Hi, after taking a look at the samba-3.0.9 Sernet packages I see that smb.conf is in the samba3-client package not the server package. This smb.conf lacks about every pre-built share we had before. Anyway... I posted this before but no answer yet: As you know, Samba up to and including 3.0.8 contains a share "pdf" which is meant to convert an incoming postscript job to PDF. At least in SUSE Linux as well as the Sernet RPMs this is broken because as documented "print command" is ignored if Samba is compiled against libcups and "printing=cups" (see smb.conf man page lines 4564 ff. in 3.0.8 and Chap. 18 of the HOWTO under "Default UNIX System Printing Commands"). A workaround is to set printing=bsd after which this works fine. I am told SUSE is working on the problem. The share looks as follows: ... printing = bsd [pdf] comment = PDF creator path = /var/tmp printable = Yes print command = /usr/bin/smbprngenpdf -J '%J' -c %c -s %s -u '%u' -z %z create mask = 0600 use client driver = yes Anyway, I set up such a queue for a customer and he would like to have a second one (one for color and one for black & white, as if anyone used the B&W queue when he can use color...). But - when I create an identical stanza, users cannot connect to the second one and get a connection refused error. Chapter 18 of the HOWTO ("Print Commands") suggests one can create multiple printer shares like this but why won't this work for me? This is with Samba-3.0.8-Sernet-SUSE on SLES9. The server is an AD domain member of a W2003 domain. AD integration works, i.e. "getent passwd" gives us 20,000+ entries. In any case, the "doesn't work" bug should be resolved. I don't understand why a "print command" shouldn't work if we're running against CUPS, except if it's explicitly designed like that. If so - why? And the "use client driver = yes" should be the default for this share otherwise the customer gets utterly confused by the notorious "Access denied" status of the pdf queue :-( While we're at it, is there any way to set the printer location (i.e. the AD subtree for searching purposes) in the Samba config? I doubt this very much but I just don't want to miss anything. While we're at it ^2, if the krbtgt is valid for a week, and it expires, what happens to the ads join? Will the machine still be a domain member, or do we actually have to kinit once a week? TIA^2! -- It's not enough to be Hungarian; you must have talent too. -- Alexander Korda