P for them to see this printer on
Linux attached locally to a USB port. I can see and print to it in
Linux. I know there have been volums written on Samba, but it seems to me
sharing a printer should be simple.
It is, at least to Win2K hosts (I don't have XP running here yet). If the
pro
cally to a USB port. I can see and print to it in
Linux. I know there have been volums written on Samba, but it seems to
me sharing a printer should be simple.
I just want XP users to use their own driver and use the guest account
for printing. Fro win XP I can see the Linux box, but can'
At 03:38 PM 2/10/2005 -0500, Eve Atley wrote:
Thanks. Your advice makes sense, but allow me to give a bit more detail of
the current setup.
1. Those users for whom I do have an account set up (example: gagan) have
their own username/password.
2. FTP and Telnet has been disabled, so SSH is the only
Thanks. Your advice makes sense, but allow me to give a bit more detail of
the current setup.
1. Those users for whom I do have an account set up (example: gagan) have
their own username/password.
2. FTP and Telnet has been disabled, so SSH is the only way they can access
our US server currently
ccess to the folders for which they had permission
(having set up groups and put each user into a group). Yesterday, I ended up
deleting our Samba shares directory (/home/shared) because I was attempting
to get rid of a user; Linux prompted me if I wanted to get rid of that
user's files, an
y had permission
(having set up groups and put each user into a group). Yesterday, I ended up
deleting our Samba shares directory (/home/shared) because I was attempting
to get rid of a user; Linux prompted me if I wanted to get rid of that
user's files, and I hit ok without thinking, thereby wiping o
newbies, but I think it is the best way to
> learn linux because it really forced me to learn new things.
>
My opinion exactly. I started the same way back Slackware 7.1.
> My question: Can you recommend any books that deal more with networking, I
> am having troubles trying to set u
the best way to
> learn linux because it really forced me to learn new things.
>
> My question: Can you recommend any books that deal more with networking, I
> am having troubles trying to set up a Samba server? I also want to be able
> to set up Apache and BIND? OH, and one more, doe
k administrator guide and
System administrator guide
> am having troubles trying to set up a Samba server? I also want to be able
> to set up Apache and BIND? OH, and one more, does anyone have a good text on
> using a good linux server to serve a lot of thin clients?
>
> thanks for your time
&
best way to
learn linux because it really forced me to learn new things.
My question: Can you recommend any books that deal more with networking, I
am having troubles trying to set up a Samba server? I also want to be able
to set up Apache and BIND? OH, and one more, does anyone have a good te
I want to join into a Windows NT Domain with SAMBA but I'm not the network
admin, I'm just a simple mortal here:
Is there any way to know which is my the Primary Domain Controller?
TKS, for your help.
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie&qu
; > UP LOOPBACK RUNNING MTU:16436 Metric:1
> > RX packets:24 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
> > TX packets:24 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
> > collisions:0 txqueuelen:0
> > RX bytes:1571 (1.5 Kb) TX bytes
uses to access the Internet). Since both
interfaces use private (RFC1918 non-routable) IP addresses, it would help
to know which is your external, which your internal interface.I could infer
this from your routing table ("netstat -nr" is one way to list it), but you
didn't in
0 0 *:ssh *:*
LISTEN
tcp0 0 *:32791 *:*
LISTEN
tcp0 0 *:6010 *:*
LISTEN
udp0 0 *:talk *:*
udp0 0 *:sunrpc
I didn't mean to do a HUGE mail about this... so I made as short as
possible.
- Original Message -
From: "Ray Olszewski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, June 19, 2003 3:27 PM
Subject: Re: problems with Apache, FTP, SAMBA
> At
At 02:37 PM 6/19/2003 -0400, Alan Bort wrote:
Ok... her is my problem:
I have apache2, proftpd and samba on two machines. Though
I have them
configured correctly (at least I think so) I have the fopllowing
problem. Machine A has access to internet trough machine B. From A I
can
Ok... her is my problem:
I have apache2, proftpd and samba on two machines. Though I have them
configured correctly (at least I think so) I have the fopllowing
problem. Machine A has access to internet trough machine B. From A I
can see and use B's apache perfectly. BUT from
Originally to: Paul Kraus
->How can I set samba to start when the server starts.
->Every time I reboot the machine I have su, /sbin/service smb restart.
Paul you have it set to start in your /etc/init.rc (or something similar)
files?
