you try to connect vi internet?? and your local net? Can you work with your shares?? Is in your "hosts allow=" the subnet of your vpn?? I am doing remote domain login with openvpn without any errors. Your host can be pinged ping 88.198.15.203 Ping wird ausgeführt für 88.198.15.203 mit 32 Bytes Daten: Antwort von 88.198.15.203: Bytes=32 Zeit=17ms TTL=55
No telnet: telnet 88.198.15.203 Verbindungsaufbau zu 88.198.15.203...Es konnte keine Verbindung mit dem Host her gestellt werden, auf Port 23: Verbinden fehlgeschlagen Putty,ssh: OK. You can login from remote to your Host!!!!! I think with (ex mine ) the hosts allow = 127.0.0.1 192.168.129.0/24 192.168.133.0/24 192.168.134.0/24 192. 168.132.0/24 192.168.135.0/24 10.0.11.0/24 where 10.0.11.0.0/24 is my vpn range Fix the host allow to your vpn range. Good Luck Daniel On Mon, 3 Jan 2011 10:51:58 +0100, Mateusz Szymaniec <[email protected]> wrote: > No, it's not. > And as I've said I'm already using Samba shares from a two different > servers on my Windows 7. I've already tried to change Windows settings > via local policies and registry. No effect. Windows says it can't find > the specified network name, smbclient on cygwin can't even open a > connection. Just like there's a magical firewall blocking just the > samba. There is no single log with my ip in it. > Is there any simple way to test the connection itself? By telnet or > sending just one packet, perhaps? > You can try the host yourself, it's "revik.one.pl", ip 88.198.15.203. > Samba is currently up and running. Even a successful connection try > would tell something. > > On Mon, Jan 3, 2011 at 10:01 AM, Daniel Müller <[email protected]> > wrote: >> >> Windows XP should work on the fly! Isn't it??? >> For Windows 7 you got to hack the registry. All entries HKLM. >> You find the enties: google Windows 7 samba >> >> >> >> >> On Fri, 31 Dec 2010 14:03:05 +0100, Mateusz Szymaniec >> <[email protected]> >> wrote: >>> Hi. >>> I've got a nasty problem with Samba. Basically, I can't connect to my >>> Samba service from a home laptop (running Windows 7). I guess that on >>> this side everything is fine, I'm using my corporate Samba shares via >>> VPN, I've been using Samba on my previous server and it was running >>> OK. I've asked my buddy living nearby to connect and it didn't work >>> for him, as well as for 15 other people across living my country. The >>> weirdest thing is, that there are actually people that are able to >>> connect. They were using both Windows XP and 7 and I can't really tell >>> why. I see their connections in logs, but I can't really tell a >>> difference between my and theirs setup. >>> I've tried to use default Debian Etch 2.x Samba, 3.x backports >>> version, compiled 3.x from sources, even reinstalled operating system >>> on the server. I've used default config, copied one from my previous >>> server, wrote it from stretch server times. Every single time it was >>> possible to connect locally (smbclient -L localhost). On the client >>> side, I've tried using default Windows 7 (and XP) smb/cifs >>> implementation and cygwin's smbclient. >>> My server ISP tells that they don't block anything and it's the first >>> time someone has reported problem like this. My iptables are clean at >>> the moment. >>> Currently I'm using v. 3.2.5 with default config with one share and >>> added user by smbpasswd. >>> >>> revik:~# smbclient \\\\localhost\\test >>> Enter root's password: >>> Domain=[REVIK] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 3.2.5] >>> smb: \> ls >>> . D 0 Fri Dec 31 13:57:25 >> 2010 >>> .. D 0 Fri Dec 31 13:57:16 >> 2010 >>> testfile 0 Fri Dec 31 13:57:25 >> 2010 >>> >>> 35201 blocks of size 8388608. 33290 blocks available >>> I don't really can think of any single idea how to make it work or >>> where the problem actually lies. >>> I'd appreciate any help, thanks. >> -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba
