Running mount_smbfs as a regular user generates a permission denial in relation to iconv in the kernel. This is apparently a well known problem which can be circumvented by setting the set-user-id-on-execution bit for mount_smbfs. This works for me but leads to the problem that the mount is now seen as belonging to root and the regular user gets a denial on umount.
Allowing regular users to mount smb shares with mount_smbfs seems to me fairly benign but to set the set-user-id-on-execution bit for umount would be extremely dangerous. Is there a way around this problem -- this is under FreeBSD 5.4. Taking a look at the sources for mount_smbfs and the associated library, libsmb, I see that conditional compilation for APPLE (Darwin?) switches the effective user id when the set-user-id-on-execution bit is set with the code executed mostly under the identity of the real user and switching to privileged mode only for a few brief activities - notably for installing the iconv table and a few error conditions. Apart from this the code looks very similar to (but not quite identical with) the FreeBSD code. I presume (without any real justification) that these differences in the APPLE version are intended to circumvent the difficulty I am having when running under Darwin. The question is if I modify the FreeBSD code to perform similar switchings of effective user id and recompile am I likely to achieve my desired goal? Has anyone else tried this? Any comments would be welcome. Malcolm _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"