Just a quick question. I could and will check the samba docs, but I
thought someone on this list might be able to give me some quick
info/pointers too. In this gentleman's situation, were he to setup
samba (which I realize he doesn't need to), how would he configure samba
to only answer requests on eth1? Does samba support this or would you
have to use tcp wrappers or something?
Thanks,
Mike
"Mikkel L. Ellertson" wrote:
>
> At 11:01 AM 4/4/00 -0400, you wrote:
> >Morning Everyone:
> >
> >I'm running Red Hat 6.2 with Samba. My Linux box has 2 Ethernet cards in
> >it, eth0 going to my cable modem provider and getting its IP Address via
> >DHCP, and eth1 statically assigned 192.168.1.1. I have a Windows 2000
> >machine, installed on a NTFS partiton type on another machine. This
> >machine has an IP Address of 192.168.1.2. From the Windows 2000 machine,
> >I can go to Network Neighborhood, and see my home directory on the Linux
> >box. Networking appears to be working correctly.
> >
> >What I would like to do is the reverse, if possible. If I leave the
> >Windows 2000 machine on, and I telnet into the Linux box from a remote
> >location, is it possible to see what's on the Windows machine? If so, is
> >this something that can/should be set up through Samba, or is there a
> >different approach to take?
> >
> >- Mike
> >
> smbclient will do most of what you want. You can also mount Windows shares
> on your Linux box using smbfs and the smbmount command. You do not need to
> have Samba running on the Linux machine to use smbclient, or to mount Windows
> shares.
>
> Mikkel
>
> --
> Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons,
> for you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup.
>
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