Yes. This is called I believe cross network browsing.
I think you need to make your samba box a wins server, but, read about it in
the free book in the samba sources.
Here is what I have in my global section for a wins server.
[global]
netbios name = JHAMMER6
server string = Samba %v Your Server
security = SHARE
log level = 1
os level = 100
preferred master = True
domain master = True
wins support = Yes
guest account = ftp
read only = No
guest ok = Yes
hosts allow = 192.168. 127. 24.3.9.474 24.152.186.37
veto files = /*.{*}/
Note: In hosts allow, I need to allow a double homed gateway machine to
attach, and I am not sure if I need those 24.xxx addresses or not, but I use
them any way.
You have to configure your windows clients to use the wins server. But, this
solved all my network neighborhood problems.
Joel
On Tue, Nov 06, 2001 at 11:22:45AM +0100, Hans Scheffers
wrote:> Hoi all,
>
> I have a samba server on 192.168.1.2; my win-clients are on
> 192.168.0.xxx and can connect to the samba server (They all use a
> number of shares, so the server partly acts as a fileserver).
>
> Is it possible to make the samba server visible in the
> network-neighbourhood of win 98? is the netbios-protocol needed for
> that?
> I can see the win-clients on the same subnet in the
> networkneighbourhood, and they only have TCP/IP networking installed.
>
> The clients connect through a firewall, that allows connection from
> the DMZ (192.168.1.x) to the internal clients (192.168.0.x) by opening
> pot 137, 138, 139 TCP and UDP. Are these all needed or can I close
> some of these ports?
>
> thx
> Hans
>
>
>
> --
> Greetz
> Hans
>
> mailto:hans@jiffie.nl
> http://www.jiffie.nl/stamboom/rottweiler
>
>
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