with just a slightly insane chuckle, I have the exact same problem with my mount command ( and with other things such as this). I have not been able to get it to work either. I thought at first it was the owner:group (root:root) or a permission problem for my mountpoint, but that was not the case. I am stumped for now..time to reread the apropriate man pages again Steve Lynn David Newton wrote: >I'm dealing with this problem myself right now ... I'm >the only one who uses the systems, so it's no big deal >for me to su to root to copy files to the shared >filesystem from Linux, but I know I shouldn't have to >do it. > >So I jumped right on this model to see if I could make >it work for me. Nothing *ever* works right for me the >first time. > > jp> I have lines like this in my /etc/fstab ... > > jp> //ms_file_server/share_name /mnt/share_name smbfs noauto,user,username=ntuser,workgroup=NT_DOMAIN_NAME 0 0 > >I didn't have to use the workgroup name in the >commandline version, so I didn't add that option. In >fact the entry in my fstab now looks like this: > >//LynnsXTBox/work /mnt/work smbfs noauto,user,username=lynn 0 0 > >The first time I tried to mount as non-root I got this: > >$ mount /mnt/work >Password: >smbmnt must be installed suid root for direct user mounts (30274,30274) >smbmnt failed: 1 > >Oh really? Hmmm. So ... > >$ su ># chmod u+s /usr/bin/smbmnt >Ctrl-D >$ mount /mnt/work >Password: >cannot mount on /mnt/work: Operation not permitted >smbmnt failed: 1 > >Now what? > > >