...On a tombstone: "I TOLD YOU I WAS S
ppropriate support in the kernel) rather than
smbclient? I'm inexperienced in using client-side Samba on Linux, so I
don't know if there is a real performance difference between the two
methods, but you might want to look into it. Since smbclient runs in
userspace rather than kernelspace, I w
On Monday 17 March 2003 20:11, Abhijit Vijay wrote:
> Copy files from Server to Client 402 MB
> (avg file size 58kB)
> Linux => 2.71 MB/sec
> WinXP => 3.42 MB/sec
>
> Copy file from Server to Client 0.99 GB
> (avg file size 86,630 kB)
> Linux => 4.06 MB/sec
> WinXP => 8.49 MB/sec
>
I would make a
--- Ray Olszewski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At 10:07 AM 3/17/2003 -0800, Abhijit Vijay wrote:
> >Hi All,
> >
> >I came to know from some of my labmates who did a
> >performance test, that Linux Samba access is
> >*significantly* slower (order of three t
On Mon, 17 Mar 2003, Abhijit Vijay wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I came to know from some of my labmates who did a
> performance test, that Linux Samba access is
> *significantly* slower (order of three times) than
> Windows SMB. Is there any reason why this could be tru
> and can thi
At 10:07 AM 3/17/2003 -0800, Abhijit Vijay wrote:
Hi All,
I came to know from some of my labmates who did a
performance test, that Linux Samba access is
*significantly* slower (order of three times) than
Windows SMB. Is there any reason why this could be tru
and can this problem be fixed at all
Hi All,
I came to know from some of my labmates who did a
performance test, that Linux Samba access is
*significantly* slower (order of three times) than
Windows SMB. Is there any reason why this could be tru
and can this problem be fixed at all?
Thanks in Advance,
Abhijit
Ray,
Thanks for the response, you are always very helpful and prompt.
However, you misread the "judgment passing" portion of my post in quite a severe
light. You should observe that, bitching aside, the post indicated genuine concern
about whether or not my host was causing problems for the
uter, so if I want one at school I have to bring it in
myself). What I wonder, though, is if there is some possibility that the
computer is responsible for the network problems, which was just
described to me as 'something creating so much network traffic as to
bring the network down.' Fi
uter is responsible for the network problems, which was just
described to me as 'something creating so much network traffic as to bring the network
down.' First, the machine had been running Samba. The smbd settings relating to the
machine acting as a Primary Domain Controller were
At 09:34 03/03/2003 -0500, Paul Kraus wrote:
>How can I set samba to start when the server starts.
>Every time I reboot the machine I have su, /sbin/service smb restart.
>
>Paul Kraus
>
>-
>To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
&
Hello Paul , Try 'man chkconfig' , Then 'chkconfig samba'
Hth , JimL
On Mon, 3 Mar 2003, Paul Kraus wrote:
> How can I set samba to start when the server starts.
> Every time I reboot the machine I have su, /sbin/service
How can I set samba to start when the server starts.
Every time I reboot the machine I have su, /sbin/service smb restart.
Paul Kraus
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More majordomo inf
Hi
I've read a lot about setting up samba as a password server, and
authenticating unix users against a samba server, but is there
any way to authenticate samba users (like on logon) against
the unix users and passwords (th users on the passwd and on the
shadow files)?
thanks
Daniel
a way with
automounting, but I am not shure about this.
For your remaining problems I can offer only little help. I have the
impression, that you are setting up a samba server of your own, but I am not
shure, whether you want or need to do this. For mounting remote filesystems
this should not be nece
I am new to running Samba too, so these comments may be a bit off the mark.
Also, I use Debian SId, while I'm guessing you use Woody, so our app
versions will differ a bit. With those warnings ...
1. Needing to be root to mount filesystems is the default behavior of
"mount".
Hello,
I'm running Debian (kernel 2.4.16) now for some time, but I don't manage
to configure samba (2.2.3a) like it should (I guess). I'll try to
explain as good as possible what my problems are...
I want to get on a Windows NT intranetserver, to access some data but
esp
I just replaced one of our windows file servers with a redhat 7.3 samba
server.
I have the g (/home/advserver/g) share on the redhat box mapped to g (go
figure) on to xp pro workstations.
The map drive is being created on startup with this command. (both
workstations use same login information to
On Fri, 29 Nov 2002, Mr. James W. Laferriere wrote:
> > > mdresser@monitor:~$ smbmount //mike/c test
> Hmmm , My smbmount tool screams at me to use ... This is with
> version 2.2.7 . Which is highly recomended due to a Security
> issue . Don't know how far back in versions th
Hello Mike ,
On Fri, 29 Nov 2002, Mike Dresser wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Nov 2002, Mike Dresser wrote:
> > On Fri, 29 Nov 2002, Paul Kraus wrote:
> > > Have written some scripts that perform network backups. However I am
> > > only able to run them as root. How can give mount permissions to ano
On Fri, 29 Nov 2002, Mike Dresser wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Nov 2002, Paul Kraus wrote:
>
> > Have written some scripts that perform network backups. However I am
> > only able to run them as root. How can give mount permissions to another
> > user.
>
> Just a side note, have you seen smbtar? Might be
On Fri, 29 Nov 2002, Paul Kraus wrote:
> Have written some scripts that perform network backups. However I am
> only able to run them as root. How can give mount permissions to another
> user.
Just a side note, have you seen smbtar? Might be easier than mounting a
directory and copying it, and t
On a side note I don't want to run them with sudo. Is there another way?
-Original Message-
From: Paul Kraus [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, November 29, 2002 9:19 AM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: Samba mount not as root
Have written some scripts that
Have written some scripts that perform network backups. However I am
only able to run them as root. How can give mount permissions to another
user.
