At 12:11 PM 11/27/00 +0100, you wrote:
DG> I was wondering what would be better to use in this situation.
DG> I want to basically be able to have read access to a particular LAN device
DG> on which the files are on a NT server and the client(s) that I want to be
DG> able to read files (mostly spr
Hello Debian,
Saturday, November 25, 2000, 8:52:22 PM, you wrote:
DG> Hey Guys,
DG> I was wondering what would be better to use in this situation.
DG> I want to basically be able to have read access to a particular LAN device
DG> on which the files are on a NT server and the client(s) that I want
On Sat, Nov 25, 2000 at 05:01:29PM -0500, Debian Ghost wrote:
> Thank you for the reply.
> So samba is the only way to "mount" an NT filesystem? Sounds good...
> Do I need to run a samba server on the linux machine or would the server
> be an application on the NT machine. I went to samba.org/samba
You do not need to run a samba server to mount filesystems on your Linux
box from NT via samba
At 17:01 2000-11-25 -0500, Debian Ghost wrote:
Thank you for the reply.
So samba is the only way to "mount" an NT filesystem? Sounds good...
Do I need to run a samba server on the linux machine or wo
There is some NFS products for NT
At 16:37 2000-11-25 -0500, Jonathan D. Proulx wrote:
Hi,
AFAIK if the files are on an NT server your only option is samba,
although if you really wanted to get weird you could use appletalk
wich both NT and GNU/Linux (via netatalk) can speak
-Jon
--
To UNSUB
Thank you for the reply.
So samba is the only way to "mount" an NT filesystem? Sounds good...
Do I need to run a samba server on the linux machine or would the server
be an application on the NT machine. I went to samba.org/samba to read the
FAQs and I'm still a little confused as to what I do to g
Hi,
AFAIK if the files are on an NT server your only option is samba,
although if you really wanted to get weird you could use appletalk
wich both NT and GNU/Linux (via netatalk) can speak
-Jon
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