Command-K in the 'finder' (aka the desktop) or Go->Connect to Server menu and then smb://servername will let you browse and connect. Or, for unix-terminal freaks, you can use mount_smbfs (there is a man page for it for usage details). Mounted shares will show up as an icon on the desktop as well as in /Volumes/sharename. Oh, btw, you need encrypted password support on the server for the keychain to remember your passwords (this is a similar issue to WinXP's ability to not remember plain-text passwords).
Use the help menu to dig up some info on how to connect if you need more help. Also, Apple's web site has a support area with some related documents.
OS-X still has some serious problems for network users, though. For example, when connected to a SMB server, most non-ascii chars in file/folder names get mapped to '_'. Yuck! Worst still, some chars do not (like the cursive latin f [option-f]) which get written to the server correctly but confuses OS-X when the directory contents are read back... OS-X then invalidates the entire directory list causing all the files and directories to disappear. Experiment and know these issues before you deploy!
Apple still has some work to do... :'(
Phil
Jim Morris wrote:
On Wed, 2003-01-01 at 16:21, Jim LaSalle wrote:
How do I map OSX to Samba file shares? I'm not new to Samba but OSX is a puzzle. I can get the Mac OSX to see the Samba server but not the shares. Maybe I'm so hung up on the Windows "net use D: \\server\share" syntax I can see the forest for the trees.Use the Go->Servers option, or something like that - I don't have my
iBook in front of me at the moment. When you do that, type the server
name, and connect to the server. To see the full list of shares, you may
need to click the 'Authenticate' button, and give a valid
username/password pair for the Samba server. Once you do this, the full
list of shares should be viewable via a drop down list. Once you pick
one of the shares and then click the 'Connect' button, it will be
mounted as a volume on your desktop.
Alternatively, you can use command line tools such as smbclient, and I
am sure that the 'mount' command has syntax for mounting an SMB share
into the /Volumes directory hierarchy on OS X.
I hope that helps..... like I said, I am running off memory here, but I
have mounted my Samba server shares many times on my iBook, using
Finder....
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