On 1/25/06, Craig White <craigwhite@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, 2006-01-25 at 19:57 -0500, Matt Morgan wrote: > > I have a couple users, in a new install of a samba file server on > > CentOS 4.2, who are being prompted to overwrite the existing file when > > in MS-Excel and simply saving the active spreadsheet. Normally, > > File--Save (or just clicking on the disk icon) for an already saved > > file will re-save the file without prompting to overwrite. > > > > I have my doubts about whether this could be a server-side issue, and > > suspect it's probably Excel, except > > > > 1) it started when I switched them from a Windows file server to the > > Samba server; > > 2) it happened to both of them at the same time; > > 3) I've been working with Excel for a long time and never seen a > > setting for this. > > > > Anybody have any idea what this could be, or how to diagnose it? > > Googling gets me a few VBScript questions, nothing useful. > > > > FYI, the samba share is pretty basic, but I did increase the create > > mask and directory mask settings, since these files are shared between > > several users and they need to write each other's files. Apart from > > that, no deviations from the norm. > ---- > Excel is very peculiar in how it saves files. > > see > > http://article.gmane.org/gmane.network.samba.general/60586/match=excel > > a lot of fixes were put into Samba-3.0.11 and I would guess that > upstream incorporated many of the patches since I've not had complaints > about that. Have you installed all updates? > # rpm -q samba > samba-3.0.10-1.4E.2 > Yes, that's the version I'm running. So I looked into this a lot more and realized there's a lot more to file-locking, etc., than I realized. Thanks for pointing me in the right direction. My other samba server (also CentOS 4.2, also samba 3.0.10-14E2) only deals with Excel 97 and OOo clients, and it looks like 2000/2003 create problems that 97 doesn't. Anyway, I checked around, and I'm getting totally conflicting opinions on whether to turn oplocks and level2 oplocks on or off. Can I get opinions from the list? This particular business does not do a lot of MS-Access (which offers good reasons to have oplocks turned on). Thanks, Matt