smbcontrol 1 smbcontrol send messages to smbd, nmbd or winbindd processes smbcontrol -i smbcontrol destination message-type parameter DESCRIPTION This tool is part of the Samba 7 suite. smbcontrol is a very small program, which sends messages to a smbd 8, a nmbd 8, or a winbindd 8 daemon running on the system. OPTIONS -i Run interactively. Individual commands of the form destination message-type parameters can be entered on STDIN. An empty command line or a "q" will quit the program. destination One of nmbd, smbd or a process ID. The smbd destination causes the message to "broadcast" to all smbd daemons. The nmbd destination causes the message to be sent to the nmbd daemon specified in the nmbd.pid file. If a single process ID is given, the message is sent to only that process. message-type One of: close-share, debug, force-election, ping , profile, debuglevel, profilelevel, or printnotify. The close-share message-type sends a message to smbd which will then close the client connections to the named share. Note that this doesn't affect client connections to any other shares. This message-type takes an argument of the share name for which client connections will be closed, or the "*" character which will close all currently open shares. This may be useful if you made changes to the access controls on the share. This message can only be sent to smbd. The debug message-type allows the debug level to be set to the value specified by the parameter. This can be sent to any of the destinations. The force-election message-type can only be sent to the nmbd destination. This message causes the nmbd daemon to force a new browse master election. The ping message-type sends the number of "ping" messages specified by the parameter and waits for the same number of reply "pong" messages. This can be sent to any of the destinations. The profile message-type sends a message to an smbd to change the profile settings based on the parameter. The parameter can be "on" to turn on profile stats collection, "off" to turn off profile stats collection, "count" to enable only collection of count stats (time stats are disabled), and "flush" to zero the current profile stats. This can be sent to any smbd or nmbd destinations. The debuglevel message-type sends a "request debug level" message. The current debug level setting is returned by a "debuglevel" message. This can be sent to any of the destinations. The profilelevel message-type sends a "request profile level" message. The current profile level setting is returned by a "profilelevel" message. This can be sent to any smbd or nmbd destinations. The printnotify message-type sends a message to smbd which in turn sends a printer notify message to any Windows NT clients connected to a printer. This message-type takes the following arguments: queuepause printername Send a queue pause change notify message to the printer specified. queueresume printername Send a queue resume change notify message for the printer specified. jobpause printername unixjobid Send a job pause change notify message for the printer and unix jobid specified. jobresume printername unixjobid Send a job resume change notify message for the printer and unix jobid specified. jobdelete printername unixjobid Send a job delete change notify message for the printer and unix jobid specified. Note that this message only sends notification that an event has occured. It doesn't actually cause the event to happen. This message can only be sent to smbd. parameters any parameters required for the message-type VERSION This man page is correct for version 2.2 of the Samba suite. SEE ALSO nmbd 8 and smbd 8. AUTHOR The original Samba software and related utilities were created by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar to the way the Linux kernel is developed. The original Samba man pages were written by Karl Auer. The man page sources were converted to YODL format (another excellent piece of Open Source software, available at ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/) and updated for the Samba 2.0 release by Jeremy Allison. The conversion to DocBook for Samba 2.2 was done by Gerald Carter. The conversion to DocBook XML 4.2 for Samba 3.0 was done by Alexander Bokovoy.