mirror of
https://github.com/samba-team/samba.git
synced 2024-12-27 03:21:53 +03:00
73cf65bcdd
smb.conf.5: Removed reference to 'domain controller' being the browse
list collator to match the change I just added to
nameannounce.c.
jallison@whistle.com
(This used to be commit 22243ffaa4
)
901 lines
38 KiB
Plaintext
901 lines
38 KiB
Plaintext
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Frequently Asked Questions
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about the
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SAMBA Suite
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(FAQ version 1.9.15a, Samba version 1.09.15)
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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This FAQ was originally prepared by Karl Auer and is
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currently maintained by Paul Blackman (ictinus@lake.canberra.edu.au).
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As Karl originally said, 'this FAQ was prepared with lots of help from numerous
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net.helpers', and that's the way I'd like to keep it. So if you find anything
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that you think should be in here don't hesitate to contact me.
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Thanks to Karl for the work he's done, and continuing thanks to Andrew Tridgell
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for developing Samba.
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Note: This FAQ is (and probably always will be) under construction. Some
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sections exist only as optimistic entries in the Contents page.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Contents
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* SECTION ONE: General information
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All about Samba - what it is, how to get it, related sources of
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information, how to understand the version numbering scheme,
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pizza details
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* SECTION TWO: Compiling and installing Samba on a Unix host
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Common problems that arise when building and installing Samba under
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Unix.
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* SECTION THREE: Common client problems
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Common problems that arise when trying to communicate from a client
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computer to a Samba server. All problems which have symptoms you see
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at the client end will be in this section.
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* SECTION FOUR: Specific client problems
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This section covers problems that are specific to certain clients,
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such as Windows for Workgroups or Windows NT. Please check Section
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Three first!
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* SECTION FIVE: Specific client application problems
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This section covers problems that are specific to certain products,
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such as Windows for Workgroups or Windows NT. Please check Sections
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Three and Four first!
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* SECTION SIX: Miscellaneous
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All the questions that aren't classifiable into any other section.
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===============================================================================
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SECTION ONE: General information
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 1: What is Samba?
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Samba is a suite of programs which work together to allow clients to access
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to a server's filespace and printers via the SMB (Session Message Block)
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protocol. Initially written for Unix, Samba now also runs on Netware, OS/2 and
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AmigaDOS.
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In practice, this means that you can redirect disks and printers to Unix disks
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and printers from Lan Manager clients, Windows for Workgroups 3.11 clients,
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Windows NT clients, Linux clients and OS/2 clients. There is also a generic
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Unix client program supplied as part of the suite which allows Unix users to
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use an ftp-like interface to access filespace and printers on any other SMB
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servers. This gives the capability for these operating systems to behave much
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like a LAN Server or Windows NT Server machine, only with added functionality
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and flexibility designed to make life easier for administrators.
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The components of the suite are (in summary):
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* smbd, the SMB server. This handles actual connections from clients,
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doing all the file, permission and username work
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* nmbd, the Netbios name server, which helps clients locate servers,
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doing the browsing work and managing domains as this capability is
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being built into Samba
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* smbclient, the Unix-hosted client program
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* smbrun, a little 'glue' program to help the server run external
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programs
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* testprns, a program to test server access to printers
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* testparms, a program to test the Samba configuration file for
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correctness
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* smb.conf, the Samba configuration file
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* smbprint, a sample script to allow a Unix host to use smbclient to
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print to an SMB server
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* documentation! DON'T neglect to read it - you will save a great deal
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of time!
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The suite is supplied with full source (of course!) and is GPLed.
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The primary creator of the Samba suite is Andrew Tridgell. Later versions
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incorporate much effort by many net.helpers. The man pages and this FAQ were
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originally written by Karl Auer.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 2: What is the current version of Samba?
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At time of writing, the current version was 1.9.16. If you want to be sure
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check the bottom of the change-log file.
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(ftp://samba.anu.edu.au/pub/samba/alpha/change-log)
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For more information see question 5, "What do the version numbers mean?"
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 3: Where can I get it?
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The Samba suite is available via anonymous ftp from samba.anu.edu.au. The
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latest and greatest versions of the suite are in the directory:
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/pub/samba/
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Development (read "alpha") versions, which are NOT necessarily stable and which
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do NOT necessarily have accurate documentation, are available in the directory:
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/pub/samba/alpha
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Note that binaries are NOT included in any of the above. Samba is distributed
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ONLY in source form, though binaries may be available from other sites. Recent
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versions of some Linux distributions, for example, do contain Samba binaries
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for that platform.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 5: What do the version numbers mean?
