![]() Pluuuuus, you can't provision new accounts from your MSP partner portal. BUT, you have to enter your username and password every single time you open a file. ![]() After a period of inactivity that connection will close and you get rejected the first time you try to browse the drive. The other maps a lettered drive to the Egnyte butt with WebDAV. One of them works just like OneDrive or Dropbox. You're left to figure out everything after that yourself.Īlso, that WebDAV thing I mentioned above: If you don't have the local appliance set up, there are several ways to access your butt files. Their build doc only explains how to provision the VM and join it to the domain. As administrator I don't have access to the ELC share that the VM creates, and there is no obvious way to give it to myself. Now I'm stuck trying to figure out how their share permissions work. The second time I built it, the networking was hosed and I couldn't connect to the management page to do anything with it. I ended up rebuilding it a third time with their senior engineer who found an obscure GPO which was preventing the domain join from happening. Neither of them could figure out what was going on and in the end, their advice was rebuilding the VM from scratch. I’ve already sunk six hours in to building the VM, mostly on the phone with their Level 1 and Level 2 support guys trying to get the VM to join to the domain. I am now building our second customer-facing deployment and it isn’t going well either. ![]() I spent about 30 hours over a weekend merging the three sets of data back together for the rollback (old on-prem Windows share, on-prem Egnyte share, cloud Egnyte) and it sucked badly. That client has millions of files and it was a 700GB set of files. It refused to remain a member of the domain, time wouldn’t stay synced, storage sync didn’t work, the web management portal was broken, the VM locked up, refused to boot, and finally the file system went senile and we just turned it off. The entire file system ended up becoming hosed and we had to roll back out of Egnyte completely because it was unusably damaged. Quite a bit of that was the fault of the engineer who deployed the product without much common sense, but the Egnyte VM was also extremely unstable. Our internal deployment works well enough (minus the annoying lack of WebDAV authentication persistence), but our first client deployment was an absolute catastrophe that caused us to lose that client. I’ve had a pretty bad experience with Egnyte so far.
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