On Mon, 6 Jan 2003, Gerald (Jerry) Carter wrote:
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> On Mon, 6 Jan 2003, John H Terpstra wrote:
>
> > jht@frodo:~> smbpasswd -r frodo jht
> > Old SMB password:
> > machine frodo rejected the password change: Error was : RAP86: The
> > specified pas
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On Mon, 6 Jan 2003, John H Terpstra wrote:
> jht@frodo:~> smbpasswd -r frodo jht
> Old SMB password:
> machine frodo rejected the password change: Error was : RAP86: The
> specified password is invalid.
> Failed to change password for jht
>
> The pas
On Mon, 6 Jan 2003, Dan Kirkpatrick wrote:
> Perhaps I should downgrade to 2.2.7 (instead of 2.2.7a) to get users able
> to set their own passwords? Or perhaps there's an easier fix of changing
> the smbpasswd binary or something.
Dan,
Please give us a bit of breathing time, we are working on t
Perhaps I should downgrade to 2.2.7 (instead of 2.2.7a) to get users able
to set their own passwords? Or perhaps there's an easier fix of changing
the smbpasswd binary or something.
It won't let user change/set password from a blank OR a "NO PASSWORD"
It will only allow user to make change if t
On Mon, 6 Jan 2003, Herb Lewis wrote:
> The entry you are showing is NOT for no password but for a disabled
> password.
>
> It should look like the following if there is no password
>
> test:207:NO PASSWORDX:NO
> PASSWORDX:
True, but the complaint appears v
The entry you are showing is NOT for no password but for a disabled
password.
It should look like the following if there is no password
test:207:NO PASSWORDX:NO
PASSWORDX:
Dan Kirkpatrick wrote:
>
> I just created a new smbpasswd file, all users with u
On Mon, 2003-01-06 at 16:47, Dan Kirkpatrick wrote:
> I just created a new smbpasswd file, all users with unset passwords.
> Problem is, users can't set their passwords, only I can as root.
> Password is not set / blank, but they still get:
>
> >test> smbpasswd
> >Old SMB password:
> >New SMB pas
I just created a new smbpasswd file, all users with unset passwords.
Problem is, users can't set their passwords, only I can as root.
Password is not set / blank, but they still get:
test> smbpasswd
Old SMB password:
New SMB password: Samba
Retype new SMB password: Samba
machine 127.0.0.1 reject