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It is not recommended that you run a version of Samba with the word "alpha"
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in its name unless you know what you are doing and are willing to do some
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debugging. Many, many people just get the latest recommended stable release
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version and are happy. If you are brave, by all means take the plunge and
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help with the testing and development - but don't install it on your
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departmental server. Samba is typically very stable and safe, and this is
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mostly due to the policy of many public releases.
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How the scheme works:
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1) when major changes are made the version number is increased. For example,
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the transition from 1.9.15 to 1.9.16. However, this version number will not
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appear immediately and people should continue to use 1.9.15 for production
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systems (see next point.)
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2) just after major changes are made the software is considered
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unstable, and a series of alpha releases are distributed, for example
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1.9.16alpha1. These are for testing by those who know what they are doing.
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The "alpha" in the filename will hopefully scare off those who are just
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looking for the latest version to install.
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3) when Andrew thinks that the alphas have stabilised to the point where he
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would recommend new users install it, he renames it to the same version
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number without the alpha, for example 1.9.16.
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4) inevitably bugs are found in the "stable" releases and minor
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patch levels are released which give us the pXX series, for example
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1.9.16p2.
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So the progression goes:
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1.9.15p7 (production)
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1.9.15p8 (production)
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1.9.16alpha1 (test sites only)
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:
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1.9.16alpha20 (test sites only)
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1.9.16 (production)
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1.9.16p1 (production)
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The above system means that whenever someone looks at the samba ftp site
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they will be able to grab the highest numbered release without an
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alpha in the name and be sure of getting the current recommended
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version.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 4: What platforms are supported?
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Many different platforms have run Samba successfully. The platforms most widely
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used and thus best tested are Linux and SunOS.
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At time of writing, the Makefile claimed support for:
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* SunOS
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* Linux with shadow passwords
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* Linux without shadow passwords
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* SOLARIS
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* SOLARIS 2.2 and above (aka SunOS 5)
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* SVR4
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* ULTRIX
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* OSF1 (alpha only)
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* OSF1 with NIS and Fast Crypt (alpha only)
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* OSF1 V2.0 Enhanced Security (alpha only)
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* AIX
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* BSDI
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* NetBSD
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* NetBSD 1.0
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* SEQUENT
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* HP-UX
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* SGI
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* SGI IRIX 4.x.x
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* SGI IRIX 5.x.x
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* FreeBSD
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* NeXT 3.2 and above
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* NeXT OS 2.x
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* NeXT OS 3.0
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* ISC SVR3V4 (POSIX mode)
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* ISC SVR3V4 (iBCS2 mode)
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* A/UX 3.0
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* SCO with shadow passwords.
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* SCO with shadow passwords, without YP.
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* SCO with TCB passwords
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* SCO 3.2v2 (ODT 1.1) with TCP passwords
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* intergraph
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* DGUX
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* Apollo Domain/OS sr10.3 (BSD4.3)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 5: How can I find out more about Samba?
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There are two mailing lists devoted to discussion of Samba-related matters.
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There is also the newsgroup, comp.protocols.smb, which has a great deal of
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discussion on Samba. There is also a WWW site 'SAMBA Web Pages' at
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http://samba.canberra.edu.au/pub/samba/samba.html, under which there is a
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comprehensive survey of Samba users. Another useful resource is the hypertext
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archive of the Samba mailing list.
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Send email to listproc@samba.anu.edu.au. Make sure the subject line is
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blank, and include the following two lines in the body of the message:
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subscribe samba Firstname Lastname
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subscribe samba-announce Firstname Lastname
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Obviously you should substitute YOUR first name for "Firstname" and YOUR last
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name for "Lastname"! Try not to send any signature stuff, it sometimes confuses
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the list processor.
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The samba list is a digest list - every eight hours or so it regurgitates a
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single message containing all the messages that have been received by the list
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since the last time and sends a copy of this message to all subscribers.
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If you stop being interested in Samba, please send another email to
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listproc@samba.anu.edu.au. Make sure the subject line is blank, and
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include the following two lines in the body of the message:
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unsubscribe samba
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unsubscribe samba-announce
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The From: line in your message MUST be the same address you used when you
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subscribed.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 6: Something's gone wrong - what should I do?
