You may need to add an endpoint to open that port. Is it classic vm or new one 
on the new portal?


________________________________
From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com <ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com> on behalf 
of Greg Keogh <gfke...@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, 29 February 2016 8:13 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: Azure File Storage

I'm googletarded, but I did find this way down a page:

Are Azure File shares visible publicly over the Internet, or are they only 
reachable from Azure?

As long as port 445 (TCP Outbound) is open and your client supports the SMB 3.0 
protocol (e.g., Windows 8 or Windows Server 2012), your file share is available 
via the Internet.


Sounds great! However, my net use command gives error 53 from my home Win10 
machine with no firewall active, and I get error 5 (access denied) from a 
Win2008R2 Azure VM that I just created. Snookered from both directions! The 
CloudBerry product is interesting, but I want to avoid foreign software 
whenever possible.


GK

On 29 February 2016 at 11:05, David Burstin 
<david.burs...@gmail.com<mailto:david.burs...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hi Greg,

A quick search seems to indicate that 
http://www.cloudberrylab.com/windows-azure-cloud-drive-desktop-software.aspx 
can deal with this, for $30 per machine. I haven't found anything else that 
does, but your Google-fu may be better than mine.

Cheers
Dave

On 29 February 2016 at 10:53, Greg Keogh 
<gfke...@gmail.com<mailto:gfke...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Folks, I just read about Azure File Storage and I got all excited at the 
possibility of creating a familiar mapped drive letter to the cloud. In the 
portal I created the File share, uploaded some files and issued a net use 
command which failed with error 53. It turns out I didn't read the fine print 
in my excitement, which says:

To connect to this file share, run this command from any Windows virtual 
machine on the same subscription and location

So you can't just mount it from your home PC, only from a suitable VM. I 
suppose there are security and performance issues, but it's a damn shame as we 
could really have put this to good use as a kind of "giant file share" for apps 
written in C++ with no code changes.

I just want to be sure that this is all true and there's not some less 
restrictive way of using Azure File Storage. Is there some other magic way of 
having a file share in the cloud from anywhere?

Greg K


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