I managed Apple Servers for years. Would not be the first time that a mount 
point went south, and when it does, yeah you get a lot of wierdness. It used to 
be you had to go to the folder that contained the dynamic links to the mount 
points and delete the bad ones. Now when you reboot it flushes all your prior 
mount points.

Bob S


On May 5, 2016, at 12:09 , Sannyasin Brahmanathaswami 
<bra...@hindu.org<mailto:bra...@hindu.org>> wrote:

Rebooting the machine and remounting that remote volume works.  There was some 
bizzare “version” of the remote machine mounted invisibly… because even after 
ejecting the one from the desk top in Terminal I could still see that volume 
mounted.

I suspect someone logged into the server once, then someone else came along and 
logged in a second time with a different user/permissions. Livecode was acting 
as the active user of that machine, but did not have permission to view the 
server because the volume being addressed by my shell scripts had been mounted 
as a different user.

Weird… reboot/remount volume

Works now.

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