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Author: Digital Wokan
Date:  
Subject: Fstab
Try username=guest/workgroup%password


Jon K wrote:

> //192.168.1.110/backup    /mnt/mp3    smbfs    
> noauto,rw,fmask=777,dmask=777,username=guest,password=password    0    0

>
> thats what i have and it still not working for me but command:
>
> mount -t smbfs -o username=guest,password=password //192.168.1.110/backup
> /mnt/mp3
>
> works.
>
> any ideas?
>
> On Wednesday 03 July 2002 11:41, Digital Wokan wrote:
>
>>No, since it includes my username on the Samba server. But I can
>>paraphrase the line from it for you...
>>
>>//machinename/sharename /mnt/mountdir smbfs
>>noauto,rw,fmask=777,dmask=777,username=guest% 0 0
>>
>>Jon K wrote:
>>
>>>I've been trying to do this myself, can you post your fstab for me?
>>>thanks.
>>>
>>>On Tuesday 02 July 2002 17:39, Digital Wokan wrote:
>>>
>>>>On Tuesday 02 July 2002 14:29, Tom Achtenberg wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>In my fstab file, for an smb share what entry do I need to give all
>>>>>users read/write privileges?
>>>>>
>>>>after the smbfs (file system type) entry, make sure the following are
>>>>added to the options field: rw,fmask=777,dmask=777
>>>>
>>>>It took me most of an afternoon of hunting between man pages and google
>>>>to finally get that answer. This is the kind of setting that needs more
>>>>documentation and examples for sysadmins to study. (Including the usual
>>>>warnings about potential security hazards from using those settings.)