On Tue, 27 Feb 2001, Mike Loiterman wrote:
>
> I'm using various 2000 and 98 machines with my Redhat 7 machine.?
> Everything works perfectly when I go from the Win machines to the Linux
> machine.? But, I cannot, for the life of me figure out how to mount the
> Win Shares on my linux machine!? I have tried smbmount /*/server/*/share
> (remove * my email program wants to turn it into a link) but it keeps
So fix your mail program ... if it doesn't allow you to type // it is
seriously broken!
> asking for a mountpoint.? I tried / but that doesn't work. I can
connect
> if I use a smbclient command, but then I can't transfer files back and
> forth between my linux and win machines. Thanks for the help.
smbclient allows you to move files with get/put.
smbmount needs to know a little more than just the server and share. The
mountpoint is simply where on the local filesystem the remote share should
appear. Where the filesystem should be mounted.
Example:
mount -t smbfs -o username=puw,password=abc80 //server/share /mnt/smb
(depending on what you had to tell smbclient to get it to connect you may
have to adjust that line a bit, read the smbmount manpage for details)
That command, which is simply smbmount being called by the normal mount
program, will mount the share on /mnt/smb. So you can list files on the
server using 'ls /mnt/smb', etc.
Mounting a filesystem requires you to be root. Normally you do not want to
replace any local directory such as / with a remote share, so create a new
directory and mount there.
/Urban