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/* local definitions for file server */
#ifndef _LOCAL_H
#define _LOCAL_H
/* This defines the section name in the configuration file that will contain */
/* global parameters - that is, parameters relating to the whole server, not */
/* just services. This name is then reserved, and may not be used as a */
/* a service name. It will default to "global" if not defined here. */
#define GLOBAL_NAME "global"
#define GLOBAL_NAME2 "globals"
/* This defines the section name in the configuration file that will
refer to the special "homes" service */
#define HOMES_NAME "homes"
/* This defines the section name in the configuration file that will
refer to the special "printers" service */
#define PRINTERS_NAME "printers"
/* This defines the name of the printcap file. It is MOST UNLIKELY that
this will change BUT! Specifying a file with the format of a printcap
file but containing only a subset of the printers actually in your real
printcap file is a quick-n-dirty way to allow dynamic access to a subset
of available printers.
*/
#define PRINTCAP_NAME "/etc/printcap"
/* set these to define the limits of the server. NOTE These are on a
per-client basis. Thus any one machine can't connect to more than
MAX_CONNECTIONS services, but any number of machines may connect at
one time. */
#define MAX_CONNECTIONS 127
#define MAX_OPEN_FILES 100
/* the max number of connections that the smbstatus program will show */
#define MAXSTATUS 1000
/* max number of directories open at once */
/* note that with the new directory code this no longer requires a
file handle per directory, but large numbers do use more memory */
#define MAXDIR 64
#define WORDMAX 0xFFFF
/* separators for lists */
#define LIST_SEP " \t,;:\n\r"
#ifndef LOCKDIR
#define LOCKDIR "/tmp/samba"
#endif
/* this is where browse lists are kept in the lock dir */
#define SERVER_LIST "browse.dat"
/* the print command on the server, %s is replaced with the filename */
/* note that the -r removes the file after printing - you'll run out */
/* of disk pretty quickly if you don't. This command is only used as */
/* the default - it can be overridden in the configuration file. */
#define PRINT_COMMAND "lpr -r %s"
/* the lpq command on the server. the printername is passed as an argument */
#ifndef LPQ_COMMAND
#define LPQ_COMMAND "lpq -P"
#endif
/* shall guest entries in printer queues get changed to user entries,
so they can be deleted using the windows print manager? */
#define LPQ_GUEST_TO_USER
/* shall filenames with illegal chars in them get mangled in long
filename listings? */
#define MANGLE_LONG_FILENAMES
/* define this if you want to stop spoofing with .. and soft links
NOTE: This also slows down the server considerably */
#define REDUCE_PATHS
/* the size of the directory cache */
#define DIRCACHESIZE 20
/* what type of filesystem do we want this to show up as in a NT file
manager window? */
#define FSTYPE_STRING "Samba"
/* do you want smbd to send a 1 byte packet to nmbd to trigger it to start
when smbd starts? */
#ifndef PRIME_NMBD
#define PRIME_NMBD 1
#endif
/* do you want session setups at user level security with a invalid
password to be rejected or allowed in as guest? WinNT rejects them
but it can be a pain as it means "net view" needs to use a password
You have 3 choices:
GUEST_SESSSETUP = 0 means session setups with an invalid password
are rejected.
GUEST_SESSSETUP = 1 means session setups with an invalid password
are rejected, unless the username does not exist, in which case it
is treated as a guest login
GUEST_SESSSETUP = 2 means session setups with an invalid password
are treated as a guest login
Note that GUEST_SESSSETUP only has an effect in user or server
level security.
*/
#ifndef GUEST_SESSSETUP
#define GUEST_SESSSETUP 0
#endif
/* the default pager to use for the client "more" command. Users can
override this with the PAGER environment variable */
#ifndef PAGER
#define PAGER "more"
#endif
/* the size of the uid cache used to reduce valid user checks */
#define UID_CACHE_SIZE 4
/* the following control timings of various actions. Don't change
them unless you know what you are doing. These are all in seconds */
#define DEFAULT_SMBD_TIMEOUT (60*60*24*7)
#define SMBD_RELOAD_CHECK (10)
#define SHARE_MODES_CHECK (10)
#define SHARE_MODES_CLEAN (300)
#define IDLE_CLOSED_TIMEOUT (60)
#define DPTR_IDLE_TIMEOUT (120)
#define SMBD_SELECT_LOOP (10)
#define NMBD_SELECT_LOOP (2)
#define BROWSE_INTERVAL (60)
#define REGISTRATION_INTERVAL (10*60)
#define NMBD_INETD_TIMEOUT (120)
#define NMBD_MAX_TTL (24*60*60)
#define LPQ_LOCK_TIMEOUT (5)
/* the following are in milliseconds */
#define LOCK_RETRY_TIMEOUT (100)
/* do you want to dump core (carefully!) when an internal error is
encountered? Samba will be careful to make the core file only
accessible to root */
#define DUMP_CORE 1
/* what is the longest significant password available on your system?
Knowing this speeds up password searches a lot */
#ifndef PASSWORD_LENGTH
#define PASSWORD_LENGTH 8
#endif
#define SMB_ALIGNMENT 1
/* shall we support browse requests via a FIFO to nmbd? */
#define ENABLE_FIFO 1
/* keep the password server open, this uses up a aocket, but is needed
by many apps */
#define KEEP_PASSWORD_SERVER_OPEN 1
#endif
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