SMB shares should be visible to the command line. Try this: Launch gnome-terminal Open your smb mount in Nautilus and navigate to a file on the smb filesystem Drag the file to the terminal
This should paste the path of the file into your terminal. If it doesn't paste the actual path into the terminal that you can navigate to via the command line, you should log a bug. Bryan Boone wrote: > "kinda there" means I can see it with nautilus, but not from the command > line. > It would be nice to be able to create say, a softlink to it (can I?), after > the space has been mounted. > That way I can mount foreing filesystems and use them as my own. > -Bryan > > ________________________________________ > From: Robert Thurlow [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Tuesday, February 26, 2008 3:49 PM > To: Bryan Boone > Cc: Giacomo Tufano; Brian Nitz; [email protected] > Subject: Re: [indiana-discuss] How good will Indiana be for > desktop computing? > > Bryan Boone wrote: > >> My desktop computing requirements are a little more modest. >> I develop Java apps for my company. >> So I need Java, nfs, and smb (cifs). >> >> Java, I think is there. >> NFS is there. >> SMB is kinda there, but I'd like to mount it via fstab (or the Solaris >> equivalent) >> > > By "kinda there", do you mean what you see in Nautilus aka > File Manager? Yes, that's useful but not a "real" file > system. > > A new CIFS client was integrated into Nevada build 84 - see > if it comes closer, but note there are still some things it > doesn't know how to do yet: > > http://www.opensolaris.org/os/project/smbfs/ > > Rob T > _______________________________________________ indiana-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/indiana-discuss
