&author.jelmer;
&author.jht;
&author.danshearer;
&person.jmcd;OS/25 Mar 2001Samba and Other CIFS ClientsThis chapter contains client-specific information.Macintosh Clients
Yes. Thursby has a CIFS client/server called DAVE.
They test it against Windows 95, Windows NT/200x/XP, and Samba for
compatibility issues. At the time of this writing, DAVE was at version
4.1. Please refer to Thursby's Web site for more information regarding this
product.
Alternatives include two free implementations of AppleTalk for
several kinds of UNIX machines and several more commercial ones.
These products allow you to run file services and print services
natively to Macintosh users, with no additional support required on
the Macintosh. The two free implementations are
Netatalk and
CAP.
What Samba offers MS Windows users, these packages offer to Macs.
For more info on these packages, Samba, and Linux (and other UNIX-based systems), see
http://www.eats.com/linux_mac_win.html.Newer versions of the Macintosh (Mac OS X) include Samba.OS2 ClientConfiguring OS/2 Warp Connect or OS/2 Warp 4Basically, you need three components:The File and Print Client (IBM peer)TCP/IP (Internet support) The NetBIOS over TCP/IP driver (TCPBEUI)Installing the first two together with the base operating
system on a blank system is explained in the Warp manual. If Warp
has already been installed, but you now want to install the
networking support, use the Selective Install for Networking
object in the System Setup folder.Adding the NetBIOS over TCP/IP driver is not described
in the manual and just barely in the online documentation. Start
MPTS.EXE, click on OK, click on Configure LAPS, and click
on IBM OS/2 NETBIOS OVER TCP/IP in Protocols. This line
is then moved to Current Configuration. Select that line,
click on Change number, and increase it from 0 to 1. Save this
configuration.If the Samba server is not on your local subnet, you
can optionally add IP names and addresses of these servers
to the Names List or specify a WINS server (NetBIOS
Nameserver in IBM and RFC terminology). For Warp Connect, you
may need to download an update for IBM Peer to bring it on
the same level as Warp 4. See the IBM OS/2 Warp Web page<./para>
Configuring Other Versions of OS/2This sections deals with configuring OS/2 Warp 3 (not Connect), OS/2 1.2, 1.3 or 2.x.You can use the free Microsoft LAN Manager 2.2c Client for OS/2 that is
available from
ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/BusSys/Clients/LANMAN.OS2/. In a nutshell, edit
the file \OS2VER in the root directory of the OS/2 boot partition and add the lines:
20=setup.exe
20=netwksta.sys
20=netvdd.sys
before you install the client. Also, do not use the included NE2000 driver because it is buggy.
Try the NE2000 or NS2000 driver from
ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/os2/network/ndis/ instead.
Printer Driver Download for OS/2 ClientsCreate a share called that is
world-readable. Copy your OS/2 driver files there. The .EA_
files must still be separate, so you will need to use the original install files
and not copy an installed driver from an OS/2 system.Install the NT driver first for that printer. Then, add to your &smb.conf; a parameter,
filename.
Next, in the file specified by filename, map the
name of the NT driver name to the OS/2 driver name as follows:nt driver name = os2 driver name.device name, e.g.,
HP LaserJet 5L = LASERJET.HP LaserJet 5LYou can have multiple drivers mapped in this file.If you only specify the OS/2 driver name, and not the
device name, the first attempt to download the driver will
actually download the files, but the OS/2 client will tell
you the driver is not available. On the second attempt, it
will work. This is fixed simply by adding the device name
to the mapping, after which it will work on the first attempt.
Windows for WorkgroupsLatest TCP/IP Stack from MicrosoftUse the latest TCP/IP stack from Microsoft if you use Windows
for Workgroups. The early TCP/IP stacks had lots of bugs.
Microsoft has released an incremental upgrade to its TCP/IP 32-bit
VxD drivers. The latest release can be found at
ftp.microsoft.com, located in /Softlib/MSLFILES/TCP32B.EXE.
There is an update.txt file there that describes the problems that were
fixed. New files include WINSOCK.DLL,
TELNET.EXE,
WSOCK.386,
VNBT.386,
WSTCP.386,
TRACERT.EXE,
NETSTAT.EXE, and
NBTSTAT.EXE.