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[#] *** IMPORTANT! *** [#]
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DO NOT post messages on mailing lists or in newsgroups until you have carried
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out the first three steps given here!
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Firstly, see if there are any likely looking entries in this FAQ! If you have
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just installed Samba, have you run through the checklist in DIAGNOSIS.txt? It
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can save you a lot of time and effort.
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Secondly, read the man pages for smbd, nmbd and smb.conf, looking for topics
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that relate to what you are trying to do.
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Thirdly, if there is no obvious solution to hand, try to get a look at the log
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files for smbd and/or nmbd for the period during which you were having
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problems. You may need to reconfigure the servers to provide more extensive
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debugging information - usually level 2 or level 3 provide ample debugging
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info. Inspect these logs closely, looking particularly for the string "Error:".
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Fourthly, if you still haven't got anywhere, ask the mailing list or newsgroup.
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In general nobody minds answering questions provided you have followed the
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preceding steps. It might be a good idea to scan the archives of the mailing
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list, which are available through the Samba web site described in the previous
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section.
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If you successfully solve a problem, please mail the FAQ maintainer a succinct
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description of the symptom, the problem and the solution, so I can incorporate
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it in the next version.
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If you make changes to the source code, _please_ submit these patches so that
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everyone else gets the benefit of your work. This is one of the most important
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aspects to the maintainence of Samba. Send all patches to
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samba-bugs@samba.anu.edu.au, not Andrew Tridgell or any other individual and
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not the samba team mailing list.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* n: Pizza Supply Details
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Those who have registered in the Samba survey as "Pizza Factory" will already
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know this, but the rest may need some help. Andrew doesn't ask for payment,
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but he does appreciate it when people give him pizza. This calls for a little
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organisation when the pizza donor is twenty thousand kilometres away, but
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it has been done.
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Method 1: Ring up your local branch of an international pizza chain and see if
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they honour their vouchers internationally. Pizza Hut do, which is how the
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entire Canberra Linux Users Group got to eat pizza one night, courtesy of
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someone in the US
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Method 2: Ring up a local pizza shop in Canberra and quote a credit card
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number for a certain amount, and tell them that Andrew will be collecting
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it (don't forget to tell him.) One kind soul from Germany did this.
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Method 3: Purchase a pizza voucher from your local pizza shop that has no
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international affiliations and send it to Andrew. It is completely useless
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but he can hang it on the wall next to the one he already has from Germany :-)
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Method 4: Air freight him a pizza with your favourite regional flavours. It will
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probably get stuck in customs or torn apart by hungry sniffer dogs but it will
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have been a noble gesture.
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===============================================================================
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SECTION TWO: Compiling and installing Samba on a Unix host
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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===============================================================================
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SECTION THREE: Common client problems
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 1: I can't see the Samba server in any browse lists!
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*** Until the FAQ can be updated, please check the file:
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*** ftp://samba.anu.edu.au/pub/samba/docs/BROWSING.txt
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*** for more information on browsing.
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If your GUI client does not permit you to select non-browsable servers, you may
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need to do so on the command line. For example, under Lan Manager you might
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connect to the above service as disk drive M: thusly:
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net use M: \\mary\fred
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The details of how to do this and the specific syntax varies from client to
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client - check your client's documentation.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 2: Some files that I KNOW are on the server doesn't show up when I view the
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directories from my client!
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If you check what files are not showing up, you will note that they are files
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which contain upper case letters or which are otherwise not DOS-compatible (ie,
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they are not legal DOS filenames for some reason).
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The Samba server can be configured either to ignore such files completely, or
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to present them to the client in "mangled" form. If you are not seeing the
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files at all, the Samba server has most likely been configured to ignore them.
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Consult the man page smb.conf(5) for details of how to change this - the
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parameter you need to set is "mangled names = yes".
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 3: Some files on the server show up with really wierd filenames when I view
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the directories from my client!
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If you check what files are showing up wierd, you will note that they are files
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which contain upper case letters or which are otherwise not DOS-compatible (ie,
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they are not legal DOS filenames for some reason).
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The Samba server can be configured either to ignore such files completely, or
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to present them to the client in "mangled" form. If you are seeing strange file
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names, they are most likely "mangled". If you would prefer to have such files
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ignored rather than presented in "mangled" form, consult the man page
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smb.conf(5) for details of how to change the server configuration - the
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parameter you need to set is "mangled names = no".
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 4: My client reports "cannot locate specified computer" or similar.
