I have these two shares on my Ubuntu Server:
I want to mount them to the directories that I created on my
Desktop called "shared" and "www" how do I do this?
I ran the command:
From the desktop where 192.168.10.101 is the IP of my server
and I'm able to see the shares but how do I mount them?
Hi...
I can ping my Windows PC using both the IP address and NetBios name and I can ping my Linux box the same, IP address and NetBios name. I can even use smbclient to see the shares on my Windows PC. But I can't map the shares so that Linux sees it as a drive. How do I do that? (5 Replies)
I have a samba server node and I want to mount the samba (CIFS) shares from a second (client) unix machine.
However, the unix mount command requires I specify the name of the share. What if I don't know the name of the share?
How can I enumerate all the shares from the samba client machine?
... (1 Reply)
Hi there,
My samba configuration file looks like that :
...
...
path = /home/samba/profiles/
...
path = /home/samba/shares/family
valid users = family
path = /home/samba/shares/admins
valid users = admins
path = /home/samba/shares/publicI want to extract the list of standard... (3 Replies)
So I have Samba installed on my server and I have to create two shares.
Make a backup of your smb.conf - call it smb.conf.orig. Create a share called
shared that allows read and write permissions for everyone and points to
/media/shared.
Create another share called www that points to the... (1 Reply)
Hopefully someone will be kind enough to help me. I have a fileserver acting as a PDC and providing samba shares to a small network. Authentication to the PDC is via LDAP (setup using ebox) The users all have real local accounts on the server.
I would like a windows logon script that will:... (4 Replies)
Hello Forum,
I was overwhelmed by how fast and correct the responses to my first question in this forum was, and I hope I expreience this again today.
The reason is that I have to copy a fileserver (Ubuntu 8.04 32 with Samba) to another server via Internet within tomorrow. I have no problem... (0 Replies)
Hi all,
You may have seen my recent topic, where I asked for help getting some samba shares to work on our network.
Now that these are working, I move on to the next hurdle!
We have a few externally hosted (Windows Server 2008 R2) web servers which are not on our domain, but can still... (0 Replies)
Hi,
We have a number of Windows Server 2003 shares mounted on our AIX server via CIFS, using a command similar to this:
mkcifsmnt -f /test -d testshare -h testserver -c testuser -p pass -w DOMAIN
The windows servers are currently being upgraded to 2012, and as part of this they are setting... (0 Replies)
Hi. Ive recently upgraded Samba on an AIX server to Samba 4. The aim is to allow a specific group of Windows AD users to access some AIX file shares (with no requirement to enter passwords) - using AD to authenticate.
Currently I have:
Samba 4 installed ( and 3 daemons running)
Installed... (1 Reply)
I am running AIX 7.1 and currently we have samba 3.6.25 installed on the server. As it stands some AIX folders are shared that can be accessed by certain Windows users.
The problem is that since Windows 10 the guest feature no longer works so users have to manually type in their Windows login/pwd... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: linuxsnake
14 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
cups-browsed.conf
cups-browsed.conf(5)cups-browsed.conf(5)NAME
cups-browsed.conf - server configuration file for cups-browsed
DESCRIPTION
The cups-browsed.conf file configures the cups-browsed daemon. It is normally located in the /etc/cups directory. Each line in the file can
be a configuration directive, a blank line, or a comment. Comment lines start with the # character.
DIRECTIVES
The BrowseAllow directive specifies a system or network to accept CUPS browse packets from. The default is to accept browse packets from
all hosts when BrowseRemoteProtocols uses the CUPS protocol.
BrowseAllow 192.168.7.20
BrowseAllow 192.168.7.0/24
BrowseAllow 192.168.7.0/255.255.255.0
The BrowsePoll directive polls a server for available printers once every 60 seconds. Multiple BrowsePoll directives can be specified to
poll multiple servers. The default port to connect to is 631. BrowsePoll works independently of whether CUPS browsing is activated in
BrowseRemoteProtocols.
BrowsePoll 192.168.7.20
BrowsePoll 192.168.7.65:631
BrowsePoll host.example.com:631
The BrowseLocalProtocols directive specifies the protocols to use when advertising local shared printers on the network. The default is
"none". Control of advertising of local shared printers using dnssd is done in /etc/cups/cupsd.conf.
BrowseLocalProtocols none
BrowseLocalProtocols CUPS
The BrowseRemoteProtocols directive specifies the protocols to use when finding remote shared printers on the network. Multiple protocols
can be specified by separating them with spaces. The default is "dnssd cups".
BrowseRemoteProtocols none
BrowseRemoteProtocols CUPS dnssd
BrowseRemoteProtocols CUPS
BrowseRemoteProtocols dnssd
The BrowseProtocols directive specifies the protocols to use when finding remote shared printers on the network and advertising local
shared printers. "dnssd" is ignored for BrowseLocalProtocols. Multiple protocols can be specified by separating them with spaces. The
default is "none" for BrowseLocalProtocols and "dnssd cups" for BrowseRemoteProtocols.
BrowseProtocols none
BrowseProtocols CUPS dnssd
BrowseProtocols CUPS
BrowseProtocols dnssd
SEE ALSO cups-browsed(8)
/usr/share/doc/cups-filters/README
AUTHOR
The authors of cups-browsed are listed in /usr/share/doc/cups-filters/AUTHORS.
This manual page was written for the Debian Project, but it may be used by others.
29 June 2013 cups-browsed.conf(5)