Paul Kraus
Network Administrator
PEL Supply Company
216.267.5775 Voice
216-267-6176 Fax
www.pelsupply.com
BEGIN:VCARD
VERSION:2.1
N:Kraus;Paul
FN:Pau
Hi there
I think I did this befre, but it isn't working
is there any tag to the smb.conf file to authenticate users using the unix
users, but without kerberos or ldap
thanks
Daniel Provin
Lixux User #191271
EEL LABMETRO UFSC
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbi
On Wed, 2002-10-09 at 19:11, Alan Womack wrote:
> I assume you are using them in a raid, are you using an IDE controller,
> if so which one or are you using RAID within the kernel itself. e.g.
> software only raid.
No, actually. This is just a staging server - we backup from production
solaris
I assume you are using them in a raid, are you using an IDE controller, if so which
one or are you using RAID within the kernel itself. e.g. software only raid.
> (resolution note:) Instead, we got four of the 120G devices, and ended
up spending $600 for for 480 G instead of $500 for 320 G. I
On Wed, 2002-10-09 at 16:23, Paul Kraus wrote:
> I noticed this in /var/log/messages. This is a brand new 180gb ide
> drive.
>
> Log
>
> Oct 9 10:32:08 redhat-fax kernel: hde: status error: status=0x58 {
> DriveReady SeekComplete DataRequest }
Paul, I don't know what brand of 180 Gig drive
On Wednesday 09 October 2002 20:05, Le, Paul [Contractor] wrote:
> I am looking a Unix command which allow me search & replace a string a an
> ascii file.
sed
Help can be found here;
www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-sed1.html
>
> Thanks,
> Paul
--
Regards Richard
[EMAIL PROTECTE
Of Paul Kraus
Sent: Wednesday, October 09, 2002 3:59 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Samba Mount File Corruption
Has anyone had any issues when copying a file from a samba/windows
mounted drive (mount -t smbfs) to there Linux box? I had a 1 gig file I
transferred that was a tar file. On the
I am looking a Unix command which allow me search & replace a string a an
ascii file.
Thanks,
Paul
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please re
Has anyone had any issues when copying a file from a samba/windows
mounted drive (mount -t smbfs) to there Linux box? I had a 1 gig file I
transferred that was a tar file. On the Linux machine I then tried to
untar it received errors and failed about half way through. The file
size was correct. I
>
>*On a side note why can't I open Linux conf files with notepad? There
>are strange characters. I have to open it with WordPad. I can not save
>or edit using either notepad or WordPad because they seem to add strange
>characters also. Just curious.*
Its the Line Feed/Carriage Return problem.
At 10:57 AM 10/1/02 -0400, Paul Kraus wrote:
>I have written the script to tar up folders on my xp box. The script
>works. I mount -t smbfs The folder I want. I then tar mnt/folder
>The problem is that I get errors saying that the file changed as we read
>it. Or text file busy.
>None of the f
At 11:15 AM 10/1/02 -0400, Paul Kraus wrote:
[...]
>*On a side note why can't I open Linux conf files with notepad? There
>are strange characters. I have to open it with WordPad. I can not save
>or edit using either notepad or WordPad because they seem to add strange
>characters also. Just curiou
I have an Epson 880 on my windows workstation. I have this shared
through cups using samba. This configuration works fine. I can print to
the printer without any issues.
The problem is that when I lp something the left margin is always cuts
off the first character.
Now I have found a work
umably you are using SAMBA to mount the drive from your XP box. In
which case, you don't need to be root, provided that the mount point is
owned by the user. For example, as user paulk, you could create a
directory to use for the mount (mkdir ~/windows) and then you should be
able to mount the sam
In order to print to my windows shared printers I have setup cups to use
samba. Test pages work and I can print documents to the windows
workstations using lp. However when I use lp -dprinter the very left
character of the printjob gets cut off. How can I increase the left
margin to avoid this
I am looking for a simple poor man's solution and not an elaborate big
business set-up
This is the situation:
We have a Samba server (Slackware with kernel 2.2.17) which shares files
including
MS Office, graphics, mp3s, etc over several win9x clients in the office.
This has been
ru
me of the share anyways
an mixed case username was causing samba to look for alan instead of Alan, so I
changed all my entries of Alan across the security files to alan
I can now browse and open my shares on my windows box. I also see a nifty deal for
changing the volume name of the share from
ines.
>encrypt passwords = Yes
> smb passwd file = /etc/samba/sambapasswd
Are the users in the sambapasswd file with the same UID as /etc/passwd?
>#Easier backups
>syslog = 3
>#Level of logging to syslog. Keep this low
>max log size = 1000
>
I am having trouble getting samba to let me access the share I put on my LFS 3.3 box.
attached is the dialog I get in windows.
the following is my smb.conf
root@webby:log# cat /etc/samba/smb.conf
[global]
workgroup = FAMILY
# Put your own in here.
netbios name = WEBBY
server
I have two PC's (Linux and Win2000) connected with a server running Linux 7.0
and Samba. When booting the win-box but also on further ocasions I cannot
define, the server starts connecting to ISDN ( dial on demand ) in spite of
the fact that nobody wants a connection at this time.
>From
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