On 2010-05-12 05:12:12 GMT Gary Dunn <osp <at> aloha.com> wrote: > On Fri, 2010-05-07 at 09:57 +0000, osp <at> aloha.com wrote:
.. > > Should I try Samba 4.0? I had been using Samba 3.3 so I installed the 3.4 port and got the same result. Yesterday I installed samba4. It's like a whole new ball game! Sorry to report no improvement. I have a few notes and questions. I had to add a "users" group to /etc/group, did not see that mentioned anywhere. Figured it out from provision errors. I used server role = standalone I added my share to /usr/local/etc/smb4.conf I added my g8team user with net newuser g8team I can connect to the share from the console, and using smbclient on a separate FreeBSD box. Gnome's places/network stopped working, so I installed the samba4wins port but Gnome is still unhappy. Vista still gives error 67 and refuses to connect. I recommend having the provision script suggest renaming the existing smb4.conf file instead of just giving errors as it does now. (I tried running it several times while figuring out how it worked.) Two questions: 1. Is printer sharing working? What syntax do I use in the [printers] section? 2. This is running on a nat gateway. I only want the samba service to appear on the private network. My old smb.conf file had hosts allow = 10.0.1. 127. interfaces = 10.0.1.1 How do I specify this in Samba4? Overall I rate the installation process very good for alpha software. Wiki howto was a big help. For what I need, though, all that support for kerberos and dns and ldap seems like overkill. Samba 3 with security = share is all I need. Physical access to the Ethernet switch is all the access control this application requires. A generic username and password is as far as I want to go. I am absolutely certain that client workstations will not be joining my domain, and I do not want to authenticate against any other directory. Gary Dunn Open Slate Project -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba
