Mal: You were dead! Tracy: Hunh? Oh. Right. Suppose I was. Hey there, Zoe.

'The Message'


Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."

Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!


tommyrot - Apr 28, 2008 7:01:27 am PDT #5921 of 25501
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Free software - today only: [link]

Every day we offer licensed software you'd have to buy otherwise, for free! Today's giveaway is KingConvert for MP3.

...

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Haven't tried it myself....


Sean K - Apr 28, 2008 7:42:39 am PDT #5922 of 25501
You can't leave me to my own devices; my devices are Nap and Eat. -Zenkitty

I really need to learn to not check Woot! unless I am prepared to buy. Today they have a Magellan GPS for $189. I have long wanted a portable GPS. Today will, sadly, not be the day I get one.

I'll probably pick up some kind of laptop stand today to help cooling this massive beastie.


§ ita § - Apr 28, 2008 8:17:38 am PDT #5923 of 25501
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

That should be it, I'd check to make sure that it is in the [global] section and make sure that smbd has been restarted to pick up the change.

Thing is, Vista says that the Ubuntu box is in the network location I specified in its smb.conf--I just don't know where I can set the Ubuntu box's workgroup. I don't understand Windows networking-wise how those are different.

eta: I don't mean the bolding to look like I'm talking down--just to highlight the distinction.


Gudanov - Apr 28, 2008 9:36:12 am PDT #5924 of 25501
Coding and Sleeping

I believe in Vista speak the network location is the TCP/IP domain name while the workgroup is the name of the peer to peer network on top of TCP/IP.

The workgroup setting in smb.conf equates to workgroup in Vista. The domain name is not really meaningful if you don't have DNS for your lan.

Using 'smbclient -L localhost' should tell you the workgroup the Ubuntu box thinks it's in.


§ ita § - Apr 28, 2008 9:44:38 am PDT #5925 of 25501
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Thanks. I'm very confused now that I'm away from the box which parameter's actually set to the correct value, since from browsing the web it looks like it's workgroup. But when you posted I did go in and check the file...

I will smbclient when I get home. Thanks for the instructions.


omnis_audis - Apr 28, 2008 9:47:02 am PDT #5926 of 25501
omnis, pursue. That's an order from a shy woman who can use M-16. - Shir

I really need to learn to not check Woot! unless I am prepared to buy. Today they have a Magellan GPS for $189. I have long wanted a portable GPS. Today will, sadly, not be the day I get one.
:: whistles innocently ::

WHAT? I really hated having to load maps anytime I went out of the LA basin on my lil handheld GPS. (Can you say Moorpark gig! Oy vey)

It's what the stimulus check is for, right? Lets see... Tires $400, GPS, $194. That leaves $6 to put towards savings. It IS the American way!


Gudanov - Apr 28, 2008 9:58:20 am PDT #5927 of 25501
Coding and Sleeping

I hope it helps, configuring samba is a real pain. I never want to set things up the way the GUI tools want me to. There needs to be a GUI tool to set up samba for the home user, yeah I know my configuration is insecure, I know that it will make network admins cry, but it's my own little private network and I don't care.


§ ita § - Apr 28, 2008 10:01:39 am PDT #5928 of 25501
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

You wouldn't have any tips for me on the samba user front would you ( ita "Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."" Apr 26, 2008 12:07:35 pm PDT)? I'd like to set up machine accounts for my other computers so I can give them default shares for their backups. It's overkill, I know, but I feel that I've let my sysadmin skills decay to most nothing, and I want some of them back.


Gudanov - Apr 28, 2008 10:20:52 am PDT #5929 of 25501
Coding and Sleeping

To set up a samba machine, do I need a samba user of the same name? To set up a samba user, do I need a Linux user of the same name? Can I forgo passwords on many of these?

Do you want to deal with users and passwords at all? If not, you need to use 'share' level access instead of 'user' level access. That is the part that makes network admins cry.

And now a directory layout question--how do you guys organize your Linux file structure? I mean, if you have files that you want to share across machines (like .avis, or something), do you stay under the /home directory? I'm probably going to drop a /shared under the root and work from there, but I'm curious.

I use a directory (/storage in my case) under root for my MythBox that shares images, audio, and video.


§ ita § - Apr 28, 2008 10:28:47 am PDT #5930 of 25501
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Do you want to deal with users and passwords at all?

I had a passing idea that I'd have users with home shares, but that's strictly for the learning curve, since it's pretty much just me on the network. Honestly, manually picking the share the PC backs up to versus the one the laptop backs up to isn't unworkable workflow--I just thought it would be tidy and worth learning the automatic way.