
yeah, i hear ya, but this is easier to get going at first..rush_ad wrote:a good program but doesnt look so good. i'd rather configure nautilus to do the same. for kde, smb4k is pretty good.




Since the password encryption for Windows is different and Linux encrypted passwords cannot be decrypted this is impossible.robbyjo wrote:It would be very nice if there's a way to "copy" user's passwords over to Samba without requiring the user to reinput the passwords.

ok, i get it... so you don't need smbfs (nor cifs) if you only serve out from the Linux box, but you must have one or the other only if you mount a share from a Windows box (or another Linux box running Samba, but if you wanted to do that you might as well use NFS)?darkphader wrote:Some added clarification: Samba is used to act as an smb "server" - to share your files Windows style. While smbfs or cifs is used to mount smb shares (Windows, Samba, Dave, etc.).
You don't use Samba to mount shares and you don't use smbfs or cifs to serve shares.
Chris
well i you knew the tricks of the trade, you could brute force it right?Since the password encryption for Windows is different and Linux encrypted passwords cannot be decrypted this is impossible.

Yes, NFS would probably be best for Nix to Nix communication. But if you have to serve them up for Windows as well it's probably less problematic to use smb/cifs to connect from your nix systems.Sheepdogj15 wrote:ok, i get it... so you don't need smbfs (nor cifs) if you only serve out from the Linux box, but you must have one or the other only if you mount a share from a Windows box (or another Linux box running Samba, but if you wanted to do that you might as well use NFS)?
Yes, probably more correct to say something like "so time consuming to be virtually useless".Sheepdogj15 wrote:well i you knew the tricks of the trade, you could brute force it right? :lol: (yes it would be pointless, i'm just sayin'.)darkphader wrote:Since the password encryption for Windows is different and Linux encrypted passwords cannot be decrypted this is impossible.




This, in a way, depends on what you mean by running off his peer server. Does the app actually run on the "server", or is it running from the "server", where the "server" is just supplying the data files and or the application code? If it's just supplying the data, and or the code (the clients load the code through the network), then it's pretty straightforward.nostabo wrote:Is it possible to "run" windows applications from a Linux/Samba server? I have a Dentist friend who would like to replace his peer network with a Linux server based TCP/IP network. The problem is he has a Windows application that stores financial, office management and x-ray data that runs off his peer "server". He would still need to have the same centralized application running on whatever type of server he upgrades to.
Frankly I wouldn't use FAT32 for anything like this. The network doesn't expose the underlying file system.nostabo wrote:Can his app run on a FAT32 partition on a Linux/Samba server?
Get a cable/DSL router, don't bother the server with this.nostabo wrote:He also needs to share his DSL connection from the server...

Ermm... I don't mean to nitpick, but that's kind of confusing. Those are backslashes.Sheepdogj15 wrote:
You should now be able to connect in. To do so, open Windows Explorer in Windows, and type in \\(computer name)\(share). Remember those are forward slashes not backslashes. so for my set up, it would be \\thebeast\smb

It would be more correct to say that you can use various "tools" to connect to Windows "shares".Jykke wrote:I just newly realized that samba can be used to mount drives from windows to linux.
There is no problem with NTFS then, is there?
(Too bad you can't use this way to mount local windows partitions of a shared machine - since
windows is not running simultaneously)
I assume that you have to give your windows drives free to the network from windows before
samba can access them? (I mean I could not access a second windows machine in network
from another windows machine if the drive wasn't shared first)?

Webmin has a utility for this... I use it all the time...Sheepdogj15 wrote:thank you
another guide i looked at talked about a utility for that purpose, but i couldn't find it anywhere on my system. I'll search around and see if i can find another way to sync smb logins with the Linux logins.
