Consider the following scenario:Additionally, the user does not have access to the mapped drive.
Note When this issue occurs, only users who make the network path available offline can revert the redirected folder or the mapped drive back to the online state.
- You configure the following Folder Redirection Group Policy setting to use a network location as the redirected path of user folders:GPO name\User Configuration\Policies\Windows Settings\Folder RedirectionNotes
- User folders include the Documents folder.
- You can use the Group Policy Management Console (GPMC) to locate Group Policy settings.
- You disable the following Do not automatically make redirected folders available offline Group Policy setting to make the redirected folder available offline: GPO name\User Configuration\Administrative Templates\System\Folder Redirection
- You configure the following Configure slow-link mode Group Policy setting to use the slow-link mode for the redirected folders when the network latency is greater than a specified value:Computer Configuration\Policies\Administrative Templates\Network\Offline FilesNote By default, all redirected folders are set to offline mode if the network latency is longer than 80 milliseconds (ms).
- A user logs on to a client computer that is running Windows 7 or Windows Server 2008 R2.
- The user uses a redirected folder to transfers files.
- The network latency is greater than the specified value.
- The redirected folder is transitioned to offline mode that is also known as the slow-connection mode, and the redirected folder is available offline.
- The user maps a local drive on the client computer to a network share.
- The user makes the network share available offline and uses Windows Explorer to set the network share to offline mode.
- The user logs off from the client computer.
- Another user logs on to the client computer. This user has not previously logged on to this client computer.
You do not have permissions to access \\DFS root\.
Note When this issue occurs, only users who make the network path available offline can revert the redirected folder or the mapped drive back to the online state.