On Wed, May 13, 2015 at 10:54:52PM +0200, deloptes wrote:
> Ed R wrote:
>
> > Greetings,
> >
> > I've just installed debian 8.0 on a thinkpad t41 laptop. Installed w/ grub
> > boot selected as this is only OS on system. All seemed to go well until
> > reboot which failed due cache sync errors. Cu
Ed R wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> I've just installed debian 8.0 on a thinkpad t41 laptop. Installed w/ grub
> boot selected as this is only OS on system. All seemed to go well until
> reboot which failed due cache sync errors. Current symptons are I can't
> restart from the software as I see a "Kerne
Greetings,
I've just installed debian 8.0 on a thinkpad t41 laptop. Installed w/ grub
boot selected as this is only OS on system. All seemed to go well until
reboot which failed due cache sync errors. Current symptons are I can't
restart from the software as I see a "Kernel Panic - not syncing att
> I've installed 1.3.1 on a machine at work. It's on a (physical) network
> with a bunch of Windows boxes running NT, Win95 and WFW3.x. I've added
...
> Samba from bo is installed (with no problems) on the Linux box.
>
> What I'm looking for is the absolute minimum /etc/smb.conf that will
> allow
Kevin Traas wrote:
>
> > What I'm looking for is the absolute minimum /etc/smb.conf that will
> > allow me to share a directory, say /tmp, on the Linux box with the
> > Windows box.
>
> Have you looked at /usr/doc/HOWTO/SMB-Howto.gz?
>
> It contains a starter /etc/smb.conf as follows:
>
On Thu, 24 Jul 1997, Pann McCuaig wrote:
> What I'm looking for is the absolute minimum /etc/smb.conf that will
> allow me to share a directory, say /tmp, on the Linux box with the
> Windows box.
Ahh, another person who despite RTFMing needs a good example -- sounds
like me! :-) BTW, I found
> What I'm looking for is the absolute minimum /etc/smb.conf that will
> allow me to share a directory, say /tmp, on the Linux box with the
> Windows box.
Have you looked at /usr/doc/HOWTO/SMB-Howto.gz?
It contains a starter /etc/smb.conf as follows:
-
[global]
; Uncomment this if
I've installed 1.3.1 on a machine at work. It's on a (physical) network
with a bunch of Windows boxes running NT, Win95 and WFW3.x. I've added
TCPIP stacks to one NT machine and one Win95 machine, set IP addresses,
and the two Windows boxes and the Linux box can all ping one another
at will. :-)
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