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This indicates one of three things: You supplied an incorrect server name, the
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underlying TCP/IP layer is not working correctly, or the name you specified
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cannot be resolved.
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After carefully checking that the name you typed is the name you should have
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typed, try doing things like pinging a host or telnetting to somewhere on your
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network to see if TCP/IP is functioning OK. If it is, the problem is most
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likely name resolution.
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If your client has a facility to do so, hardcode a mapping between the hosts IP
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and the name you want to use. For example, with Man Manager or Windows for
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Workgroups you would put a suitable entry in the file LMHOSTS. If this works,
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the problem is in the communication between your client and the netbios name
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server. If it does not work, then there is something fundamental wrong with
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your naming and the solution is beyond the scope of this document.
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If you do not have any server on your subnet supplying netbios name resolution,
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hardcoded mappings are your only option. If you DO have a netbios name server
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running (such as the Samba suite's nmbd program), the problem probably lies in
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the way it is set up. Refer to Section Two of this FAQ for more ideas.
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By the way, remember to REMOVE the hardcoded mapping before further tests :-)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 5: My client reports "cannot locate specified share name" or similar.
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This message indicates that your client CAN locate the specified server, which
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is a good start, but that it cannot find a service of the name you gave.
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The first step is to check the exact name of the service you are trying to
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connect to (consult your system administrator). Assuming it exists and you
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specified it correctly (read your client's doco on how to specify a service
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name correctly), read on:
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* Many clients cannot accept or use service names longer than eight
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characters.
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* Many clients cannot accept or use service names containing spaces.
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* Some servers (not Samba though) are case sensitive with service names.
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* Some clients force service names into upper case.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 6: My client reports "cannot find domain controller", "cannot log on to the
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network" or similar.
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Nothing is wrong - Samba does not implement the primary domain name controller
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stuff for several reasons, including the fact that the whole concept of a
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primary domain controller and "logging in to a network" doesn't fit well with
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clients possibly running on multiuser machines (such as users of smbclient
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under Unix). Having said that, several developers are working hard on
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building it in to the next major version of Samba. If you can contribute,
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send a message to samba-bugs!
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Seeing this message should not affect your ability to mount redirected disks
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and printers, which is really what all this is about.
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For many clients (including Windows for Workgroups and Lan Manager), setting
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the domain to STANDALONE at least gets rid of the message.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 7: Printing doesn't work :-(
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Make sure that the specified print command for the service you are connecting
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to is correct and that it has a fully-qualified path (eg., use "/usr/bin/lpr"
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rather than just "lpr").
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Make sure that the spool directory specified for the service is writable by the
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user connected to the service. In particular the user "nobody" often has
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problems with printing, even if it worked with an earlier version of Samba. Try
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creating another guest user other than "nobody".
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Make sure that the user specified in the service is permitted to use the
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printer.
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Check the debug log produced by smbd. Search for the printer name and see if
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the log turns up any clues. Note that error messages to do with a service ipc$
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are meaningless - they relate to the way the client attempts to retrieve status
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information when using the LANMAN1 protocol.
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If using WfWg then you need to set the default protocol to TCP/IP, not Netbeui.
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This is a WfWg bug.
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If using the Lanman1 protocol (the default) then try switching to coreplus.
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Also not that print status error messages don't mean printing won't work. The
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print status is received by a different mechanism.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 8: My programs install on the server OK, but refuse to work properly.
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There are numerous possible reasons for this, but one MAJOR possibility is that
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your software uses locking. Make sure you are using Samba 1.6.11 or later. It
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may also be possible to work around the problem by setting "locking=no" in the
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Samba configuration file for the service the software is installed on. This
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should be regarded as a strictly temporary solution.
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In earlier Samba versions there were some difficulties with the very latest
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Microsoft products, particularly Excel 5 and Word for Windows 6. These should
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have all been solved. If not then please let Andrew Tridgell know.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* 9: My "server string" doesn't seem to be recognized, my client reports the
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default setting, eg. "Samba 1.9.15p4", instead of what I have changed it
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to in the smb.conf file.
