, I'm running IIS 4.0 on my computer and everything
> >: works fine on the intranet but when people on
different
> >: computers try to connect it gives them a security box
> >: called "enter network password" and prompts them for a
> >: username and password. How do I get rid of this box so
> >: people can go to my site?