More information about this patch is available in Knowledge Base article 99891.Delete .pwl Files After Password Change
Windows for Workgroups does a lousy job with passwords. When you change passwords on either
the UNIX box or the PC, the safest thing to do is delete the .pwl files in the Windows
directory. The PC will complain about not finding the files, but will soon get over it,
allowing you to enter the new password.
If you do not do this, you may find that Windows for Workgroups remembers and uses the old
password, even if you told it a new one.
Often Windows for Workgroups will totally ignore a password you give it in a dialog box.
Configuring Windows for Workgroups Password Handling
There is a program call admincfg.exe
on the last disk (disk 8) of the WFW 3.11 disk set. To install it,
type EXPAND A:\ADMINCFG.EX_ C:\WINDOWS\ADMINCFG.EXE.
Then add an icon for it via the Program ManagerNew menu.
This program allows you to control how WFW handles passwords,
Disable Password Caching and so on,
for use with user.
Password Case SensitivityWindows for Workgroups uppercases the password before sending it to the server.
UNIX passwords can be case-sensitive though. Check the &smb.conf; information on
to specify what characters
Samba should try to uppercase when checking.Use TCP/IP as Default ProtocolTo support print queue reporting, you may find
that you have to use TCP/IP as the default protocol under
Windows for Workgroups. For some reason, if you leave NetBEUI as the default,
it may break the print queue reporting on some systems.
It is presumably a Windows for Workgroups bug.Speed Improvement
Note that some people have found that setting DefaultRcvWindow in
the section of the
SYSTEM.INI file under Windows for Workgroups to 3072 gives a
big improvement.
My own experience with DefaultRcvWindow is that I get a much better
performance with a large value (16384 or larger). Other people have
reported that anything over 3072 slows things down enormously. One
person even reported a speed drop of a factor of 30 when he went from
3072 to 8192.
Windows 95/98
When using Windows 95 OEM SR2, the following updates are recommended where Samba
is being used. Please note that the above change (John, specify the change???????) will affect you once these
updates have been installed.
There are more updates than the ones mentioned here. Refer to the
Microsoft Web site for all currently available updates to your specific version
of Windows 95.
Kernel Update: KRNLUPD.EXEPing Fix: PINGUPD.EXERPC Update: RPCRTUPD.EXETCP/IP Update: VIPUPD.EXERedirector Update: VRDRUPD.EXE
Also, if using MS Outlook, it is desirable to
install the OLEUPD.EXE fix. This
fix may stop your machine from hanging for an extended period when exiting
Outlook, and you may notice a significant speedup when accessing network
neighborhood services.
Speed Improvement
Configure the Windows 95 TCP/IP registry settings to give better
performance. I use a program called MTUSPEED.exe that I got off the
Internet. There are various other utilities of this type freely available.
Windows 2000 Service Pack 2
There are several annoyances with Windows 2000 SP2, one of which
only appears when using a Samba server to host user profiles
to Windows 2000 SP2 clients in a Windows domain. This assumes
that Samba is a member of the domain, but the problem will
most likely occur if it is not.
In order to serve profiles successfully to Windows 2000 SP2
clients (when not operating as a PDC), Samba must have
no
added to the file share that houses the roaming profiles.
If this is not done, then the Windows 2000 SP2 client will
complain about not being able to access the profile (Access
Denied) and create multiple copies of it on disk (DOMAIN.user.001,
DOMAIN.user.002, and so on). See the &smb.conf; man page
for more details on this option. Also note that the
parameter was formally a global parameter in
releases prior to Samba 2.2.2.
Following example provides a minimal profile share.
Minimal Profile Share/export/profile06000700nono
The reason for this bug is that the Windows 200x SP2 client copies
the security descriptor for the profile that contains
the Samba server's SID, and not the domain SID. The client
compares the SID for SAMBA\user and realizes it is
different from the one assigned to DOMAIN\user; hence,
access denied message.
When the parameter is disabled, Samba will send
the Windows 200x client a response to the QuerySecurityDescriptor trans2 call, which causes the client
to set a default ACL for the profile. This default ACL includes:
DOMAIN\user Full Control>This bug does not occur when using Winbind to
create accounts on the Samba host for Domain users.Windows NT 3.1If you have problems communicating across routers with Windows
NT 3.1 workstations, read this Microsoft Knowledge Base article:.