New to samba. Win7 machine cleanly shut down on home network, umount still reports "target is busy". What needs tweaking? Thanks
Rowland penny
2019-Aug-23 20:39 UTC
[Samba] no connections yet target is busy, can't unmount
On 23/08/2019 21:03, Zalth via samba wrote:> New to samba. Win7 machine cleanly shut down on home network, umount still reports "target is busy". What needs tweaking? ThanksWell, from the information that you have provided, try hitting the server with a sledgehammer ;-) Or, you could just give us a lot more information. Rowland
Rowland penny
2019-Aug-23 21:16 UTC
[Samba] no connections yet target is busy, can't unmount
On 23/08/2019 21:59, Zalth wrote:> With the Win7 machine shutdown, umount succeeds after restarting smbd with: systemctl restart smbd > > Samba version 4.5.16-Debian > >Well it would, this would sever the connection. 4.5.16 means Stretch, upgrade to Buster, this will get you a later version of Samba. However, you idea of a lot more info is very different from mine ;-) How are you running Samba ? Probably the easiest way to find out is if you post your smb.conf Rowland
New to samba. Win7 machine cleanly shut down on home network, umount still reports "target is busy". What needs tweaking? With the Win7 machine shutdown, umount succeeds (seemingly only) after restarting smbd, for example: systemctl restart smbd Samba version 4.5.16-Debian Samba is installed standalone, (from /etc/samba/smb.conf: server role = standalone server )
Rowland penny
2019-Aug-24 06:33 UTC
[Samba] no connections yet target is busy, can't unmount
On 23/08/2019 23:29, Zalth via samba wrote:> New to samba. Win7 machine cleanly shut down on home network, umount still reports "target is busy". What needs tweaking? > > With the Win7 machine shutdown, umount succeeds (seemingly only) after restarting smbd, for example: systemctl restart smbd > > Samba version 4.5.16-Debian > > Samba is installed standalone, (from /etc/samba/smb.conf: > server role = standalone server )[quote] Generally, how can I get a dump of a running configuration? What query do I need to run to get a listing of the actual options being used when running, for example when a particular option is not set in smb.conf? Or if it is set in smb.conf, what is the actual setting being used? [/quote] Please do not open a new thread on the same subject. type 'cat /etc/samba/smb.conf' in a terminal then cut & paste the ouput into a reply to this thread. It might also help if you tell us how you 'mount' the share. Rowland