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<H2><A NAME="s1">1. Quick Reference Guides to Samba Documentation</A></H2>

<P>
<A NAME="quickref"></A> 
</P>
<P>We are endeavouring to provide links here to every major class of
information about Samba or things related to Samba. We cannot list every
document, but we are aiming for all documents to be at most two
referrals from those listed here. This needs constant maintaining, so
please send the author your feedback.</P>

<H2><A NAME="ss1.1">1.1 Samba for the Impatient</A></H2>

<P>
<A NAME="impatient"></A> 
</P>
<P>You know you should read the documentation but can't wait to start? What
you need to do then is follow the instructions in the following
documents in the order given. This should be enough to get a fairly
simple site going quickly. If you have any problems, refer back to this
meta-FAQ and follow the links to find more reading material.</P>
<P>
<DL>
<P>
<A NAME="ImpGet"></A> 
</P>
<DT><B>Getting Samba:</B><DD><P>The fastest way to get Samba
going is and install it is to have an operating system for which the
Samba team has put together an installation package. To see if your OS
is included have a look at the directory
/pub/samba/Binary_Packages/"OS_Vendor" on your nearest 
<A HREF="../MIRRORS">mirror site</A>. If it is included follow the
installation instructions in the README file there and then do some 
<A HREF="#ImpTest">basic testing</A>. If you are not so fortunate, follow the normal 
<A HREF="Samba-meta-FAQ-2.html#WhereFrom">download instructions</A> and then continue with 
<A HREF="#ImpInst">building and installing Samba</A>.</P>
<P>
<A NAME="ImpInst"></A> 
</P>
<DT><B>Building and Installing Samba:</B><DD><P>At the moment
there are two kinds of Samba server installs besides the prepackaged
binaries mentioned in the previous step. You need to decide if you have a 
<A HREF="../UNIX_INSTALL.txt">Unix or close relative</A> or 
<A HREF="Samba-Server-FAQ.html#PortInfo">other supported operating system</A>.</P>
<P>
<A NAME="ImpTest"></A> 
</P>
<DT><B>Basic Testing:</B><DD><P>Try to connect using the
supplied smbclient command-line program. You need to know the IP
hostname of your server. A service name must be defined in smb.conf, as
given in the examples (under many operating systems if there is a
<F>homes</F> service you can just use a valid username.) Then type
<CODE>smbclient \\hostname\servicename</CODE>
Under most Unixes you will need to put the parameters within quotation
marks. If this works, try connecting from one of the SMB clients you
were planning to use with Samba.</P>
<P>
<A NAME="ImpDebug"></A> 
</P>
<DT><B>Debug sequence:</B><DD><P>If you think you have completed the 
previous step and things aren't working properly work through 
<A HREF="../DIAGNOSIS.txt">the diagnosis recipe.</A></P>
<P>
<A NAME="ImpExp"></A> 
</P>
<DT><B>Exporting files to SMB clients:</B><DD><P>You should read the manual pages
for smb.conf, but here is a 
<A HREF="Samba-Server-FAQ.html#Exporting">quick answer guide.</A></P>
<P>
<A NAME="ImpControl"></A> 
</P>
<DT><B>Controlling user access:</B><DD><P>the quickest and dirtiest way of sharing
resources is to use 
<A HREF="Samba-meta-FAQ-4.html#ShareModeSecurity">share level security.</A> If you want to spend more time and have a proper username
and password database you must read the paragraph on 
<A HREF="Samba-meta-FAQ-4.html#DomainModeSecurity">domain mode security.</A> If you want
encryption (eg you are using Windows NT clients) follow the 
<A HREF="Samba-Server-FAQ.html#SMBEncryptionSteps">SMB encryption instructions.</A></P>
<P>
<A NAME="ImpBrowse"></A> 
</P>
<DT><B>Browsing:</B><DD><P>if you are happy to type in "\\samba-server\sharename"
at the client end then do not read any further. Otherwise you need to
understand the 
browsing terminology</A>
and read 
<A HREF="Samba-Server-FAQ.html#NameBrowsing">Samba-Server-FAQ.html#NameBrowsing</A>. </P>
<P>
<A NAME="ImpPrint"></A> 
</P>
<DT><B>Printing:</B><DD><P>See the 
<A HREF="Samba-Server-FAQ.html#Printing">printing quick answer guide.</A></P>

</DL>
</P>
<P>If you have got everything working to this point, you can expect Samba
to be stable and secure: these are its greatest strengths. However Samba
has a great deal to offer and to go further you must do some more
reading. Speed and security optimisations, printer accounting, network
logons, roving profiles, browsing across multiple subnets and so on are
all covered either in this document or in those it refers to.</P>


<H2><A NAME="ss1.2">1.2 All Samba Documentation</A></H2>

<P>
<A NAME="AllDocs"></A> 
</P>
<P>
<UL>
<LI> Meta-FAQ. This is the mother of all documents, and is the one you
are reading now. The latest version is always at 
<A HREF="http://samba.org/[.....]">http://samba.org/[.....]</A> but there is probably a much
nearer 
<A HREF="../MIRRORS">mirror site</A> which you should use
instead.
</LI>
<LI> 
<A HREF="Samba-Server-FAQ.html">Samba-Server-FAQ.html</A> is the best starting point for
information about server-side issues. Includes configuration tips and
pointers for Samba on particular operating systems (with 40 to choose
from...)
</LI>
<LI> 
<A HREF="Samba-Client-FAQ.html">Samba-Client-FAQ.html</A> is the best starting point for
information about client-side issues, includes a list of all clients
that are known to work with Samba.
</LI>
<LI> 
<A HREF="samba-man-index.html">manual pages</A> contains
descriptions of and links to all the Samba manual pages, in Unix man and
postscript format.
</LI>
<LI> 
<A HREF="samba-txt-index.html">samba-txt-index.html</A> has descriptions of and links to
a large number of text files have been contributed to samba covering
many topics. These are gradually being absorbed into the FAQs and HOWTOs
but in the meantime you might find helpful answers here.
</LI>
<LI> 
</LI>
</UL>
</P>


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