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[ CC: 56711@bugs.debian.org, gautier@email.enst.fr ]
> When you give a share a name longer than 14 chars, it is impossible
> to connect to this share. For the client the ShareName is cut at 14
> but it seems that when it tries to connect the server doesn't know
> the short-cut name.
I think this is caused by implementing the old Windows sharing protocol
as opposed to one of the NT protocols. As such it is most likely fixed
in the latest development versions of Samba. (Not that these should be
Debian-packaged yet!)
The easy "fix" is really in testparm. Patch appended. You *do*
always
run testparm after editing smb.conf, right? (:
> This is important because it is not easy to detect, but i think the
> bug can be downgraded to normal if there is no easy fix (at least
> there is a workaround: don't use long names!)
I say: apply the following patch and downgrade bug to `wishlist'.
Peter
Index: source/utils/testparm.c
==================================================================RCS file:
/cvsroot/samba/source/utils/testparm.c,v
retrieving revision 1.22.2.12
diff -u -r1.22.2.12 testparm.c
--- testparm.c 1999/10/08 01:37:09 1.22.2.12
+++ testparm.c 2000/02/05 09:18:26
@@ -239,6 +239,10 @@
printf("WARNING: You have some share names that are longer than 8
chars\n");
printf("These may give errors while browsing or may not be
accessible\nto some older clients\n");
break;
+ } else if (strlen(lp_servicename(s)) > 14) {
+ printf("WARNING: You have some share names that are longer than 14
chars\n");
+ printf("These may not be accessible to some clients\n");
+ break;
}
}