On 5/6/2010 5:06 PM, Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
This is the company wide share everyone has access to it,
It even fails if I use the domain and enterprise admin accounts-
And as I'm typing this, could that be the reason, because im using domain
accounts?
Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
I'd be curious to know if it is still the case that ntfs writes are
not reliable in that situation. There are times when doing this
can be handy on a dual-boot laptop, for example. 'Anyone out there
care to comment on the state of ntfs rw access?
Sorry I was reading
Hi all,
I have a file I need in my bsd box, would it be easier, or is it possible, to
mount an NTFS share , or should I try to map a directory from the windows box.
TIA,
I have
Xp
Win7
Win2003
Win2008
Freebsd 6.4
thanx
___
On 5/6/2010 3:47 PM, Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
Hi all,
I have a file I need in my bsd box, would it be easier, or is it possible, to
mount an NTFS share , or should I try to map a directory from the windows
box.
TIA,
I have
Xp
Win7
Win2003
Win2008
Freebsd 6.4
thanx
On 5/6/2010 3:47 PM, Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
Hi all,
I have a file I need in my bsd box, would it be easier, or is it possible, to
mount an NTFS share , or should I try to map a directory from the windows
box.
TIA,
I have
Xp
Win7
Win2003
Win2008
Freebsd 6.4
thanx
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Jean-Paul Natola
Sent: Thursday, May 06, 2010 5:13 PM
To: 'Tim Daneliuk'; FreeBSD Mailing List
Subject: RE: Accessing file from windows or to windows
On 5/6/2010 3
On Thu, May 6, 2010 at 4:12 PM, Jean-Paul Natola jnat...@familycareintl.org
wrote:
Well my book (absolute BSD) yes its old, says:
writing to an NTFS partition may corrupt the partition - I'm guessing
this is not the case anymore
and to answer your question;
1. Its 2 separate machines
2.
On 5/6/2010 4:19 PM, Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
SNIP
Well my book (absolute BSD) yes its old, says:
writing to an NTFS partition may corrupt the partition - I'm guessing this
is not the case anymore
and to answer your question;
1. Its 2 separate machines
2. As a security standard I have
On Thu, May 6, 2010 at 4:01 PM, Jean-Paul Natola jnat...@familycareintl.org
wrote:
Thx for the quick reply, one question
Which one , I have
Samba3
Samba33
Samba34
Samba4wins
--
look at samba.org for the lastest stable version and thats it.
--
mmm, interesante.
In order to 'provide' shares to a windows network you would need to
run a daemon on FreeBSD which provides such services. The most popular
solution is 'samba'. I think the package is called 'samba3'. You
install it, edit its config file, which specifies what to share and
how to share it. You then
On 5/6/2010 4:12 PM, Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
On 5/6/2010 3:47 PM, Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
Hi all,
I have a file I need in my bsd box, would it be easier, or is it possible,
to mount an NTFS share , or should I try to map a directory from the
windows box.
TIA,
I have
Xp
Win7
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Tim Daneliuk
Sent: Thursday, May 06, 2010 5:28 PM
To: FreeBSD Mailing List
Subject: Re: Accessing file from windows or to windows-
On 5/6/2010 4:19 PM, Jean-Paul
On 5/6/2010 4:30 PM, Modulok wrote:
In order to 'provide' shares to a windows network you would need to
run a daemon on FreeBSD which provides such services. The most popular
solution is 'samba'. I think the package is called 'samba3'. You
install it, edit its config file, which specifies what
writing to an NTFS partition may corrupt the partition - I'm guessing this
is not the case anymore.
That's only when you have directly mounted an NTFS on the local
machine. Like if you jacked a hard drive out of a windows machine and
plugged it into your BSD machine. If you're accessing it
On 5/6/2010 4:32 PM, Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Tim Daneliuk
Sent: Thursday, May 06, 2010 5:28 PM
To: FreeBSD Mailing List
Subject: Re: Accessing file from windows
On 5/6/2010 4:36 PM, Modulok wrote:
writing to an NTFS partition may corrupt the partition - I'm guessing
this is not the case anymore.
That's only when you have directly mounted an NTFS on the local
machine. Like if you jacked a hard drive out of a windows machine and
plugged it into your
I'd be curious to know if it is still the case that ntfs writes are
not reliable in that situation. There are times when doing this
can be handy on a dual-boot laptop, for example. 'Anyone out there
care to comment on the state of ntfs rw access?
Sorry I was reading so much I go the commands
will be established.
Same error:
milter# mount_smbfs //jnat...@fcisql01/DATA /mnt
Password:
mount_smbfs: unable to open connection: syserr = Authentication error
milter#
This sounds like you have a permissions problem on the Windows share.
In Windows Explorer, right click on the shared
This is the company wide share everyone has access to it,
It even fails if I use the domain and enterprise admin accounts-
And as I'm typing this, could that be the reason, because im using domain
accounts?
___
That was it , I was using a domain
On 5/6/2010 4:52 PM, Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
will be established.
Same error:
milter# mount_smbfs //jnat...@fcisql01/DATA /mnt
Password:
mount_smbfs: unable to open connection: syserr = Authentication error
milter#
This sounds like you have a permissions problem on the Windows share.
On 5/6/2010 5:06 PM, Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
This is the company wide share everyone has access to it,
It even fails if I use the domain and enterprise admin accounts-
And as I'm typing this, could that be the reason, because im using domain
accounts?
Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
Hi all,
I have a file I need in my bsd box, would it be easier, or is it possible, to mount an
NTFS share , or should I try to map a directory from the windows box.
TIA,
I have
Xp
Win7
Win2003
Win2008
Freebsd 6.4
thanx
Sounds like all your PCs are on a
22 matches
Mail list logo