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You need to use the -C option in nmbd. The "server string" affects
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what smbd puts out and -C affects what nmbd puts out. In a future
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version these will probably be combined and -C will be removed, but
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for now use -C
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|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
* 10: When I attempt to get a listing of available resources from the Samba
|
|
server, my client reports
|
|
"This server is not configured to list shared resources".
|
|
|
|
Your guest account is probably invalid for some reason. Samba uses
|
|
the guest account for browsing in smbd. Check that your guest account is
|
|
valid.
|
|
|
|
See also 'guest account' in smb.conf man page.
|
|
|
|
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
* 11: You get the message "you appear to have a trapdoor uid system"
|
|
in your logs
|
|
|
|
This can have several causes. It might be because you are using a uid
|
|
or gid of 65535 or -1. This is a VERY bad idea, and is a big security
|
|
hole. Check carefully in your /etc/passwd file and make sure that no
|
|
user has uid 65535 or -1. Especially check the "nobody" user, as many
|
|
broken systems are shipped with nobody setup with a uid of 65535.
|
|
|
|
It might also mean that your OS has a trapdoor uid/gid system :-)
|
|
|
|
This means that once a process changes effective uid from root to
|
|
another user it can't go back to root. Unfortunately Samba relies on
|
|
being able to change effective uid from root to non-root and back
|
|
again to implement its security policy. If your OS has a trapdoor uid
|
|
system this won't work, and several things in Samba may break. Less
|
|
things will break if you use user or server level security instead of
|
|
the default share level security, but you may still strike
|
|
problems.
|
|
|
|
The problems don't give rise to any security holes, so don't panic,
|
|
but it does mean some of Samba's capabilities will be unavailable.
|
|
In particular you will not be able to connect to the Samba server as
|
|
two different uids at once. This may happen if you try to print as a
|
|
"guest" while accessing a share as a normal user. It may also affect
|
|
your ability to list the available shares as this is normally done as
|
|
the guest user.
|
|
|
|
Complain to your OS vendor and ask them to fix their system.
|
|
|
|
Note: the reason why 65535 is a VERY bad choice of uid and gid is that
|
|
it casts to -1 as a uid, and the setreuid() system call ignores (with
|
|
no error) uid changes to -1. This means any daemon attempting to run
|
|
as uid 65535 will actually run as root. This is not good!
|
|
|
|
===============================================================================
|
|
SECTION FOUR: Specific client problems
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
* 1: Are any MacIntosh clients for Samba.
|
|
|
|
Yes. Thursby Software Systems have released 'Dave' - a SMB client for
|
|
MacIntosh systems. This is a commercial product and inclusion in this
|
|
faq does not imply any endorsement by the Samba developers. Having said
|
|
that, the first public demonstration of 'Dave' was to the Samba server
|
|
run by Andrew Tridgell over the Internet from Redmond, Washington, USA to
|
|
Australia as part of the first CIFS developers conference.
|
|
|
|
For more details on 'Dave' contact :
|
|
|
|
Web contact: www.thursby.com
|
|
|
|
Thursby Software Systems, Inc.
|
|
5840 W. Interstate 20
|
|
Arlington, Texas 76017 U.S.A.
|
|
Voice: 817-478-5070
|
|
FAX: 817-561-2313
|
|
sales@thursby.com
|
|
|
|
There are currently no Free Software solutions other than to make
|
|
your UNIX server talk AppleTalk.
|
|
|
|
In Rob Newberry's words (rob@eats.com, Sun, 4 Dec 1994):
|
|
|
|
In future Apple System Software, you may see support for other protocols, such
|
|
as SMB -- Applet is working on a new networking architecture that will make it
|
|
easier to support additional protocols. But it's not here yet.
|
|
|
|
If you want your Unix machine to speak Appletalk, there are several options.
|
|
"Netatalk" and "CAP" are free, and available on the net. There are also
|
|
several commercial options, such as "PacerShare" and "Helios" (I think).
|
|
In any case, you'll have to look around for a server, not anything for the Mac.
|
|
|
|
Depending on your OS, some of these may not help you. I am currently
|
|
coordinating the effort to get CAP working with Native Ethertalk under Linux,
|
|
but we're not done yet.
|
|
|
|
Rob
|
|
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
* 2: I am getting a "Session request failed (131,130)" error when I try to
|
|
connect to my Win95 PC with smbclient. I am able to connect from the PC
|
|
to the Samba server without problems. What gives?
|
|
|
|
The following answer is provided by John E. Miller:
|
|
|
|
I'll assume that you're able to ping back and forth between the machines by
|
|
IP address and name, and that you're using some security model where you're
|
|
confident that you've got user IDs and passwords right. The logging options
|
|
(-d3 or greater) can help a lot with that. DNS and WINS configuration can
|
|
also impact connectivity as well.
