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On Saturday 10 April 2004 02:14 pm, Ken Elliott wrote:
> I'm an experienced user with Windows NT/2000 server, and some
> HP-UX/Xenix. But I've never used Linux much until this week. Trying to
> get Samba to work. I can ping the boxes and Win 2000 sees the Linux box
> in the workgroup. So the networking side seems OK. But I can't seem to
> get them to see each others shares.
>
> Problem: Window 2000 "Rufus" can see SuSE 9.0 Linux box "TUX400" in the
> workgroup "KENET", but cannot access any shares. When I click on TUX400
> to view it's shares, I get this W2K Error message: "\\TUX400 not
> accessible. Path not found."
>
> Shares:
> ken (/usr/ken) Linux user
> kennt (/usr/kennt) Linux user
> smb-share (public)
I want to point out that usr does not mean users directory. It stands for
user land directory, i.e. files not part of the actual operating system.
- From a security viewpoint it's better to keep peoples documents in their
home directory. I.e. /home/ken. If home is on a seperate partition you can
make that partition f.ex. non executable and/or unable to run system files.
It also means staying true to the Posix standard that Linux is adhearing to.
The usr partition then can be a read only partition stopping any hacker or
virus wanting to change files. If you need to update it you can do it after
you remount the partition as read-write.
I add a smb dir where I put all the samba-shares in under home.
- --
Steve
"They that would give up essential liberty for temporary safety deserve
neither liberty nor safety."
Benjamin Franklin
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