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smbstat(1m) [opensolaris man page]

smbstat(1M)						  System Administration Commands					       smbstat(1M)

NAME
smbstat - show Solaris CIFS file server statistics SYNOPSIS
smbstat [-di] DESCRIPTION
The smbstat command shows statistical information for the smbd server. When the -i option is specified, the smbstat command shows general information about the CIFS service. For instance, smbstat -i shows the number of sessions, connections, and open files. The -d option shows dispatched CIFS request counters. By default, the smbstat command shows all statistics. OPTIONS
The smbstat command includes the following options: -d Shows all the dispatched CIFS requests on the CIFS server. This option shows count statistics based on request activity. -i Shows the following information for the CIFS server: connections Number of CIFS connections. open_files Number of files open on the CIFS server. sessions Number of active CIFS sessions. EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 Successful completion. >0 An error occurred. ATTRIBUTES
See the attributes(5) man page for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWsmbsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Uncommitted | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Utility Output Format |Not-an-Interface | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
sharectl(1M), sharemgr(1M), smbadm(1M), smbstat(1M), attributes(5) SunOS 5.11 4 Aug 2008 smbstat(1M)

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smbautohome(4)							   File Formats 						    smbautohome(4)

NAME
smbautohome - CIFS autohome configuration SYNOPSIS
smbautohome DESCRIPTION
The Solaris CIFS service can automatically share home directories when a CIFS client connects. The autohome map file, /etc/smbautohome, uses the search options and rules to determine whether to share a home directory when a CIFS client connects to the server. For example, the following entries specify the autohome rules for a particular environment: +nsswitch dn=ad,dn=sun,dn=com,ou=users jane /home/?/& dn=ad,dn=sun,dn=com,ou=users The nsswitch autohome entry uses the naming service to match users to home directories. The second autohome entry specifies that the home directory for user jane is /home/j/jane. autohome Map Entry Format A map entry, which is also referred to as a mapping, uses the following format: key location [ options ] key is a user name, location is the fully qualified path for the user's home directory, and options specifies the share options, for exam- ple, an AD container or description. See sharemgr(1M) for information on share options. If you intend to publish the share in Active Directory (AD), you must specify an AD container name, which is specified as a comma-separated list of attribute name-value pairs. The attributes use the LDAP distinguished name (DN) or relative distinguished name (RDN) format. The DN or RDN must be specified in LDAP format by using the following attribute types: o cn= represents the common name o ou= represents the organizational unit o dc= represents the domain component The attribute type that is used to describe an object's RDN is called a naming attribute. AD uses the naming attributes as follows: o cn for the user object class o ou for the OU (organizational unit) object class o dc for the domainDns object class autohome Map Key Substitution The autohome feature supports the following wildcard substitutions for the value of the key field: o The ampersand character (&) is expanded to the value of the key field for the entry in which it occurs. In the following exam- ple, & expands to jane: jane /home/& o The question mark character (?) is expanded to the value of the first character in the key field for the entry in which it occurs. In the following example, ? expands to j: jane /home/?/& Wildcard Rule When supplied in the key field, the asterisk character (*) is recognized as the "catch-all" entry. Such an entry matches any key not previ- ously matched. For example, the following entry would map any user to a home directory in /home in which the home directory name was the same as the user name: * /home/& The wildcard rule is only applied if an appropriate rule is not matched by another map entry. NSSwitch Map The nsswitch map is used to request that the home directory be obtained from a password database, such as the local, NIS, NIS+, or LDAP databases. If an AD path is appended, it is used to publish shares. +nsswitch Like the "catch-all" entry, the nsswitch map is only searched if an appropriate rule is not matched by another map entry. The wildcard and nsswitch rules are mutually exclusive. Do not include an nsswitch rule if a wildcard rule has already been defined. FILES
/etc/smbautohome ATTRIBUTES
See the attributes(5) man page for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWsmbsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Uncommitted | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
sharectl(1M), sharemgr(1M), smbadm(1M), smbd(1M), smbstat(1M), smb(4), attributes(5) SunOS 5.11 5 Jan 2009 smbautohome(4)
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