On Wed, Dec 29, 2010 at 1:07 PM, Hodges, Robert CTR USAF AFMC 520 SMXS/MXDEC <robert.hodges....@hill.af.mil> wrote: > The registry change and enabling the browser service produced the same > results as before, same error ("The specified network name is no longer > available."). > > However, it did allow Windows XP to force itself to use the Samba server as > the master browser without having to disable the Computer Browser service, > which is what I had been doing. So that was nice. > > Any other suggestions?
If you have a WINS server that the system is registering with you shouldn't need an lmhosts file - although as long as they don't contradict you would be fine. FYI, possibly the absolute dumbest UI decision ever was Microsoft's one to hide file extensions for known file types. Many users think they have a perfectly fine lmhosts file when they have a useless lmhosts.sam or lmhosts.txt file instead. You can examine the wins.dat file on the WINS server host to determine if the XP system is registering itself. Outside possibility - NetBIOS Scope - which allows for some (il)logical type of NetBIOS "subnetting". It possible that the XP system has been setup to respond to a particular NetBIOS scope ID (although I haven't seen such a setup in use for eons). I do admit to always adding an - option netbios-scope ""; - to my dhcpd server to eliminate this tattoo from the registry. You can also manually check it at: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\NetBT\Parameters\ScopeID If there's any value there delete it (unless you're using a Scope ID, then make it match). Chris -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba