Date: Mon, 23 Oct 2000 12:18:57 +0400 (MSD)
From: Michael Lucas
Subject: Эксперименты с Sharity-Light под FreeBSD (eng)
Experiments in SMB
Accessing Microsoft Files Using Sharity-Light
SMBFS not exactly what you need? Sharity Light could solve your
Windows connectivity problems. Dru Lavigne explains how to set it up.
As a FreeBSD user in a Windows world, one of my big problems is
accessing resources shared out on NT machines. Sharity-Light works,
but its licensing is restrictive and the program isn't
well-maintained. You can use smbclient from the Samba suite, but its
FTP-style interface isn't all one could ask for.
The FreeBSD Project's Boris Popov has been working on Samba filesystem
support, so that a BSD user can mount a Windows share on a FreeBSD
machine. This system is smaller than the whole Samba suite and is
well-maintained. Its BSD license opens the way for whole new groups of
embedded products.
The SMBFS kernel module is beta software. It needs testing in a
variety of environments before it can be committed. If you've ever
wanted to help test a module before it goes into production, this is
your chance. Almost everyone has an NT or Windows system they'd like
to access from a BSD machine.
Before you can use the SMBFS module, you'll need the FreeBSD
encryption sources. If you're running 4.0 or -current, check to see if
you have a /usr/src/sys/crypto directory. If not, use CVSup to grab
the sys-crypto distribution from the appropriate legal CVS server.
If you're running FreeBSD 3-stable, you'll need to grab the crypto
sources for -current or 4-stable. You can do this with CVSup, cvs, or
FTP. SMBFS relies on this code, and its presence won't interfere with
building a 3-stable world.
Then fetch the SMBFS beta tarball from
ftp://ftp.butya.kz/pub/smbfs/smbfs.tar.gz. This is a symlink to
the latest version. At the time I write this, it's 1.2.2; by the time
this article appears, it will probably change. Older versions are also
available, but you probably don't want to use them. Unpack the
tarball, and go into the directory.
Since SMBFS is in beta, be sure to read the documentation. The README
contains the usual warnings. The HISTORY file gives a good overview of
the module's current functionality. And best of all, the INSTALL file
gives exact instructions on how to get everything running.
Follow the instructions as written:
cp config.mk.in config.mk
Edit the config.mk file to fit your environment. I found the defaults
to be sensible enough, but uncommented ENCRYPTED_PASSWD.
make && make install
The disk drive will flash for a while. When it's finished, a
kldload smbfs
loads the module. Finally, a
make makedev
creates the SMBFS devices.
SMBFS uses a configuration file, either /usr/local/etc/nsmb.conf or
$HOME/.nsmbrc. I elected to use .nsmbrc. There are a lot of possible
options, but the file I wound up with is fairly simple:
[default]
workgroup=GLTG
GLTG is my local NT domain.
.nsmbrc includes options for character sets, filenames, and different
servers. The module looks ready to handle almost any possible
combination of environments you might have.
While my local nameserver has DNS entries for both "mail" and
"mailserver," the server believes that its real name is "mailserver."
It seems you need to use the Windows host name.
The only catch here is that you need to know a share name in order to
mount it. Programs such as Sharity-Light give you no way to "browse" a
network. SMBFS still won't let you browse the network, but if you know
server names you can see shares they offer with the smbutil utility.
smbutil view -I fileserver //mlucas@fileserver
Password:
Share Type Comment
-------------------------------
NETLOGON disk Logon server share
ADMIN$ disk Remote Admin
REPL$ disk
... ...
Since our fileserver has one share per user, I'm not going to bother
listing them all here. Suffice it to say, you can get a good grip on
what resources your servers offer.
Since this is beta software, not ready for committing to the main
source tree, you shouldn't rely on it for mission-critical purposes
yet. But it's coming along nicely and will probably be committed when
the author considers it ready for prime time.
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