|
|
|
|
Now, on to 'scope id's. Somewhere in your Win95 TCP/IP network configuration
|
|
(I'm too much of an NT bigot to know where it's located in the Win95 setup,
|
|
but I'll have to learn someday since I teach for a Microsoft Solution Provider
|
|
Authorized Tech Education Center - what an acronym...) [Note: It's under
|
|
Control Panel | Network | TCP/IP | WINS Configuration] there's a little text
|
|
entry field called something like 'Scope ID'.
|
|
|
|
This field essentially creates 'invisible' sub-workgroups on the same wire.
|
|
Boxes can only see other boxes whose Scope IDs are set to the exact same
|
|
value - it's sometimes used by OEMs to configure their boxes to browse only
|
|
other boxes from the same vendor and, in most environments, this field should
|
|
be left blank. If you, in fact, have something in this box that EXACT value
|
|
(case-sensitive!) needs to be provided to smbclient and nmbd as the -i
|
|
(lowercase) parameter. So, if your Scope ID is configured as the string
|
|
'SomeStr' in Win95 then you'd have to use smbclient -iSomeStr <otherparms>
|
|
in connecting to it.
|
|
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
* 3: How do I synchronize my PC's clock with my Samba server?
|
|
|
|
To syncronize your PC's clock with your Samba server:
|
|
|
|
* Copy timesync.pif to your windows directory
|
|
* timesync.pif can be found at:
|
|
http://samba.canberra.edu.au/pub/samba/binaries/miscellaneous/timesync.pif
|
|
* Add timesync.pif to your 'Start Up' group/folder
|
|
* Open the properties dialog box for the program/icon
|
|
* Make sure the 'Run Minimized' option is set in program 'Properties'
|
|
* Change the command line section that reads \\sambahost to reflect the name
|
|
of your server.
|
|
* Close the properties dialog box by choosing 'OK'
|
|
|
|
Each time you start your computer (or login for Win95) your PC will
|
|
synchronize it's clock with your Samba server.
|
|
|
|
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
* 4: Problems with WinDD, NTrigue, WinCenterPro etc
|
|
|
|
All of the above programs are applications that sit on an NT box and
|
|
allow multiple users to access the NT GUI applications from remote
|
|
workstations (often over X).
|
|
|
|
What has this got to do with Samba? The problem comes when these users
|
|
use filemanager to mount shares from a Samba server. The most common
|
|
symptom is that the first user to connect get correct file permissions
|
|
and has a nice day, but subsequent connections get logged in as the
|
|
same user as the first person to login. They find that they cannot
|
|
access files in their own home directory, but that they can access
|
|
files in the first users home directory (maybe not such a nice day
|
|
after all?)
|
|
|
|
Why does this happen? The above products all share a common heritage
|
|
(and code base I believe). They all open just a single TCP based SMB
|
|
connection to the Samba server, and requests from all users are piped
|
|
over this connection. This is unfortunate, but not fatal.
|
|
|
|
It means that if you run your Samba server in share level security
|
|
(the default) then things will definately break as described above. The
|
|
share level SMB security model has no provision for multiple user IDs
|
|
on the one SMB connection. See security_level.txt in the docs for more
|
|
info on share/user/server level security.
|
|
|
|
If you run in user or server level security then you have a chance,
|
|
but only if you have a recent version of Samba (at least 1.9.15p6). In
|
|
older versions bugs in Samba meant you still would have had problems.
|
|
|
|
If you have a trapdoor uid system in your OS then it will never work
|
|
properly. Samba needs to be able to switch uids on the connection and
|
|
it can't if your OS has a trapdoor uid system. You'll know this
|
|
because Samba will note it in your logs.
|
|
|
|
Also note that you should not use the magic "homes" share name with
|
|
products like these, as otherwise all users will end up with the same
|
|
home directory. Use \\server\username instead.
|
|
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
* 5: Problem with printers under NT
|
|
|
|
This info from Stefan Hergeth may be useful:
|
|
|
|
A network-printer (with ethernetcard) is connected to the NT-Clients via
|
|
our UNIX-Fileserver (SAMBA-Server), like the configuration told by
|
|
Matthew Harrell <harrell@leech.nrl.navy.mil> (see WinNT.txt)
|
|
|
|
1.) If a user has choosen this printer as the default printer in his
|
|
NT-Session and this printer is not connected to the network
|
|
(e.g. switched off) than this user has a problem with the SAMBA-
|
|
connection of his filesystems. It's very slow.
|
|
|
|
2.) If the printer is connected to the network everything works fine.
|
|
|
|
3.) When the smbd ist started with debug level 3, you can see that the
|
|
NT spooling system try to connect to the printer many times. If the
|
|
printer ist not connected to the network this request fails and the
|
|
NT spooler is wasting a lot of time to connect to the printer service.
|
|
This seems to be the reason for the slow network connection.
|
|
|
|
4.) Maybe it's possible to change this behaviour by setting different printer
|
|
properties in the Print-Manager-Menu of NT, but i didn't try it
|
|
yet.
|
|
|
|
I hope this information will help in some way.
|
|
|
|
Stefan Hergeth <hergeth@f7axp1.informatik.fh-muenchen.de>
|
|
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
* 6: Why are my file's timestamps off by an hour, or by a few hours?
|
|
|
|
This is from Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com>.
|
|
|
|
Most likely it's a problem with your time zone settings.
|
|
|
|
Internally, Samba maintains time in traditional Unix format,
|
|
namely, the number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 Universal Time
|
|
(or ``GMT''), not counting leap seconds.
|
|
|
|
On the server side, Samba uses the Unix TZ variable to convert internal
|
|
timestamps to and from local time. So on the server side, there are two
|
|
things to get right.
|
|
|
|
1. The Unix system clock must have the correct Universal time.
|
|
Use the shell command "sh -c 'TZ=UTC0 date'" to check this.
|
|
|
|
2. The TZ environment variable must be set on the server
|
|
before Samba is invoked. The details of this depend on the
|
|
server OS, but typically you must edit a file whose name is
|
|
/etc/TIMEZONE or /etc/default/init, or run the command `zic -l'.
|
|
|
|
3. TZ must have the correct value.
|
|
|
|
3a. If possible, use geographical time zone settings
|
|
(e.g. TZ='America/Los_Angeles' or perhaps
|
|
TZ=':US/Pacific'). These are supported by most
|
|
popular Unix OSes, are easier to get right, and are
|
|
more accurate for historical timestamps. If your
|
|
operating system has out-of-date tables, you should be
|
|
able to update them from the public domain time zone
|
|
tables at <URL:ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/>.
|
|
|
|
3b. If your system does not support geographical time zone
|
|
settings, you must use a Posix-style TZ strings, e.g.
|
|
TZ='PST8PDT,M4.1.0/2,M10.5.0/2' for US Pacific time.
|
|
Posix TZ strings can take the following form (with optional
|
|
items in brackets):
|
|
|
|
StdOffset[Dst[Offset],Date/Time,Date/Time]
|
|
|
|
where:
|
|
|
|
`Std' is the standard time designation (e.g. `PST').
|
|
|
|
`Offset' is the number of hours behind UTC (e.g. `8').
|
|
Prepend a `-' if you are ahead of UTC, and
|
|
append `:30' if you are at a half-hour offset.
|
|
Omit all the remaining items if you do not use
|
|
daylight-saving time.
|
|
|
|
`Dst' is the daylight-saving time designation
|
|
(e.g. `PDT').
|
|
|
|
The optional second `Offset' is the number of
|
|
hours that daylight-saving time is behind UTC.
|
|
The default is 1 hour ahead of standard time.
|
|
|
|
`Date/Time,Date/Time' specify when daylight-saving
|
|
time starts and ends. The format for a date is
|
|
`Mm.n.d', which specifies the dth day (0 is Sunday)
|
|
of the nth week of the mth month, where week 5 means
|
|
the last such day in the month. The format for a
|
|
time is [h]h[:mm[:ss]], using a 24-hour clock.
|
|
|
|
Other Posix string formats are allowed but you don't want
|
|
to know about them.
|
|
|
|
On the client side, you must make sure that your client's clock and
|
|
time zone is also set appropriately. [[I don't know how to do this.]]
|
|
|
|
Samba traditionally has had many problems dealing with time zones, due
|
|
to the bizarre ways that Microsoft network protocols handle time
|
|
zones. A common symptom is for file timestamps to be off by an hour.
|
|
To work around the problem, try disconnecting from your Samba server
|
|
and then reconnecting to it; or upgrade your Samba server to
|
|
1.9.16alpha10 or later.
|
|
|
|
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
* 7: How do I set the printer driver name correctly?
|
|
|
|
Question:
|
|
> On NT, I opened "Printer Manager" and "Connect to Printer".
