-----Original Message----- From: centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of MHR Sent: Sunday, June 01, 2008 5:40 AM To: CentOS mailing list Subject: Re: CentOS-Samba question I just found something interesting. I brought up my XP guest, and it had no trouble at all connecting to the shares, but it couldn't open the workgroup at all and the printer had become disconnected. I could not reconnect through the workgroup (duh), but if I just input the network name, the printer came up just fine. ------------------------------------------------------- """If you logged on from the Windows Guest Account then you know it is authenticating by the guest or nobody account that's on the Samba Server. The previous config file I that I stuck in the mail for you will work on a Windows Client machine providing there is sufficient name and ip address translation. It will authenticate against the samba server "nobody" account. IE, as in provide anonymous user name and password authentication so the user will not have to enter a password. That is to get you going on the right path. From there you will need to incorporate some type of user mode authentication. You don't want the whole world to access it.""" -------------------------------------------------------- So: I can connect to my shares from the XP guest, and I can connect to my printer from the XP guest, I just can't open the workgroup (this is relatively new, like, since I began messing with the smb.conf file in the last two weeks). Don't know exactly what that means, but I haven't given up yet. Tomorrow I'll dig in more on the remote machine and see where that all takes me. Any helpful suggestions still welcome.... :-) Mhr ---------------------------------------------------------------------- OK, you don't need to just open the Workgroup. All you really need to do is just add the share on the Samba server. Here we go like this; Tools | Map Network Drive "or" Right Click My Computer and Select Map Network Drive. What I believe you concern is about "Browsing the Network"? You don't need to Browse the network in order to connect to the shares. But you will have to add each share you have on the samba server to the windows clients. Now if your really concerned about eyeball browsing the network (I am not making fun of you either) Go To Start | Run |, and in the run command box type "net use \\samba_server_name_here\". Then they should, I say should again be in Network Neighborhood. Also the your Win98 client may need to set up with an LMHOSTS file and using NetBios/tcpip. They can be configured to use the Samba servers "WIN Server" to provide hostname to ip address translation. It would really be justafiable to have a DNS Server on the network to do the translation. Another thing that comes to mind is that the Win98 clients are not authenticating against the given user account. Now why is that? If I recall right there is an issue with password encryption. I believe it's mentioned in the earlier stated links I gave you and that would be in one of the downloadable PDF Files. Wish you Luck, JohnStanley _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos