ls -ld data/ drwxrwxrwx. 2 root root 6 12月 8 23:34 data/ I get following message from LOG file of samba: [2016/12/09 00:01:56.326449, 4, pid=19816, effective(0, 0), real(0, 0)] ../source3/passdb/pdb_ldap.c:2437(ldapsam_getgroup) ldapsam_getgroup: Did not find group, filter was (&(objectClass=sambaGroupMapping)(sambaSID=S-1-5-11)) What this means? Thanks. Du At 2016-12-07 22:06:32, "Mike Burger" <mburger at bubbanfriends.org> wrote: >On 2016-12-07 4:08 am, truename wrote: >> OS: CentosOS 7 >> >> I have installed samba + openldap + smbldap-tools + pam by: >> >> yum --enablerepo=extras install -y epel-release >> yum install -y smbldap-tools >> yum install -y samba openldap openldap-clients openldap-servers >> migrationtools >> yum install -y nss-pam* >> >> I know that smbldap-tools is a dead project, but I'm interested in it >> and would like research on it. >> >> I create users and groups by: >> >> sudo smbldap-groupadd -a g1 >> sudo smbldap-groupadd -a g2 >> sudo smbldap-useradd -a -P -g 1001 u1 >> sudo smbldap-useradd -a -P -g 1002 u1 >> >> groups u1 >> u1 : g1 >> >> groups u2 >> u2 : g2 >> >> I create shared folder: >> >> cd / >> sudo mkdir data >> >> sudo chown u1 /data >> sudo chgrp g1 /data >> >> sudo chmod ugo+rwx /data >> >> I edit /etc/samba/smb.conf: >> >> [data] >> comment = data >> path = /data >> valid users = u1,u2 >> write list = u1,u2 >> create mask = 0777 >> sync always = Yes >> ; hide dot files = yes >> ; writeable = no >> >> And then: >> >> sudo service smb restart >> >> When I open file manager and input following in location box: >> >> smb://127.0.0.1 >> >> The shared folder data is shown, I click the shared folder and input >> username u1 and password, I get error message: You have not permission >> to view content of this location >> >> The error message is Chinese in my system, I translate it into English. >> >> Thanks > >Silly question...what are the permissions on /data? > >-- >Mike Burger >http://www.bubbanfriends.org > >"It's always suicide-mission this, save-the-planet that. No one ever >just stops by to say 'hi' anymore." --Colonel Jack O'Neill, SG1