Collins, Kevin
2004-Dec-06 20:47 UTC
[Samba] Minor annoyances: Samba 3.0.2/Win2k and WinXP
I have three users that are having trouble with my Samba network. This trouble is composed of two (possibly distinct) issues. My network is controlled by a Red Hat ES 3 server running Samba 3.0.2 with an LDAP backend. Issue 1: Laptop users, with "Offline Files" that are made of their "My Documents" directories. These directories are stored on the Samba server (so they can be backed up) and sync'ed so they can use them on the road. This issue is intermittent, but when it happens, it *really* happens. The symptoms are the machine will complain that it's "Working Offline" and ask the user to click an icon in the taskbar to restore the connections. They do, the machine goes back online and things are fine for a varying amount of time (between 10 seconds and days to months). Then the cycle starts all over again. Both of the affected machines are running Windows XP Pro with all of the patches/service packs etc. applied to them. Issue 2: Windows 2000 Pro desktop user. This issue manifests itself as an error message when the user goes to save a file. The error message is: "An error occurred while reconnecting <Drive Letter>: to \\Server\sharename. Microsoft Windows Network: The local device name is already in use. The connection has not been restored." Even though the error message leads the user to believe that something bad has happened, the file he is trying save *is* saved, and no problems exist. This used to happen from time to time, now it has become a normal happening instead of a rare occurrence. I've googled my heart out and have very little info on Issue No. 1, but a lot on Issue No. 2. It seems as though they might be related, but I can't pin any one thing to both of them. All of the info I can find on No. 2, seems to blame either/and a busy network or Microsoft for the problem, but no solution has been offered that actually fixes the problem. I can find evidence of this happening all the way back to 2000 - so I know I'm not alone here. I do have a busy network, but nothing that my systems can not deal with. The biggest problem that I have with all of this is that it only affects these three computers. The remainder of my network appears to be unaffected by them (about 30 computers). So my question is: Does anyone have a solution to this problem? Anyone have a similar issue that we can compare notes on? -- Kevin L. Collins, MCSE Systems Manager Nesbitt Engineering, Inc.
Michael Lueck
2004-Dec-06 21:08 UTC
[Samba] Re: Minor annoyances: Samba 3.0.2/Win2k and WinXP
Collins, Kevin wrote:> My network is > controlled by a Red Hat ES 3 server running Samba 3.0.2...Samba 3.0.2 IS pretty old these days... I'd suggest taking the time to get up to 3.0.9 and then seeing where you stand. Remember to test on non-production servers when at all possible, or stock up on pizza and H2O! ;-) -- Michael Lueck Lueck Data Systems Remove the upper case letters NOSPAM to contact me directly.
Collins, Kevin
2004-Dec-20 16:54 UTC
[Samba] Re: Minor annoyances: Samba 3.0.2/Win2k and WinXP
Lueck, Micheal wrote: Collins, Kevin wrote:>> My network is >> controlled by a Red Hat ES 3 server running Samba 3.0.2...> Samba 3.0.2 IS pretty old these days... I'd suggest taking the time to get > up to 3.0.9 and then seeing where you stand. Remember to test on non > production servers when at all possible, or stock up on > pizza and H2O! ;-) > > -- > Michael Lueck > Lueck Data SystemsOk, after some testing, this weekend we upgraded our Samba servers to 3.0.9. In our lab, the symptoms described in the "Laptop" section of the original posting went away. We did duplicate this with 3.0.2 in our lab, and an upgrade to 3.0.7 is where the problem actually stopped. We went ahead and tested 3.0.9 as well, as this is the version that Red Hat is pushing with "up2date". Again, the problem did not manifest itself. The upgrade came off without a hitch. All of my machines were working as normal this morning. Until about 3 minutes ago. One of our Laptop Users were forced offline again. This time, he actually lost work because of the "syncing" process. So needless to say, it's back on top of my 'Giant List O'things to Fix'. So, besides the information contained in the original post (http://lists.samba.org/archive/samba/2004-December/096759.html), what more is needed to continue down the path to fix this problem? Thanks in advance, Kevin