I know what everyone is busy and there are a lot of requests here but can
someone give me any ideas why I can't get private shares to work? Right now
I get prompted with a logon and password but I cannot connect. Under my
share config I have used user(s) = user-name valid users = user-name and
PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 04, 2003 11:57 AM
To: Thron Havens
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Samba] Samba and private shares
On Tue, 4 Nov 2003, Thron Havens wrote:
I know what everyone is busy and there are a lot of requests here but can
someone give me any ideas why I can't get
I'm running samba 2.5 on a FreeBSD box using winbind to do authentication
with my PDC/BDC. I'm able to configure shares that everyone on the NT
network can access but when I configure private shares (only 1 or 2 users
have access to) the users get prompted for a username and password and are
not
I keep going over the man file but I still can't figure out why it prompts
them for a password and then won't let them in. I still can't access the
folder unless I open it up to the whole network.
Thron
Thron Havens
Network Engineer
Minka Group
(909) 520-1551
-Original Message-
From
I'm running samba 2.5 on a FreeBSD box using winbind to do authentication
with my PDC/BDC. I'm able to configure shares that everyone on the NT
network can access but when I configure private shares (only 1 or 2 users
have access to) the users get prompted for a username and password and are
not
Hi,
I have something weird going on and I don't know what I'm doing wrong. I
have Samba 2.2.8a running on FreeBSD 5.1 with NTLM authentication. I have
been able to get a public share to work and it authenticates fine. When I
try to create a private share with only 1 or 2 users having access it
most of the time have to escape the backslash in the
username (DOMAIN\\user). That is the only suggestion I can think of.
-Original Message-
From: Thron Havens [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, October 13, 2003 13:03
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Samba] Private shares problem
Hi