![]() Note there is an update available for Windows XP/Vista for better support of WebDAV folders (Will be part of XP SP3 and Vista SP1). Click Finish to create the new drive letter.Click the blue link “Connect using a different username” to specify a different user account and password, than the Windows user account.Select the drive-letter and enter the WebDAV location in the Folder using the http address.Click the Map network drive button in the toolbar.Click on the Start menu and choose Computer.Windows Vista can create a network drive without needing to dive into the command line: Note Windows XP only supports SSL / https connections when using My Network Places, but can be tricked into using SSL with net use by creating a forward server using stunnel. If wanting to make a secure SSL mapping using the https protocol at port 443: Note Windows XP can only connect to port 80 and can only map to a sub folder and not the root directly. Note to make the mapping permanent add the parameter /persistent:yes ![]() Windows XP includes the WebClient service that allows one to mount a Web Folder as a mapped network drive: WebDAV is preferred when clients has to connect through an insecure network (like the Internet) to reach the remote server, as the remote server can be protected by a firewall and only leaving the HTTP port open and allows SSL instead of using VPN. Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) is an extension to the HTTP protocol, which makes it possible to manage files on a remote Web-Server.
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