Issues with SAMBA - plz help


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Issues with SAMBA - plz help
# 1  
Old 01-29-2008
Issues with SAMBA - plz help

Hello.

We have 2 HP-UX machines in the same Domain with SAMBA installed and configured.

The problem is:
From my Windows PC when i try to reach "machine1" by using UNC:
\\machine1
I receive the window with all folders available Smilie

From the same PC when i try to reach "mcahine2" by using UNC:
\\machine2
I receive a logon windows that asks for user & password. Smilie

Where is the setting/configuration that is responsible for this on machine2's smb.conf ?
It's not that i'm trying to reach a specific folder on machine2 that i don't have permissions for - but i only to view the list of directories.

Your help is appreciated.

Adija
 
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

AIX 7.1 - Samba 4 File Shares and Integration with Active Directory Issues

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)
Discussion started by: linuxsnake
1 Replies

2. Proxy Server

Samba on AIX, issues setting read-only flag on files?

Hello, I am having issues setting the "read-only" flag via Windows Explorer on my AIX Samba share... I have on my AIX 7.1 system installed Samba 3.6.24 and configured, joined to our Windows domain successfully. The samba binaries I got from perzl.org/aix In my smb.conf I have... ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: c3rb3rus
1 Replies

3. Solaris

samba issue: one samba share without password prompting and the others with.

Hi All, I've been trying to configure samba on Solaris 10 to allow me to have one share that is open and writable to all users and have the rest of my shares password protected by a generic account. If I set my security to user, my secured shares work just fine and prompt accordingly, but when... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ideal2545
0 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

help me out plz

hi all, this is my 1st post to this helpful forum. I am really struck in a situation. Please help me out in this. I will tell u by the example; I have one file named as abc.txt, and its content are Cat Dog Apple what I need to do is to write a script which will read through this file... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: zahirkhan
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Hi PLZ Let me Know

Hi, Iam a beginner to UNIX OS.Plz can any body tell me about CRON.Why we use CRON & where it'll be usefull. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: suneel.abinitio
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Plz help

I am a newbie to Unix, I am using vi editor. I was able to print output to the screen using simple scripts. But when I tried a midlevel script I don't see anything on the screen and Cursor is just blinking when I type ./test11 filename. I have used chmod 755 also, but of no use. Any help would... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mandab
3 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

plz help me

how i can download the game plz tell me ????? ty :) :) :) (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sora21
3 Replies

8. Solaris

Samba 3.0.14 on Solaris 10 issues

Hello All, I am facing a wierd problem with the Samba 3.0.14a on Solaris 10 and CUPS (1.1.12) printing. First of all am not sure if this combination works well. If someone could throw some light, it would be of great help. Samba is setup with security=server, and it is currently a member of... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sapna
0 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

plz Help How should I configure cc compiler output file plz help???

i.e configuration of C compiler :confused: (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: atiato
4 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
FSVS - Master/Local HOWTO(5)					       fsvs					      FSVS - Master/Local HOWTO(5)