|
|
> Enter "\\ptdi270\ps1" in the box of printer. I got the
|
|
> following error message:
|
|
>
|
|
> You do not have sufficient access to your machine
|
|
> to connect to the selected printer, since a driver
|
|
> needs to be installed locally.
|
|
|
|
Answer:
|
|
|
|
In the more recent versions of Samba you can now set the "printer
|
|
driver" in smb.conf. This tells the client what driver to use. For
|
|
example, I have:
|
|
|
|
printer driver = HP LaserJet 4L
|
|
|
|
and NT knows to use the right driver. You have to get this string
|
|
exactly right.
|
|
|
|
To find the exact string to use, you need to get to the dialog box in
|
|
your client where you select which printer driver to install. The
|
|
correct strings for all the different printers are shown in a listbox
|
|
in that dialog box.
|
|
|
|
You could also try setting the driver to NULL like this:
|
|
|
|
printer driver = NULL
|
|
|
|
this is effectively what older versions of Samba did, so if that
|
|
worked for you then give it a go. If this does work then let me know
|
|
and I'll make it the default. Currently the default is a 0 length
|
|
string.
|
|
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
* 8: I have upgraded my NT 4.0 system to service pack 3. Why
|
|
can't I connect anymore ?
|
|
|
|
This is not a bug. Microsoft has changed their policy on sending
|
|
unencrypted passwords over the net. They no longer default to allowing
|
|
unencrypted passwords to be sent over the net. This effects all Samba
|
|
servers which are configured to use security=share or security=user level
|
|
security without password encryption. They do, however, have a fix which
|
|
can be applied to the registry to fix the problem. Here's a synopsis
|
|
from the SP3 web page that discusses how to enable unencrypted password
|
|
sending from an NT 4.0 box.
|
|
|
|
A better solution is to re-compile Samba to use encrypted passwords.
|
|
See the document :
|
|
|
|
ftp://samba.anu.edu.au/pub/samba/docs/ENCRYPTION.txt
|
|
|
|
>SYMPTOMS
|
|
>==========
|
|
>
|
|
>Connecting to SMB servers (such as Samba) with unencrypted password fails
|
|
after upgrading to Windows NT 4.0 service pack 3 version 1.76.
|
|
>
|
|
>CAUSE
|
|
>======
|
|
>
|
|
>The SMB redirector in Windows NT 4.0 service pack 3 version 1.76 handles
|
|
>unencrypted passwords differently than previous version of Windows NT.
|
|
>Beginning with this version, the SMB redirector will not send an
|
|
>unencrypted password unless you add a registry entry to enable them.
|
|
>
|
|
>RESOLUTION
|
|
>===========
|
|
>
|
|
>To enable unencrypted (plain text) passwords modify the registry in this way.
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>WARNING: Using Registry Editor incorrectly can cause serious, system-wide
|
|
>problems that may require you to reinstall Windows NT to correct them.
|
|
>Microsoft cannot guarantee that any problems resulting from the use of
|
|
>Registry Editor can be solved. Use this tool at your own risk.
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>1. Run Registry Editor (REGEDT32.EXE).
|
|
>
|
|
>2. From the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE subtree, go to the following key:
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>\system\currentcontrolset\services\rdr\parameters
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>3. From the Edit menu, select Add Value.
|
|
>
|
|
>4. Add the following:
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>Value Name: EnablePlainTextPassword
|
|
>
|
|
>Data Type: REG_DWORD
|
|
>
|
|
>Data: 1
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>5. Choose OK and quit Registry Editor.
|
|
>
|
|
>6. Shutdown and restart Windows NT.
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
===============================================================================
|
|
SECTION FIVE: Specific client application problems
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
* 1: MS Office Setup reports "Cannot change properties of the file named:
|
|
X:\MSOFFICE\SETUP.INI"
|
|
|
|
When installing MS Office on a Samba drive for which you have admin user
|
|
permissions, ie. admin users = <username>, you will find the setup program
|
|
unable to complete the installation.
|
|
|
|
To get around this problem, do the installation without admin user permissions
|
|
The problem is that MS Office Setup checks that a file is rdonly by trying to
|
|
open it for writing.
|
|
|
|
Admin users can always open a file for writing, as they run as root.
|
|
You just have to install as a non-admin user and then use "chown -R" to fix
|
|
the owner.
|
|
|
|
===============================================================================
|
|
SECTION SIX: Miscellaneous
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
Maintained By Paul Blackman, Email:ictinus@lake.canberra.edu.au
|