olav Posted September 1, 2009 Share Posted September 1, 2009 When I connect from snow leopard to an AFP server using leopard it takes quite a lot more time than from leo to leo. I tested from snow leo to snow leo as well, and it is faster as well. Anyone having the same experience or knows how to solve it? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
paulicat Posted September 2, 2009 Share Posted September 2, 2009 Im having the same issue in the same scenario you are...I think its a regression in SL. No clue how to fix it though. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
olav Posted September 3, 2009 Author Share Posted September 3, 2009 I solved it by changing the authentication from "any method" to "standard" in the AFP server, and now it is as fast as before . Kerberos authentication was slow as well. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
paulicat Posted September 3, 2009 Share Posted September 3, 2009 Thanks, I'll give that a try. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
121fred Posted September 6, 2009 Share Posted September 6, 2009 I solved it by changing the authentication from "any method" to "standard" in the AFP server, and now it is as fast as before . Kerberos authentication was slow as well. Hi how exactly do you do this? I'm having problems with very very slow afp authentication on snow. Guest access no problem but authentication is poor Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
olav Posted September 6, 2009 Author Share Posted September 6, 2009 Hi how exactly do you do this? I'm having problems with very very slow afp authentication on snow. Guest access no problem but authentication is poor Thanks I'm running leopard server so it was easy to change it in the server admin program, in the AFP service tab. Maybe it's possible to do it via terminal on a regular leopard install, or change settings in some text file. However, the documentation is not great on this part, I wanted to disable the default admin access to the boot volume on another leopard install for example, but could not find out where to edit the settings. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
121fred Posted September 7, 2009 Share Posted September 7, 2009 I'm running leopard server so it was easy to change it in the server admin program, in the AFP service tab. Maybe it's possible to do it via terminal on a regular leopard install, or change settings in some text file. However, the documentation is not great on this part, I wanted to disable the default admin access to the boot volume on another leopard install for example, but could not find out where to edit the settings. Thanks, I'll play around as I'm still unimpressed with the authentication time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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