NAME
HOWTO: Master/Local repositories - This HOWTO describes how to use a single working copy with multiple repositories. This HOWTO describes how to use a single working copy with multiple repositories. Please read the HOWTO: Backup first, to know about basic steps using FSVS. Rationale If you manage a lot of machines with similar or identical software, you might notice that it's a bit of work keeping them all up-to-date. Sure, automating distribution via rsync or similar is easy; but then you get identical machines, or you have to play with lots of exclude patterns to keep the needed differences. Here another way is presented; and even if you don't want to use FSVS for distributing your files, the ideas presented here might help you keep your machines under control. Preparation, repository layout In this document the basic assumption is that there is a group of (more or less identical) machines, that share most of their filesystems. Some planning should be done beforehand; while the ideas presented here might suffice for simple versioning, your setup can require a bit of thinking ahead. This example uses some distinct repositories, to achieve a bit more clarity; of course these can simply be different paths in a single repository (see Using a single repository for an example configuration). Repository in URL base: trunk/ bin/ ls true lib/ libc6.so modules/ sbin/ mkfs usr/ local/ bin/ sbin/ tags/ branches/ Repository in URL machine1 (similar for machine2): trunk/ etc/ HOSTNAME adjtime network/ interfaces passwd resolv.conf shadow var/ log/ auth.log messages tags/ branches/ User data versioning If you want to keep the user data versioned, too, a idea might be to start a new working copy in every home directory; this way o the system- and (several) user-commits can be run in parallel, o the intermediate home directory in the repository is not needed, and o you get a bit more isolation (against FSVS failures, out-of-space errors and similar). o Furthermore FSVS can work with smaller file sets, which helps performance a bit (less dentries to cache at once, less memory used, etc.). A/ Andrew/ .bashrc .ssh/ .kde/ Alexander/ .bashrc .ssh/ .kde/ B/ Bertram/ A cronjob could simply loop over the directories in /home, and call fsvs for each one; giving a target URL name is not necessary if every home-directory is its own working copy. Note: URL names can include a forward slash / in their name, so you might give the URLs names like home/Andrew - although that should not be needed, if every home directory is a distinct working copy. Using master/local repositories Imagine having 10 similar machines with the same base-installation. Then you install one machine, commit that into the repository as base/trunk, and make a copy as base/released. The other machines get base/released as checkout source, and another (overlaid) from eg. machine1/trunk. Per-machine changes are always committed into the machineX/trunk of the per-machine repository; this would be the host name, IP address, and similar things. On the development machine all changes are stored into base/trunk; if you're satisfied with your changes, you merge them (see Branching, tagging, merging) into base/released, whereupon all other machines can update to this latest version. So by looking at machine1/trunk you can see the history of the machine-specific changes; and in base/released you can check out every old version to verify problems and bugs. Note: You can take this system a bit further: optional software packages could be stored in other subtrees. They should be of lower priority than the base tree, so that in case of conflicts the base should always be preferred (but see 1). Here is a small example; machine1 is the development machine, machine2 is a client. machine1$ fsvs urls name:local,P:200,svn+ssh://lserver/per-machine/machine1/trunk machine1$ fsvs urls name:base,P:100,http://bserver/base-install1/trunk # Determine differences, and commit them machine1$ fsvs ci -o commit_to=local /etc/HOSTNAME /etc/network/interfaces /var/log machine1$ fsvs ci -o commit_to=base / Now you've got a base-install in your repository, and can use that on the other machine: machine2$ fsvs urls name:local,P:200,svn+ssh://lserver/per-machine/machine2/trunk machine2$ fsvs urls name:base,P:100,http://bserver/base-install1/trunk machine2$ fsvs sync-repos # Now you see differences of this machines' installation against the other: machine2$ fsvs st # You can see what is different: machine2$ fsvs diff /etc/X11/xorg.conf # You can take the base installations files: machine2$ fsvs revert /bin/ls # And put the files specific to this machine into its repository: machine2$ fsvs ci -o commit_to=local /etc/HOSTNAME /etc/network/interfaces /var/log Now, if this machine has a harddisk failure or needs setup for any other reason, you boot it (eg. via PXE, Knoppix or whatever), and do (3) # Re-partition and create filesystems (if necessary) machine2-knoppix$ fdisk ... machine2-knoppix$ mkfs ... # Mount everything below /mnt machine2-knoppix$ mount <partition[s]> /mnt/[...] machine2-knoppix$ cd /mnt # Do a checkout below /mnt machine2-knoppix$ fsvs co -o softroot=/mnt <urls> Branching, tagging, merging Other names for your branches (instead of trunk, tags and branches) could be unstable, testing, and stable; your production machines would use stable, your testing environment testing, and in unstable you'd commit all your daily changes. Note: Please note that there's no merging mechanism in FSVS; and as far as I'm concerned, there won't be. Subversion just gets automated merging mechanisms, and these should be fine for this usage too. (4) Thoughts about tagging Tagging works just like normally; although you need to remember to tag more than a single branch. Maybe FSVS should get some knowledge about the subversion repository layout, so a fsvs tag would tag all repositories at once? It would have to check for duplicate tag-names (eg. on the base -branch), and just keep it if it had the same copyfrom-source. But how would tags be used? Define them as source URL, and checkout? Would be a possible case. Or should fsvs tag do a merge into the repository, so that a single URL contains all files currently checked out, with copyfrom-pointers to the original locations? Would require using a single repository, as such pointers cannot be across different repositories. If the committed data includes the $FSVS_CONF/.../Urls file, the original layout would be known, too - although to use it a sync-repos would be necessary. Using a single repository A single repository would have to be partitioned in the various branches that are needed for bookkeeping; see these examples. Depending on the number of machines it might make sense to put them in a 1- or 2 level deep hierarchy; named by the first character, like machines/ A/ Axel/ Andreas/ B/ Berta/ G/ Gandalf/ Simple layout Here only the base system gets branched and tagged; the machines simply backup their specific/localized data into the repository. # For the base-system: trunk/ bin/ usr/ sbin/ tags/ tag-1/ branches/ branch-1/ # For the machines: machines/ machine1/ etc/ passwd HOSTNAME machine2/ etc/ passwd HOSTNAME Per-area Here every part gets its trunk, branches and tags: base/ trunk/ bin/ sbin/ usr/ tags/ tag-1/ branches/ branch-1/ machine1/ trunk/ etc/ passwd HOSTNAME tags/ tag-1/ branches/ machine2/ trunk/ etc/ passwd HOSTNAME tags/ branches/ Common trunk, tags, and branches Here the base-paths trunk, tags and branches are shared: trunk/ base/ bin/ sbin/ usr/ machine2/ etc/ passwd HOSTNAME machine1/ etc/ passwd HOSTNAME tags/ tag-1/ branches/ branch-1/ Other notes 1 Conflicts should not be automatically merged. If two or more trees bring the same file, the file from the highest tree wins - this way you always know the file data on your machines. It's better if a single software doesn't work, compared to a machine that no longer boots or is no longer accessible (eg. by SSH)). So keep your base installation at highest priority, and you've got good chances that you won't loose control in case of conflicting files. 2 If you don't know which files are different in your installs, o install two machines, o commit the first into fsvs, o do a sync-repos on the second, o and look at the status output. 3 As debian includes FSVS in the near future, it could be included on the next KNOPPIX, too! Until then you'd need a custom boot CD, or copy the absolute minimum of files to the harddisk before recovery. There's a utility svntar available; it allows you to take a snapshot of a subversion repository directly into a .tar -file, which you can easily export to destination machine. (Yes, it knows about the meta-data properties FSVS uses, and stores them into the archive.) 4 Why no file merging? Because all real differences are in the per-machine files -- the files that are in the base repository are changed only on a single machine, and so there's an unidirectional flow. BTW, how would you merge your binaries, eg. /bin/ls? Feedback If you've got any questions, ideas, wishes or other feedback, please tell us in the mailing list users [at] fsvs.tigris.org. Thank you! Author Generated automatically by Doxygen for fsvs from the source code. Version trunk:2424 11 Mar 2010 FSVS - Master/Local HOWTO(5)