On Tue, 2003-06-03 at 21:35, Alan Dayley wrote: > Steve Holmes wrote: > > >Hey, I'm trying to do smbmounts as a normal user so I can access my > >home directory on my server. When I do the following, > >smbmount //lnx1/steve /lnx1 > >I get the following response; > >cannot mount on /lnx1: Operation not permitted > >smbmnt failed: 1 > > > >I set the setuid flag on smbmnt as suggested by the program when I > >tried it the first time and got a different error. The share name is > >'steve' which is my user dir on the server and /lnx1, the local mount > >point is like any other mount point owned by root. I know that normal > >mounts can't usually be done by normal users but I think for mounting > >user shares, this is the only way to go. > > > >Am I missing something here? Is this possible? BTW, I'm running > >Slackware 9.0 with a 2.4.20 kernel. > > > > > > > Try: > > smbmount \\\\lnx1\\steve /lnx1 > > Been there. Fought that. > ----- Yeah, I think that you have to escape the backslash but I think you can just fake it with the forward slash... smbmount //lnx1/steve /lnx1 but I don't use smbmount...I use mount mount -t smbfs -o username=what_ever_user_name,password=users_password //lnx1/steve /lnx1 Craig