-----Original Message----- From: CentOS [mailto:centos-bounces@centos.org] On Behalf Of david Sent: Tuesday, November 14, 2017 9:11 PM To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org Subject: [CentOS] Samba help
Folks
I have a Centos7 system (SOFA) and want to install a Samba share named "STUFF" for the machines inside my home. All users in my home have read access to the share, but only one user "me" has write permission. The configuration below worked just fine when the Samba system was on Centos 6, but did not work under Centos 7. The client machine is Windows 10. I have changed all "private" information for this message.
The Centos 7 machine is running with SELINUX disabled, and effectively without firewall.
Windows network browsing finds the computer, but not the share. (it used to find the share with Centos 6).
The server name is SOFA The share name is STUFF the Workgroup name is MYGROUP
The Linux account is "melinux" The logon name from windows is "me"
I have issued the command smbpass -a me <password-for-me> <password-for-me>
smb.conf contains:
# Samba Configuration
[global] dns proxy = no hosts allow = 192.168. 127. 10. localhost hosts deny = ALL log file = /var/log/samba/%m.log max log size = 50 netbios name = SOFA printcap name = /dev/null printing = bsd security = user server string = Samba %v on sofa socket options = TCP_NODELAY SO_RCVBUF=8192 SO_SNDBUF=8192 username map = /etc/samba/smbusers winbind use default domain = no workgroup = MYGROUP [STUFF] browsable = yes case sensitive = no comment = STUFF on sofa create mask = 0755 directory mask = 0755 force user = melinux guest ok = yes path = /home/samba-share write list = melinux
smbusers contains:
melinux = me
Where have I gone wrong? What changed from C6 to C7. Any advice would be appreciated.
David
See if adding these under [global] helps in smb.conf:
server max protocol = SMB3 client signing = required max protocol = SMB2 server signing = auto client use spnego = no client ntlmv2 auth = no client ipc max protocol = NT1 client ipc signing = auto idmap config * : backend = tdb
These are what I added when upgrading from C5's Samba 3 to C7's Samba 4.
Also, one of the recent Windows updates may have disabled SMBv1, here that caused the inability to 'browse' the server shares (yet mapping a share still worked).
On Windows 7 to enable SMBv1 on the SMB client (workstations), run the following commands:
sc.exe config lanmanworkstation depend= bowser/mrxsmb10/mrxsmb20/nsi sc.exe config mrxsmb10 start= auto
I don't know if they will work on Windows 10 or not.
Al