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NW32client 3.1sp2, Redhat 6.1, & Samba
I can't get two computers (DELL - XP Pro and GATEWAY- XP home), connected by a netgear WGR614 router - by wired connections - to communicate quickly enough. been at both off and set to allow others to share and to browse / write my files on Network Places IPCONFIG for Dell: Windows IP Configuration Host Name .

Samba Server
Well, you still don't know if upstream will become mad in the next 10 years, can you ? :) And git code isn't trivial, so I don't think you'll be able to hack version3 With Extremadura coming up, who would be interested in joining a "workgroup" to work on this stuff? I would volunteer to chair such a session.

Untitled
My problem is that I can't write 2 my server from a windows workstation. Windows shows: access is denied. Make sure the disk is not full or write-protected. I've read the HOWTO on samba but still can't get it working. Thanks in advance Mars. My samba configuration looks like this: [global] workgroup = zoom server

Networking an Apple Mac to a PC
With Temp it's set to just public = yes and I can't write to it. With the IT share it's set to public = no and write list = @'Domain+IT' and I can view it but 0] nsswitch/winbindd_group.c:winbindd_getgrnam(211) could not get domain sid for domain 'WILLOWBROOK conf file: [global] workgroup = WILLOWBROOK server

Samba can't write to FAT32 partition
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with -# this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 +# this file; ..... +++ branches/mochiweb/share/www/script/couch_tests.js Fri Feb 22 03:53:25 2008 @@ -351,7 +351,7 @@ T(db.save(jsonAttDoc).ok); - req.open("GET",

Can't Write to Samba Share
Just can't write to the folder. "Knuj Liam" <knuj2...@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:eQj04MppAHA.2236@tkmsftngp05... One W2Kpro desktop named "Main" (with printer) and one W98 laptop named "Laptop". Both are members of same workgroup named "MHG". 10baseT LAN. Have run out of ideas after doing all of the

I'm baffled??!!
But it can't create a file on the server. Someplace I'm missing something. (Probably a FAQ candidate.) -- Sherwood Botsford | email ava...@vega.math.ualberta.ca Sorcerers Apprentice | Office CAB 642B System Administrator | Tel: 403 492 5728 Trouble shooter | Fax: 403 492 6826 Having a client's workgroup name the

can't write to windows shares
We have a group (lets call it happy) in both unix, and in our windows domain. with winbind, the domain\happy group obviously isn't getting the same GID as the unix happy group. the share we are working on is 0775, so I can't write to it when I connect using my domain acct. in net groupmap a mapping for the group

Security: multi-user DB's tend to lock
Please take a look at my smb.conf and tell me what's going wrong and why I can't write to the shared folder. Thanks in advance. SMB. 20:07:50 # Global parameters [global] path = /MP3 Don't put path in the global section! writeable = Yes security = share null passwords = yes encrypt passwords = yes workgroup = 1

Need help, users can't write to shares
How else can I setup the network on the Win98 machines so that they can share files with the XP laptop? The Network Setup Wizard is in this file: C:\Windows\System32\Netsetup.exe If you can't write it to a removable medium (eg CD, floppy, thumb drive, memory stick) you can E-mail it to the other machines,

How to access the C$ share
Just in case you still don't understand my point, here it is: in Smalltalk in general you can't write a new class so that its instance can be used in to blur the whole point of this discussion, which has been about whether Smalltalk allows us to derive from two base classes that happen to share a method name.

Using sp_addumpdevice to backup a SQL Server 2000 database
In Win98, I can look at GuestRoot and browse that, but can't write. When I go to browse the share 'Root', I get a password dialogue. CONF: # Samba config file created using SWAT # from 192.168.0.1 (192.168.0.1) # Date: 1999/04/11 17:42:10 # Global parameters workgroup = TEKNET netbios name = HALLUC server

can't get permission established
There is another (liberal rules) share that I can get to with no problems at all. I can even double-click the "branch99test" share, and see the file that appears (a single text file created from the Mandrake box; even my Windows box can open it). But I can't write (create) in the directory. Can anyone postulate as

LPQ????
... logon script=%m.bat ; logon script=%U.bat ; encrypt passwords=yes ; domain logons=yes ; smb passwd file=/etc/smbpasswd ; local master=no preserve case=yes workgroup=WORKGROUP security=USER max log size=50 share modes=yes ; username map=/etc/smbusers wins support=yes short preserve case=no ; default case=lower

Samba/LDAP Question
but not with write access under any circumstances. If I change to security = user, I can access and write to home directories, but still can't write to the sharedir, although, as before, I can open it. The smb.conf file (without comments) is reproduced below. [global] workgroup = equality server string = Samba

Joining a Windows XP pc to Samba / LDAP domain
I logged on as a local Aministrator and mistakenly managed to delete my old profile, but it doesn´t matter. So I still can´t log on to my winnt machine, path = \\%m\Profiles\%U #======= Share Definitions ============ [netlogon] path = /var/samba/lib/netlogon read only = yes write list = ntadmin [homes] comment

can't write to Linux drive from Win95B
If
I mount the remote share via smbmount onto a Linux server in the office, I don't encounter any of these problems. though all communication is in Direct-hosted mode (ie, I only see traffic on port 445/tcp). smb.conf looks like this: [global] workgroup = WG123 netbios name = n2323 # hostname of server server

Security: multi-user DB's tend to lock
I finally have gotten the mount command to work, but now I can't write to the share because of permissions. Can you give some examples of your command line and the resulting file and directory permissions? I have not had any trouble using the new fmask and dmask options. Although I think they are really being used

networking weirdness
I have followed the standard network setup procedure and I can "see" the PC from the macbook but I can't connect to it. I can read and write to the mac from (all folders have full share access, the Mac and PC are on the same workgroup - I have even redone the network setup wizard). In Leopard, make sure you are

Subfolders and permissions
I can't write or delete files to any folder on my linux box. I'm logged in as root too. I can copy files from my linux system, but not the other way around. Any ideas? First when you issue a "smbstatus" command on the linux box, what does it show - you as root or guest? Are the unix permissions ok on the shares?