[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: Samba
I pasted my smb.conf file to the end of this message. I bought the SAMBA
Black Book but I still have made no progress.
Samba is running on Red Hat Linux Box. I can run swat from my other
machines. The Linux box has Windows 98 in the first partition and I can
network from my other Windows machines to the box so I know the network is
running. Of course I can only run either Linux or Win98 at one time.
My other Win98 boxes are not normally because the are actually Macintoshes
running a product call Virtual PC. Virtual PC can run most operationing
systems including Linux, Windows NT, Dos and Windows 98. I mention this
because maybe it is still complicating the problem though I do'nt think it
should.
I could find no reference to the IPC$ message in the Samba Black Book.
I hope the smb.conf will clue you in. Actually all I would like to do is
getting anything to work first.
Thanks
on 3/24/00 9:29 AM, Schlomo Schapiro at schapiro@inter.net.il wrote:
> Hi,
>
> actually IPC$ is the Inter Process Communication share. The idea is that
> if you authenticate to this share, then you get authenticated to all
> others automatically.
>
> But to enable us to help you, you have to tell us the following
> - Attach your smb.conf file (usually under /etc )
> - Tell us what CLIENT (e.g. Windows) system you are using (looks like NT)
>
> Besides that I suggest you to read the Samba documentation (probably under
> /usr/doc/samba or some similar place, depends on your Linux
> flavor). Especially read the part about encrypted passwords.
>
> And yes, you can setup shares from the web management tool. Just go to
> shares, enter a name and click Create New Share and fill in the form.
> Don't foget to "Apply Changes" in the end to save your changes.
>
> Schlomo
>
> PS: If you don't get along with reading manuals, you can always by the
> Samba Book.
>
>
> On Thu, 23 Mar 2000, Richard Fiedler wrote:
>
>> on 3/23/00 9:15 AM, Ury Segal at ury@ibm.net wrote:
>>
>>> I *think* IPC$ is what you have when you didn't export anything on the
>>> server side. I guess you forgot to actually share some directory, and/or
>>> give
>>> it the right permissions ( To whom to export, what passwd, what machine,
>>> etc.)
>>
>>
>> Thank you.
>>
>> So how do export? Can I do it from the remote web browser interface?
>>
# Samba config file created using SWAT
# from macg3 (192.168.1.254)
# Date: 2000/03/27 11:04:57
# Global parameters
[global]
server string = Samba Server
log file = /var/log/samba/log.%m
max log size = 50
socket options = TCP_NODELAY SO_RCVBUF=8192 SO_SNDBUF=8192
dns proxy = No
unix password sync = yes
encrypt passwords = no
security = user
password level = 0
null passwords = no
os level = 0
preferred master = no
domain master = no
wins support = yes
dead time = 0
debug level = 0
load printers = yes
domain logons = no
[homes]
comment = Home Directories
read only = No
browseable = yes
available = yes
public = yes
writable = yes
only user = yes
[printers]
comment = All Printers
path = /var/spool/samba
print ok = Yes
browseable = No
[guest]
path = /tmp
read only = No
guest only = yes
public = yes
browseable = yes
available = yes
writable = yes
only user = yes
[root]
path = /
read only = No
browseable = yes
available = yes
public = yes
guest only = no
writable = yes
only user = yes
[users]
path = /mnt
public = yes
available = yes
browseable = yes
guest only = no
writable = yes
only user = yes
[netlogon]
available = yes
path = \mnt
=================================================================
To unsubscribe, send mail to linux-il-request@linux.org.il with
the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command
echo unsubscribe | mail linux-il-request@linux.org.il