similar to: Problems with "nobody" processes in Samba 3.0.4

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 500 matches similar to: "Problems with "nobody" processes in Samba 3.0.4"

2004 Jul 27
1
Problems with "nobody" processes in Samba 3.0.4
Hi I am having the exact same problem. Did anyone every solve it? It occurs on both of my samba servers, one of which is not being used. Jason ----- original message ----- Hi, Hopefully someone can help me with this because its driving me up the wall. I admin a Samba PDC which authenticates through an LDAP backend. Both the samba server and pam authenticate through the entries in the
2003 Jun 13
1
LDAP and Samba 3 Beta 1
Hi, I have a slight problem, I've got the new Samba 3 Beta 1 on a machine. I've finally had chance to get to a VNC machine so that I can sort out the client side of things. I've hit a slight snag. LDAP seems to be working fine, I can log in etc etc through LDAP (once I realised you need guest as a backend to login) but when I open user manager on an XP client I get: [2003/06/13
2015 Jun 19
0
Run script action when Dahdi phone goes off-hook?
On Fri, Jun 19, 2015 at 2:14 PM, asterisk <asterisk at solutionengineers.com> wrote: > > Hi, > > Long story short - I have an ancient Britsh Telecom phone attached to my > Asterisk PBX via Dahdi. It works beautifully, receiving calls, and the call > quality is excellent. However, dialling out is impossible, as Asterisk > consistently mis-reads the number of pulses the
2015 Jun 19
3
Run script action when Dahdi phone goes off-hook?
Hi, Long story short - I have an ancient Britsh Telecom phone attached to my Asterisk PBX via Dahdi. It works beautifully, receiving calls, and the call quality is excellent. However, dialling out is impossible, as Asterisk consistently mis-reads the number of pulses the dial sends (it could be a squiffy dial, I'm not sure). Not to mention the fact that, in today's modern "want
2016 Aug 29
0
CentOS 6: files now owned by nobody:nobody
On 8/29/2016 3:59 PM, Pat Haley wrote: > We are running a cluster under CentOS 6.6. We recently attached a new > NAS device, running CentOS 6.8 and rsync'd our user file system to > it. We noticed that all the files were owned by nobody (with nobody > as the group). We copied over the /etc/passwd and /etc/group files > from our front-end server to our NAS server. If we
2016 Aug 30
0
CentOS 6: files now owned by nobody:nobody
On Mon, Aug 29, 2016 at 06:59:31PM -0400, Pat Haley wrote: > ... We > noticed that all the files were owned by nobody (with nobody as the group). If its NFSv4, then its most likely a problem with your idmapper. Make sure that the rpc.idmapd is running on your client, and that your server has appropriate ID mapping enabled. If its NFSv4, are you using sec=krb5*? -- Jonathan Billings
2016 Aug 29
0
CentOS 6: files now owned by nobody:nobody
On Mon, 29 Aug 2016 18:59:31 -0400 Pat Haley wrote: > We noticed that all the files were owned by nobody Here are my notes for dealing with this issue: If all users come up as nobody on a nfs mount: Add nfs server name to the Domain = line in /etc/idmapd.conf on both the server and the clients, i.e. Domain = nameof.server /sbin/service rpcidmapd restart /sbin/service nfslock restart
2019 Apr 03
0
nobody:nobody
On 4/3/19 2:17 PM, Mark LaPierre wrote: > > Content of idmapd.conf: As long as idmapd is *running* it typically doesn't need to be configured specifically. > Now one more question.? The imap daemon is a mail server.? How is it > that I need a mail server running to make LDAP and NFS work?? Doesn't > seem to make sense to me. idmapd is not imapd.? idmapd (aka
2019 Apr 03
1
nobody:nobody
Hey Y'all, For the last week or more I've been trying to get NFS and OpenLDAP to play nice with each other. I've pretty much worn the Google machine out trying to find a solution. I've found several that said "Solved" but none of those solutions solved my nobody:nobody problem. In the past I've used NFS in conjunction with NIS to share home directories from my
1998 Nov 24
1
nobody nobody
Occasionaly folks with Samba network-mapped drives under WinNT 4.0 complain that "all of a sudden" they do not have write permissions to directories/files in the network-mapped drive. Very strange, as they were able to only hours before. I thought it may have something to do with when I make a change to my smb.conf and do a 'kill -HUP <pid of inetd>'. But that being the
