Re: [Samba] Serious grief with a Samba connection

2009-11-30 Thread Dan White
OK, back at work

On the Sun box:
The suggested commands did not work as suggested, but I did find the proper 
options for this system

smbd -V says 2.2.8a
testparm -x says lots of stuff including encrypt passwords = yes

I will talk with the network guys about NTLM

- sato x gara...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Wed, Nov 25, 2009 at 3:21 PM, Gaiseric Vandal gaiseric.van...@gmail.com 
 wrote:

 My guess is that they may have required NTLMv2 or something thing 
 similar on the Win machines.  If these machines are part of an Active 
 Directory domain,  it would be relatively easy for this to be done.

 http://www.dennek.com/2009/03/system-error-1240-the-account-is-not-
 authorized-to-login-from-this-station/

 You can use gpedit.msc on XP to check your security settings.


 smbd -v would tell you the samba version.
 testparm -v | more   would let you check the various settings.


 Are you the sys admin for the solaris box?



 On 11/25/09 14:52, Dan White wrote:
 The server is on a Sun box (uname says SunOS 5.8) I do not know what 
 version of samba is running

 For the last year and a half, I have made a daily connection from a 
 Windows XP box with the following command:

 new use G: \\server\volume /USER:userid password

 This makes a G network drive that serves the purpose.

 About a month ago, network folks upstream from us spewed a bunch of 
 policy updates that caused serious trouble.  The worst being mine.

 Now, if I try the same command on an XP box, the command executes 
 successfully, the G-drive appears and then blinks to say 
 Disconnected Network Drive

 Because some of our team use them, I tried from a Windows 2000 box.  
 The same command responds with :

 System Error 1240 has occurred.  The account is not authorized to log 
 in from this station

 I checked the smb.conf file and found that the samba server is 
 configured for encrypted passwords.  This error makes no sense.

 The local network folks are convinced this is a Unix problem.

 Any clues out there for this clueless one ?

-- 
To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the
instructions:  https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba


Re: [Samba] Serious grief with a Samba connection

2009-11-30 Thread Dan White
- Volker Lendecke volker.lende...@sernet.de wrote:
 On Mon, Nov 30, 2009 at 01:26:34PM +, Dan White wrote:
  OK, back at work
  
  On the Sun box:
  The suggested commands did not work as suggested, but I did find the proper 
  options for this system
  
  smbd -V says 2.2.8a
  testparm -x says lots of stuff including encrypt passwords = yes
  
  I will talk with the network guys about NTLM
 
 You should also talk with your Solaris people about a newer
 Samba version :-)
 
 Volker

Yes, but this setup DID work up until a month ago.  Iit would be nice to get it 
working agin with a minimum of change because it is part of a development 
environment.

“Sometimes I think the surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in 
the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.”
Bill Waterson (Calvin  Hobbes)

-- 
To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the
instructions:  https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba

[Samba] Serious grief with a Samba connection

2009-11-25 Thread Dan White

The server is on a Sun box (uname says SunOS 5.8)
I do not know what version of samba is running

For the last year and a half, I have made a daily connection from a  
Windows XP box with the following command:


new use G: \\server\volume /USER:userid password

This makes a G network drive that serves the purpose.

About a month ago, network folks upstream from us spewed a bunch of  
policy updates that caused serious trouble.  The worst being mine.


Now, if I try the same command on an XP box, the command executes  
successfully, the G-drive appears and then blinks to say  
Disconnected Network Drive


Because some of our team use them, I tried from a Windows 2000 box.   
The same command responds with :


System Error 1240 has occurred.  The account is not authorized to log  
in from this station


I checked the smb.conf file and found that the samba server is  
configured for encrypted passwords.  This error makes no sense.


The local network folks are convinced this is a Unix problem.

Any clues out there for this clueless one ?
--
To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the
instructions:  https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba


Re: [Samba] Serious grief with a Samba connection

2009-11-25 Thread Dan White

Thanks for the reply !
I can try those commands on Monday -- long Thanksgiving holiday weekend.
I do not have admin on the Sun box, but my tech lead does.

The link says to turn off password encryption.  I cannot do that.   
The network people (government run network) will not allow that.

The samba machine is set for encrypted passwords.

On Nov 25, 2009, at 3:21 PM, Gaiseric Vandal wrote:

My guess is that they may have required NTLMv2 or something thing  
similar on the Win machines.  If these machines are part of an  
Active Directory domain,  it would be relatively easy for this to  
be done.


http://www.dennek.com/2009/03/system-error-1240-the-account-is-not- 
authorized-to-login-from-this-station/


You can use gpedit.msc on XP to check your security settings.


smbd -v would tell you the samba version.
testparm -v | more   would let you check the various settings.


Are you the sys admin for the solaris box?



On 11/25/09 14:52, Dan White wrote:

The server is on a Sun box (uname says SunOS 5.8)
I do not know what version of samba is running

For the last year and a half, I have made a daily connection from  
a Windows XP box with the following command:


new use G: \\server\volume /USER:userid password

This makes a G network drive that serves the purpose.

About a month ago, network folks upstream from us spewed a bunch  
of policy updates that caused serious trouble.  The worst being mine.


Now, if I try the same command on an XP box, the command executes  
successfully, the G-drive appears and then blinks to say  
Disconnected Network Drive


Because some of our team use them, I tried from a Windows 2000  
box.  The same command responds with :


System Error 1240 has occurred.  The account is not authorized to  
log in from this station


I checked the smb.conf file and found that the samba server is  
configured for encrypted passwords.  This error makes no sense.


The local network folks are convinced this is a Unix problem.

Any clues out there for this clueless one ?


--
To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the
instructions:  https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba


--
To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the
instructions:  https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba