

- SETTING UP WEBDAV SERVER MAC OS X SERVER 720P
- SETTING UP WEBDAV SERVER MAC OS X SERVER CODE
- SETTING UP WEBDAV SERVER MAC OS X SERVER PASSWORD
- SETTING UP WEBDAV SERVER MAC OS X SERVER DOWNLOAD
- SETTING UP WEBDAV SERVER MAC OS X SERVER FREE
You can configure application-level security if you want everyone who accesses the WebDAV server to effectively log in as the same user with no password. (Each WebDAV server is connected to a database, and each database is in turn connected to a security database in which security objects such as users are stored.) The server authenticates users with user IDs and passwords stored in the security database for that WebDAV server, and the server controls access to objects in the database with privileges and roles. WebDAV servers follow the MarkLogic Server security model, as do HTTP, ODBC, and XDBC servers. For an example of this configuration, see Example: Setting Up a WebDAV Server to Add/Modify Documents Used By Another Server.
SETTING UP WEBDAV SERVER MAC OS X SERVER CODE
Then, you can edit code from the WebDAV server that executes from an HTTP, ODBC, or XDBC server. You can, however, configure a database as the Modules database of an HTTP, ODBC, or XDBC server and you can configure the same database for access from a WebDAV server. Unlike an HTTP server, there is no Modules database for a WebDAV server. When accessing a database via a WebDAV server, you cannot execute XQuery code. When you add a document via a WebDAV client (by dragging and dropping, for example), you are actually loading a document directly into the database. The database is also accessible via WebDAV clients for reading, modifying, deleting, and adding documents.

Documents stored in that database are accessible for reading via HTTP. In the Admin Interface, you configure a WebDAV server to access a database. When a document is read or written via WebDAV, all of its associated data, such as properties, metadata, collections, and so on are also transferred with the document. Each WebDAV server provides access to a single database for reading and writing (dependent on the needed security permissions). In MarkLogic Server, WebDAV servers are defined at the group level and apply to all hosts within the group.

So that tells me that something w/ SMB protocol is jamming the atv2 or something from 10.6 OS X. I then decided to pull over my largest encoded video, ~4.5GB 1080i 'The Last Airbender' and I watched for 15mins skipping scenes and testing it out, works perfectly. Today I installed MediaMaster Server from app store onto my iMac 10.7 OS, then plugged in the info on XBMC-AppleTV2ndGen and started it up and loaded movies very fast, streaming without any buffering or trouble. After changing every setting in my router, going completely wired 1000gbps to the router on both machine and atv2, I realized it was doomed.
SETTING UP WEBDAV SERVER MAC OS X SERVER 720P
In the past, with my AppleTV2 and SMB served on iMac running 10.6.8, I was not able to play 720p or 1080i videos, it would constantly buffer and the stream became horribly, unwatchable. Just updated to 10.7 Lion, completely lost SMB, finally installed a Webdav server and have excellent results to share: The minimum requirements state 10.5, so 10.6 users can test it out to see if it will be a solution for them before updating.
SETTING UP WEBDAV SERVER MAC OS X SERVER PASSWORD
You set the folder you want to share, you can set a username and a password (optional), port, and if you want to use secure HTTP.
SETTING UP WEBDAV SERVER MAC OS X SERVER DOWNLOAD
The only catch is you have to download it from the Mac App Store, but since this is mainly of interest to 10.7 users who have lost SMB sharing that's not really an issue.
SETTING UP WEBDAV SERVER MAC OS X SERVER FREE
It's a companion app to a paid application for the iPad, but the free server works anything that supports webDAV. However, given it came up as a search result for webDAV, and what little description there was, I figured it really was just a simple webDAV server wrapped up into a very simple GUI. It came up when I did a search for webDAV but contained no real description and very few people seem to have even tried it out. Then I found Media Master Server on the Mac App Store for free.

Although it is possible to set up WebDAV on Mac OS X, there's no "easy" way to do it. Found this by chance and thought I would share.
