I would walk through DIAGNOSIS.txt, which comes with the samba sources.

Joel

On Mon, Dec 30, 2002 at 02:26:15AM +0000, phil brogan wrote:
>  > > tcp is a transport protocol. It isn't a daemon. You have not
>  > > understood the
>  > > output.
>  > > Post the output of netstat -anp | grep 139.
>  > > Is xinetd or inetd or smbd listening to this port?
>  >
>  >
>  > I tried netstat -anp | grep 139 and I see that it is indeed xinetd
>  > which
>  > is listening on that port.  How do I resolve this conflict?
> 
> I removed xinetd's files for netbios-ns and netbios-ssn, started nmbd 
> and smbd and they are running.  Oddly enough, I created the netbios-ns 
> and netbios-ssn files for xinetd as per instructions from Jerry Carter's 
> book "Teach Yourself Samba in 24 Hours".  Why would that book tell me to 
> do something that breaks Samba?
> 
> Anyway...
> 
> I did an smbstatus, got error message "Failed to open byte range locking 
> database", fixed it by using command "smbclient -L localhost".
> 
> I went to a Win98 machine, did a "net view \\linux-computer-name" and 
> received an Error 53 message from Windows "The computer name in the 
> network path cannot be located."  Yet I can ping linux-computer-name by 
> name from the Win98 box.
> 
> Any help would be appreciated, thank you.
> 
> 
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