I am trying to connect to Samba Amiga Shares from my Win 10 pro machine. The whole thing is setup on the Amiga OS4 side, and already working with WinXP (via VMWare Player and on my other machine).
However Win 10 keeps telling me, when I connect a share, that I donnot have proper authentification. This is my smb.conf:
Don't think that it works after Windows XP. You could use a Virtual machine on your Win10 machine runing Linux with Samba as a bridge to transfer files between the two OS's.
Actually it does work if you don't mind finding the buried settings in Win10 along with messing with advanced samba materials and making somewhat of a mess with dcpromo stuff under Windows(a Windows NT 4/2000/XP/...) server legacy
I had to deal with this kind of crap some years ago...
I'll have to see about digging out an old config and messing with this junk again.
It doesn't look like there's a way to list the files, yet.
Keep in mind if you use smb://user:pass@ip, then the file comment will contain the full URL including user and password.
Edited by MickJT on 2016/1/8 13:15:57 Edited by MickJT on 2016/1/8 13:16:29 Edited by MickJT on 2016/1/8 13:17:31 Edited by MickJT on 2016/1/8 13:19:13 Edited by MickJT on 2016/1/8 13:36:12
I forgot that gerograph was trying to connect to Amiga smb shares from Windows, and not the other way around. Does smbfs & smbclient still work connecting to Windows? Checking..
@MickJT Amiga HD Partitions need to be visible/usable inside Windows Explorer, like a normal Windows HD (drive letters/security are the only things which are NOT of a concern). We are NOT talking about Downloading a file once in a while.
@all My Amiga MP3 and Image HD Partitions should be usable from Windows (AMIGA = SERVER).
Using a XP Setup inside a VM Environment (Win 10 Pro as host) works out of the box!
Using a different XP Machine also works
Setting up my Amiga as FTP Server could be a way to go, and will be my "fall back" option.
@ChrisH Thanks for the link, I have to dig into that, but currently this will be on hold, as I am bussy until February
EDIT: I thought I'd gotten SMBFS working with my Windows 7 PC, after fixing a firewall issue. Sadly, although I can now see the files, any attempt to open them just returns garbage :( .
Disabling 128-bit encyption didn't help, nor did disabling SMB2 (using what I previously posted). I am assuming that just restarting the "Server" service is enough to force any SMB registry changes to take effect.
Anyone got any suggestions?
Edited by ChrisH on 2016/1/20 14:18:34 Edited by ChrisH on 2016/1/20 14:59:52 Edited by ChrisH on 2016/1/20 15:15:20 Edited by ChrisH on 2016/1/20 15:16:04 Edited by ChrisH on 2016/1/22 11:58:31
Yeah, that looks like as far as we can get with our current software. I haven't been able to do any more anyway. What we need is an updated smbfs - the MorphOS version supports SMB2 and works fine with Windows 7 shares.
Anyone familiar enough with that sort of programming to do a port? I'd pay good money to see it!
Not that I've found. I don't know and it isn't obvious what sort of licence it's under, so it could possibly be a ground-up implementation that has been kept closed source, rather than being based on the open-sourced code of the SMB 1 version. Which is a shame...
@Daedalus It might be worth emailing the authors of the MorphOS version? (I rather suspect I know what the answer will be, but you don't know for sure until you ask.)
I've had a look on my MorphOS installation before and couldn't find any specific developer or licencing documentation for SMBFS. It is listed as a "port" however so that would suggest it's based on some other code which may or may not stipulate source code availability.
Having a bit of a search now it seems it might not support SMB2 after all, but at least correctly negotiates SMB1 support when connecting to Windows so shares still work properly, and that's still a massive improvement over what we have. I might send them an email but I won't hold my breath for a helpful response.