We have been looking to see if we could setup some VMs for something that old, and we are willing to test against it if it could realistically be setup, but it has been harder than expected. Ronnie had some ideas and we are willing to experiment more but realistically it is very hard to deal with 'legacy museum style' unless we have some VMs available for old systems. Feel free to contact Ronnie and me or Shyam etc (offline if easier) if you have ideas on how to setup something like this. We don't want to be encouraging SMB1, but certainly not NTLMv1 auth with SMB1 given its security weaknesses (especially given the particular uses hackers have made of 25+ year old NTLMv1 weaknesses). On Wed, Mar 2, 2022 at 6:51 PM Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, Mar 1, 2022 at 10:58 PM Thorsten Leemhuis > <regressions@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Thx for the update. I pointed Linus towards this thread two times now, > > but he didn't comment on it afaics. CCing him now, maybe that will to > > the trick. > > So I have to admit that I think it's a 20+ year old legacy and > insecure protocol that nobody should be using. > > When the maintainer can't really even test it, and it really has been > deprecated that long, I get the feeling that somebody who wants it to > be maintained will need to do that job himself. > > This seems to be a _very_ niche thing, possibly legacy museum style > equipment, and maybe using an older kernel ends up being the answer if > nobody steps up and maintains it as an external patch. > > Linus -- Thanks, Steve