Forgive me if these questions are inappropriate for this list. I have a 3 computer home network, with one box running Linux as a firewall (IPChains/IP Masq; two NICs, one connected to ADSL modem, other connected to an ethernet hub), and one dual boot Linux/Win98 box and a third Win98 only box, both of which have NICs connected to the ethernet hub. I would like to be able to share files and a printer between the two windows boxes. From what I've read, this sounds like a job for Samba. My questions, however, are these: 1) If I have configured my firewall correctly/securely, can I forgo Samba and just enable file and print sharing on the Windows boxes? Is this secure? 2) How secure would it be to run the Samba server on the Linux firewall box? Wouldn't running Samba expose port 139 for possible attacks? Can this be easily secured by IPChains (say by creating a rule to deny all requests to port 139 not from the internal network)? 3) (This probably isn't directly related to Samba, but relevant to my file sharing needs) Is it possible to set up the paritions on my dual boot box so that all partitions are always visible, regardless of which OS happens to be booted at the time? Would I need Samba for this, or do I need to alter something in my Linux/Windows configuration (fyi, I have Caldera OL2.3 with Partition Magic and Boot Magic...could I use PM or BM to allow all partitions to be viewed regardless of OS?). Again, forgive me for asking such newbie questions, but I have had difficulty finding answers to such apparently simple questions, even in the "Teach yourself Samba in 24 Hours" book. Regards, Chris Todd todd@neurosci.bns.pitt.edu