Forum Discussion
Mapping SharePoint's to Drive Letters?
- Jul 22, 2021
Hi DanielCayea - No, there's no good way to map a drive letter to a SharePoint or OneDrive library (this question has come up a number of times in this community: see this search result)
As I understand it, the basic issues revolve around authentication and user experience.
That said, what you need to look at is the OneDrive desktop app to sync files (it can sync both OneDrive and SharePoint). It's what we tell our end users to do for apps that can't open/save files directly in OneDrive/SharePoint. End users must sync the libraries that they need to interact with most often.
There are limits to this approach - (see this https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/restrictions-and-limitations-in-onedrive-and-sharepoint-64883a5d-228e-48f5-b3d2-eb39e07630fa)
- You shouldn't try to sync more than one hundred thousand files
- You must set up the sync for the specific libraries/folders
- If you need to interact with lots of libraries, you'll have to sync them all - and may run into limits
Am I wrong and will OneDrive sync'ing SharePoint be able to do this? Or, will we have to investigate other ways to replicate this experience to end users?
From my experience, trying to replicate an on premises experience to the cloud will lead to frustrated end users because you can't replicate it exactly.
- DanielCayeaJun 05, 2023Copper ContributorI am certainly a proponent of change but not just for the sake of change; the cloud does provide benefits but only in who is responsible in taking care of the infrastructure. All of the cloud is, is just someone elses server, storage, network, etc. If the file solution can't be as flexible or programmable as those in years past but you still want cloud; might as well sets up a file share VM in Azure or AWS and VPN to it.
- Lloyd_Altitude_Cloud_SFeb 08, 2024Copper Contributor
YOu should all look at IAM Cloud and their product Cloud Drive Mapper - which removes all the sync issues with OneDrive. Has been instrumental in our migrations.
- webereincMar 25, 2022Copper ContributorI agree that many cloud solutions sacrifice the end-user experience in favor of convenience for the administration of the system. And let's not forget how inconsistent (due to latency issues and overall synchronization delays and failures) the vendor recommended sync solutions simply fail to meet the actual use cases of the on premise app experiences that the cloud promises to deliver.