Hi,

go to /mnt directory anda verify who is the owner of smb subdirectory
and what is the access permission to it.
try it as root:
cd /mnt
chown -R username smb
chmod -R 760 smb
mount -t smbfs -o username=username,uid=username //downtown/sysback
/mnt/smb/downtown

mount will ask for username password.
after sysback share mounted logon using username and try to access
/mnt/smb/downtown

Marcos Carneiro da Rocha

On Thu, 2004-08-26 at 13:13, Wim De Smet wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> On Thu, 26 Aug 2004 11:59:17 -0400, Jody Grafals
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > 
> > 
> > Still not getting anywhere, the options gid uid umask seem to have no
> > effect with smbmount and due to the way need to access w2k3 shares. I
> > have only been able to mount the drive using the command smbmount. I
> > have not been able to get fstab or `mont -t smbfs` to pass the proper
> > authentication to the w2k3 server.  I DO have write access as root.
> > using the command
> > #`smbmount //downtown/sysback /mnt/smb/downtown/ -o
> > username=username/servername%'!password'`
> > But I'm trying to get a regular user R/W access to a file on the W2k3
> > server. I have Quickbooks 2004 running under crossover and the
> > quickbooks data file is on the w2k3 server. If I can't get the thing to
> > mount the way I want it, Can I somehow give the user (myself) root
> > access to this directory?
> > [...]
> 
> I'm thinking for mount it would go more like mount -t smbfs -o
> username=...,password=... etc. I don't recognize the form in which you
> give your password but this is how I mounted my stuff (with
> username=none and empty password in my case)
> 
> greets,
> wim
> 


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