On Mon, 14 Aug 2017 21:41:20 -0500 Jason Crain <ja...@inspiresomeone.us> wrote:
On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 05:15:56PM -0400, Markus Hamilton wrote:
> The bug is still there using version 1.28.2 now ... in fact there
are forum
> discussions and bug reports all over the internet about this
problem for
> years now. Could we at least get a statement from the maintainers
whether
> this will ever get fixed or is there some policy we could implement
to allow
> this. SOME information would really help to figure out where this
is going.

From the gvfs-mount manpage:

-a, --anonymous
Use an anonymous user when authenticating

This option was added in gvfs version 1.23.90 so gvfs-mount (or gio
mount) should work on stretch or later. On earlier versions you can try
entering a fake username and password depending on how you have samba
set up.

About pcmanfm and caja - I don't see any problem with anonymous smb
shares using nautilus so this is likely something that pcmanfm and caja
need to add support for.



I think we misunderstand each other. I am not talking about anonymous access. I am talking about accessing a samba server which does not have anonymous (guest) access enabled. So users do have to provide a username to be able to login. Some of these usernames (aka smb accounts) just have no (or in other words an empty) password. Using anonymous access will not work (disabled on the server). A fake username will not work either (unknown to the server). It has to be a valid username and an empty password. Using mount via command line works fine. Here's an example - "markus" is a valid smb account at the server. The password is empty.

sudo mount -t cifs //servername/sharename /mnt -o username=markus,password=""

But when I try the same operation using gvfs-mount like this:

gvfs-mount smb://servername/sharename

Then the first thing gvfs-mount does is spitting out a message saying "Password required for share sharename on servername". It then asks for username, then domain and finally password. Just hitting "enter" doesn't cut it. gvfs-mount asks again for the password.

So far I have not managed to mount a smb share using gvfs-mount if the valid smb account simply is passwordless. If you can tell me how to do that then I'm ready to shift the blame to pcmanfm and caja. "mount -t cifs..." is living proof that it's not a samba (or Windows, for that matter) problem.

So again: how do I gvfs-mount a smb share with a non-anonymous, valid smb username but without entering (because there is none) a password?

Thank you for reading here. There are so many users out there with the same problem. It used to work. It stopped working at some point during the life of jessie.

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