Cyberduck Mount Drive

(UPDATE: Since I wrote this, Box.com has changed its WebDAV address to https://dav.box.com/dav, so I've edited the post below to reflect that.)

  1. Cyberduck Mount Driver
  2. Cyberduck Mount Drive Software

  • Cyberduck for mounting volumes in the file explorer is available for Mac & Windows. Mountain Duck lets you mount server and cloud storage as a disk in Finder on macOS and the File Explorer on Windows. Open remote files with any application and work like on a local volume. Transfer files using Finder to remote servers, fast.
  • Mountain Duck Cyberduck for mounting volumes in the file explorer. Mountain Duck lets you mount server and cloud storage as a disk in Finder on macOS and the File Explorer on Windows. Open remote files with any application and work like on a local volume.

Mountain Duck, based on the solid open-source foundation of Cyberduck, allows you to mount remote volumes in Finder on OS X and File Explorer on Windows. Access remote files as if they were on a local disk, and edit them with your preferred applications. A minimalist user interface in the menu bar allows you to quickly mount remote volumes. Cyberduck and Mountain Duck support OneDrive in personal and business edition as well as SharePoint through the default bundled connection profiles Microsoft OneDrive and Microsoft SharePoint. It doesn’t make any difference if you are using OneDrive personal or business there is only one profile that works for both.

I was reading about Box.com offering a new sync application for their personal accounts (Intel-only, natch) when I came across this little tip on how to mount your Box drive on your desktop. I never got into Box that much because its web interface was kind of a hassle and uploads were unreliable. Half the time they wouldn't start and I would just be staring at a barbershop progress bar. So I was curious to check this out.
The procedure is simple. In the Finder, click on the Go menu, choose Connect to Server, and under Server Address enter https://dav.box.com/dav and click connect. Then enter your Box username and password and a new volume will mount in the Finder called /dav. Like magic!
There was just one problem. Uploads were still unreliable in the same way, and I had to force quit mount_webdav in Activity Monitor to kill the stalled progress bar and get my Finder back.

Cyberduck Mount Driver


Then I thought, wait a minute, I've heard of WebDAV though I wasn't quite sure what it was. Don't they have dedicated clients for that? Let's see what google has to say.Cyberduck

Cyberduck Mount Drive Software


Bingo! Cyberduck supports WebDAV connections. Leopard PowerPC users can download the latest version, though Tiger users will have to go here and look for version 3.2.1. Click the 'Open Connection' button, then paste in https://dav.box.com/dav in the server field and you'll see it automatically adds '/dav' to your Path field:
Then fill in your Box username and password and click 'Connect'. Afterward, your connection's settings will be in your Bookmarks menu under 'History', so no need to fill out the fields every time. One weird thing: if you copy and paste https://dav.box.com/dav in the server field, it works fine, but if you manually type the full url including the '/dav' at the end, the connection fails (shrugs).
Once I had my Box folder mounted successfully, uploads worked flawlessly. I could also choose the Synchronize option to easily sync folders from the desktop to my Box folder, though not vice versa, so it's not pure syncing like Dropbox. However it's a good online backup solution that's quick, cross platform (you can also mount WebDAV volumes in Linux in a variety of ways, in the true Linux tradition), and I don't have to mess around with symlinks on Dropbox or a java application like on Wuala or Mozy.
One last note, if you accidentally delete something in the Cyberduck interface, it's still recoverable by going to Box.com's web interface and finding it in your Trash folder. This procedure truncated my heart attack last night.