RE: Access viewer



Depends on your Operating System...

In XP, Right mouse click on My Computer, click manage, drill down to
Sessions (under Shared folders), and click on Open Files. It will show
you who's accessing the files (they would need to have an account for it
to show up here) and what files are being accessed.

HTH,

Daniel

-----Original Message-----
From: kacrut [mailto:kacrut@xxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 4:18 AM
To: security-basics@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Access viewer

Dear all,


I would like to know if someone is accessing my computer. As far as i
know, by typing netstat (in M$)..i can see someone's IP connected to
my PC, but i don't know what is being accessed (like opening file,
etc...). Is there any way or any tool to view this? Any help would be
appreciated.

Sorry for my bad english and grammar... :)



Kacrut



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Well i did it again
    ... My Computer> Right Click Manage> Shared Folders> Sessions or Open files ... You might also want to check via Exchange system manager if users located ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.server.sbs)
  • Re: RDP to server not responding
    ... server still having issues. ... shared folders, Sessions and Open files, ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.server.general)
  • Re: Help-How to delete a .mdb file?
    ... found 'Shared Folders - Open Files' but the list is empty. ... I thought it was a file on a server. ... would work for locally opened files. ...
    (comp.databases.ms-access)
  • Re: where i can know what files & Tables are open from the Server by the user
    ... Excerpt from Windows Help: ... Using Shared Folders, you can view a summary of connections and resource use ... Macintosh users to share files and other resources, ... shares, sessions, and open files on the local computer. ...
    (microsoft.public.win2000.advanced_server)
  • Re: where i can know what files & Tables are open from the Server by the user
    ... > Using Shared Folders, you can view a summary of connections and resource ... In Windows 2000, Shared Folders replaces ... > Macintosh users to share files and other resources, ... > shares, sessions, and open files on the local computer. ...
    (microsoft.public.win2000.advanced_server)