Gordon Messmer wrote:
> Stephen Bosch wrote:
>>
>> If the Samba server is the domain browser, the Network Neighborhood (or
>> My Network Places) for the domain is empty. As soon we reset the server
>> to not be a browser of any sort, another machine on the network takes
>> over, and we see all the
Gordon Messmer wrote:
> Stephen Bosch wrote:
>
>>
>> If the Samba server is the domain browser, the Network Neighborhood (or
>> My Network Places) for the domain is empty. As soon we reset the server
>> to not be a browser of any sort, another machine on the network takes
>> over, and we see all t
Hi, Anthony:
Thanks for your reply. My comments are below.
Anthony Messina wrote:
> stephen, in your earlier posts, you mentioned that these are windows
> 2000 clients; is that correct?
Yes, that is true, however -- in our laboratory environment, the clients
are XP clients, and we observe the sa
Stephen Bosch wrote:
If the Samba server is the domain browser, the Network Neighborhood (or
My Network Places) for the domain is empty. As soon we reset the server
to not be a browser of any sort, another machine on the network takes
over, and we see all the hosts. This is even though we can co
Stephen Bosch wrote:
Hello:
This browsing problem is not going away. We have followed the how-to,
used someone else's "known good" config, perused packet dumps until we
were blue, and tried replicating the setup in a laboratory environment
to see if it was site-specific.
The problem is still th
Hello:
This browsing problem is not going away. We have followed the how-to,
used someone else's "known good" config, perused packet dumps until we
were blue, and tried replicating the setup in a laboratory environment
to see if it was site-specific.
The problem is still there:
If the Samba serv