Not to put too fine a point on it, but actually that is exactly what
this requires. Microsoft phased out the SMBv1 protocol, (NetBios is
dead, long live NetBios), in favour of their new protocol: Web Services
Dynamic Discovery (WSD). There has been a lot of discussion and work as
to exactly HOW
In the very same article you linked: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us
/windows-server/storage/file-server/troubleshoot/smbv1-not-installed-by-
default-in-windows
With SMBv1 being removed, Network Browser (which depended on SMBv1) was
removed, all of which relied on NetBios being used for
My apologies for sidetracking this far trying to explain differences
between discovery and browsing but there seems to be a lot of mixing the
2 as one. The fact that you have "discovered" a server you wish to
"browse" is irrelivant for this bug (afaik you shouldn't have been able
to discover it as
@BloodyIron, please see: https://github.com/christgau/wsdd
I suggest you install as it is a significantly better work-around than
constantly killing the daemon. It is intended to be released in the next
Debian (bookworm) release as a package, I do not know if Ubuntu will
also be including it in