I am not sure if anyone can help me with this. I am currently using Norton Ghost to create images of a number of Windows NT Server machines. I want the ability to save my Norton Ghost images to a samba share. The problem I have run into is that Norton Ghost runs only from a Dos Prompt. I created a Dos Boot disk to load NetBEUI network drivers that so I can save my images on a network drive. The problem I have run into is because my network boot disk only loads NetBEUI I can not map my samba shares. What needs to be loaded to see a samba share? Is there a dos driver for smb??? Any suggestions??? -Todd Rosenthal
todd.rosenthal@ac.com wrote:> > What needs to be loaded to see a samba share? Is > there a dos driver for smb??? Any suggestions???You simply need to load the TCP/IP stack for the DOS client. Cheers, jerry ________________________________________________________________________ Gerald ( Jerry ) Carter Engineering Network Services Auburn University jerry@eng.auburn.edu http://www.eng.auburn.edu/users/cartegw "...a hundred billion castaways looking for a home." - Sting "Message in a Bottle" ( 1979 )
Hi : Well, you can have a NT or Windows 95/98 clonning server machine which connect and use a shared samba disk resource to save the image, then you can boot your client with any protocol (that your clonnign server have installed) and your image will be on samba. Regards, Hugo Segura e-mail : hsegura@acm.org todd.rosenthal@ac.com wrote:> I am not sure if anyone can help me with this. I am currently using Norton Ghost > to create images of a number of Windows NT Server machines. I want the ability > to save my Norton Ghost images to a samba share. The problem I have run into is > that Norton Ghost runs only from a Dos Prompt. I created a Dos Boot disk to load > NetBEUI network drivers that so I can save my images on a network drive. The > problem I have run into is because my network boot disk only loads NetBEUI I > can not map my samba shares. What needs to be loaded to see a samba share? Is > there a dos driver for smb??? Any suggestions??? > > -Todd Rosenthal