unidan - my SMB2 has been active for most of this year at least, maybe even earlier. The VLC problem is NOT due to SMB1.What Felix mentioned should solve your issue, but in any case SMBv1 should be avoided as much as possible nowadays.
glnz, I don't see any SMB1 setting --- it's Windows 10, 64 bit, the latest version:
[...]
Naxos - I am curious whether your PC is running SMB1 and that's why you are connecting.
In regedit, go to
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\services\LanmanServer\Parameters
Look for the SMB1 key. If its DWORD value is 0, then it is off. If it is 1, then it is on.
Also curious whether your SMB2 is on. Same 0 off and 1 on.
Please let us know.
Thanks.
Do I need to turn on Windows features on first?Naxos - I didn't realize you were on 10. One more test for you -- please go to Windows Features (Start button and type Windows Features). There is an option box for "SMB 1.0/CIFS File Sharing Support", with three sub-options.
Is any of them checked (some SMB 1) or all off (no SMB 1)?
Thanks.
glnz, I won't mess with anything at this point... I was glad to get the VLC functionality back and I'll leave things as they are.Naxos - looks like your SMB 1 is on in your Win 10.
If you UNchecj the three SMB 1 boxes and reboot, does your VLC on iOS still connect?
You can then go back in to Windows Features and turn those boxes back on if you want although SMB 1 is supposed to be insecure.
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