I believe your broadcast addresses on the linux box are set wrong. If you are
using 192.168.111.0/24 and 192.168.222.0/24 as your IP networks, you should be
using 192.168.111.255 and 192.168.222.255 as your broadcast addresses
respectively. This may be why the Windows machines aren't picking up NetBios
broadcasts from the Samba server.
HTH,
David van Geyn
----- Original Message -----
From: Anders Norrbring
To: samba@lists.samba.org
Sent: Saturday, May 25, 2002 7:05 AM
Subject: [Samba] Trouble browsing on different nets.
I'm not sure if this even SHOULD work. I can't find anything really
useful in the documentation.
I have a RedHat 7.3 system in the DMZ of our network, its address is
192.168.222.10, broadcast address is 192.168.222.254
I firewall, linux based with 3 ports, the 192.168.222.0 net (DMZ), the
"outside world" on one port and the internal network is 192.168.111.0,
broadcasting on 192.168.111.254.
So, on the internal network are Windows XP workstations, these can
"search computers" and find the linux on the DMZ by name, they can
connect to it if given the network address or name (the name - network address
translation is done in the Windows' hosts files) and also browse the samba
shares.
BUT. Here's the problem. The linux (Samba) server never shows up in the
Windows' Network neighbourhood, which would be very good for those who
aren't too familiar with networking. Can anyone please help me out here?
Thank you,
Anders.
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