2002 Feb 21
1
wrong MD4/LM pass for user nobody ? (nobody in smbpasswd)
still trying to solve my domain-problems (from time to time I get 'domain controller cant be found' on a special sambaserver 2.2.3a) Why does samba complain about wrong password for user nobody ? I actually found "nobody" in smbpasswd, but I'm not sure if I put it in there and dont understand why nobody needs to be samba-user. imho nobody is the unix-account under which
2019 Apr 03
2
nobody:nobody
On 4/3/19 5:29 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote: > On 4/3/19 2:17 PM, Mark LaPierre wrote: >> >> Content of idmapd.conf: > > > As long as idmapd is *running* it typically doesn't need to be > configured specifically. > > >> Now one more question.? The imap daemon is a mail server.? How is it >> that I need a mail server running to make LDAP and NFS
2019 Apr 03
3
nobody:nobody
On 4/3/19 6:43 AM, mark wrote: > On 04/02/19 20:21, Mark LaPierre wrote: >> Hey Y'all, >> >> For the last week or more I've been trying to get NFS and OpenLDAP to >> play nice with each other.? I've pretty much worn the Google machine >> out trying to find a solution.? I've found several that said "Solved" >> but none of those
2016 Aug 29
6
CentOS 6: files now owned by nobody:nobody
Hi, We are running a cluster under CentOS 6.6. We recently attached a new NAS device, running CentOS 6.8 and rsync'd our user file system to it. We noticed that all the files were owned by nobody (with nobody as the group). We copied over the /etc/passwd and /etc/group files from our front-end server to our NAS server. If we log in to the NAS server we see the files owned by their
1999 Mar 23
0
"invalid users = nobody" is bad
Samba 2.0.3 on Solaris 5.5.1 with security=server, NT PDC and several 100 clients. We recently had lots of intermittent problems with samba. These included: Share mounting problems, Locking errors, Access denied errors, Document corruption and errors related to writing buffers back to the server. The problems where much worst when Command AntiVirus's dynamic virus checking was enabled. After
2004 Oct 12
0
Invalid username/password for ipc$ [nobody]
Hi, this is the error I get in the log: [2004/10/12 12:33:56, 2] smbd/service.c:make_connection(331) Invalid username/password for ipc$ [nobody] [2004/10/12 12:33:56, 2] smbd/server.c:exit_server(511) Closing connections now what should I look at? background: adding winXP pro clients into network which previously had win95 clients. upgraded to samba 2.2.12 added new user to win XP
2008 Jan 09
1
irq 9: nobody cared(try booting with the "irqpoll" option)
Hi I am getting the error : irq 9: nobody cared(try booting with the "irqpoll" option) before a kernel panic and the server reboots. Fresh installation of CentOS 5.1. I selected the virtualisation option for install and was presented with the xen kernel upon reboot. however the error mentioned comes up. The non-xen kernel works fine. I''ve googled and its seems a solution
2001 Feb 01
0
nobody answered
This list is very busy so I give it another try. If you got Linux set up as PDC and nobody is guest user is there a way to prevent people to change the /etc/smbpasswd for nobody? Thanks, -- Marcel Kunath *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-* Montie House Network Greater Lansing Linux Users Group http://www.montiehouse.com http://www.gllug.org
2007 Aug 23
0
Trouble with SID and user nobody
Hello, I have troubles with "SID" and some users on my Etch servers. It's a new install before servers were in Sarge and all was ok. Distribution: Linux Etch, SaMBa, OpenLDAP, Gosa. (all from debian Etch) Architecture: - 1 "master" server, and few servers "slaves". - Openldap data from "PDC" Samba "master" are replicated on
2009 Aug 27
1
Crontab Nobody
I have a crontab for Nobody. I tried to delete it in a root kcron, which I'm sure is how I dealt with this in the past, but it seems impossible to delete. Should I delete the file /var/spool/cron/nobody? It is owned root:root, perms 600. Anne -- New to KDE4? - get help from http://userbase.kde.org Just found a cool new feature? Add it to UserBase -------------- next part --------------