Ah, thank you! $ gvfs-mount ftp://servername promts me to enter username and password and works then.
$ gvfs-ls -a "standard::target-uri" network:/// dnssd-domain-cookbook._sftp-ssh._tcp 0 (shortcut) standard::target-uri=sftp://192.168.2.110:22/ ("cookbook" is the servername. [it's my kitchen notebook. ;-)]) So I'm even more confused now, is my server ftp or sftp? (standard vsftp setup with "allow local users") And, to get to my initial question again: What can be done to connect to it via the "browse network" function in nautilus? 2014-07-16 14:15 GMT+02:00 Ross Lagerwall <rosslagerw...@gmail.com>: > On Wed, Jul 16, 2014 at 8:35 AM, Bazon Bloch <bazonbl...@arcor.de> wrote: > > this isn't too bad, as the "connect to server" option works flawlessly, > but > > anyway, if a FTP server is shown in the "browse network" view, it would > be > > nice to be able to connect to it. > > > > So what could lead to this connection refuse? > > > > I have the gvfs package installed, and even created anonymous user access > > without password to one of the FTP server, but that didn't lead to > success. > > Via terminal, I get: > > $ gvfs-mount sftp://servername > > Error mounting location: Verbindung wurde vom Server verweigert > [connection > > refused by server] > > > > FYI: I use vsftp as server and use arch-linux with nautilus 3.12.2-1. > > > > What is the output of: gvfs-ls -a "standard::target-uri" network:/// > That should show what Nautilus is trying to connect to when you double > click on the ftp server. > > It also looks like you're confusing SFTP and FTP to some degree. > gvfs-mount sftp://server tries to connect to an SFTP server so it's > not surprising that it fails. > > Cheers > -- > Ross Lagerwall >
-- nautilus-list mailing list nautilus-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/nautilus-list