Quoting David <[email protected]>:

On 8/19/19 1:31 PM, Michael C Robinson wrote:
I am on a CentOS 7 system running gnome 3, fully updated.  I want clicking on Windows Network in Nautilus to show my freenas 11.2 U6 server.  My smb.conf on the CentOS 7 box follows:


<-- removed smb.conf -->
This config is relevant I believe and shouldn't have been removed!


Please note that I am trying to use the CentOS 7 host as a client to the freenas server.  I'm trying specifically to use Nautilus and browse to the freenas server.

[mrobinson@eagle ~]$ nmblookup freenas
192.168.254.18 freenas<00>
[mrobinson@eagle ~]$

I can do a smb://freenas manually, but I want clicking on Windows Network to work properly.



How are you configuring the mount for this? In order to use Nautilus or other tools, the OS has to know how to find the share.

I do something similar with autofs in my home network, and it works fine. You can set up something similar, or use /etc/fstab strictly to mount on boot and leave it attached all the time.

david
I can manually in Nautilus connect to freenas, but it should be possible to see freenas when I click on Windows Network. What am I missing to be able to browse to my freenas server in Nautilus without manually connecting? I am not thinking I need a manual mount or autofs to be able to browse in Nautilus to a freenas server. Freenas implements cifs
I believe and is probably Samba 3.x based.

I'm running into a lot of you have to set the workgroup to WORKGROUP nonsense online, my workgroup is roch.robinson-west.com. What does Nautilus use on the backend to be able to browse a Windows Network?

_______________________________________________
PLUG mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug


_______________________________________________
PLUG mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug

Reply via email to