I've followed these instructions and have now reached the point whereby my PC can ping my Amiga and vice versa. Brillant
2 queries though;
1. This guide states, at the stage "testing your connections":
"Finally, while you have a shell open, enter Status at the prompt (return) within the list that appears the words nmbd should be listed somewhere. If not check and double check your user-startup sequence."
I have done this and do not see nmbd. I have checked, double checked and tripple checked my user-startup sequence and can not see anything missing as per the guide. Does anyone have any ideas?
2. I keep getting annoying Network log output dos windows saying "Server on port netbios-ns (137) is looping (1500 requests this minute alone) and has been disabled for a while", followed by "Server on port netbios-ns(137) has been enabled again"
Does anyone have any ideas on why this is happening?
Sold up all my Amiga gear, not only an Amigan via Amiga Forever!
Off the top of my head, no, I haven't got a clue why this is happening. The mind boggles at the mo. I have to re-install Samba this weekend, I'll see if something has changed.
Mikey C
No cause is lost if there is but one fool left to fight for it.
The netbios-ns message comes because nmbd is not running. Windows seems to flood a malfunctioning computer with requests.
Nmbd usually fails to run if it cannot write its log file. Use SWAT in extended view mode to check if all configured paths do actually exist (extended view also shows default values which are not written to smb.conf).
Also check the log files for interesting messages. Usually the log files contain useful hints.
And don't blindly believe an idiot's guide if you aren't an idiot.
I restored my Amiga to the pre-Samba state (deleted the Samba folder, copied across Services and Servers from the OS4.1 CD) and started again, this time trying this guide:
"Use SWAT in extended view mode to check if all configured paths do actually exist (extended view also shows default values which are not written to smb.conf)".
I'm afraid I don't know how to use SWAT in extended mode
I seem to be hitting a brick wall with Samba, tis very frustrating!!
Sold up all my Amiga gear, not only an Amigan via Amiga Forever!
I tried a 3rd time to set up Samba ( you see I don't give up easily!), following the Samba Idiots guide again.
2 things I did differently which I may not have done 1st time;
1. I didn't install it on my home drive (called Amiga OS4) but instead tried Programs. The difference being the space (or lack of in the name). Not sure if this could make a difference?
2. The netbiois name for my machine in the smb.conf file may not have matched the name I gave the machine when setting up the Hosts in Internet Prefs.
One of these two items has corrected the problem - no more annoying messages appearing and when I type Status I see nmbd listed
My PC also see's the SAM on the network - yippee! However I am having some trouble with the PC being able to access the Amiga at this point, but I am busy reading through the rest of the idiots guide so a solution should come to be soon enough!
Sold up all my Amiga gear, not only an Amigan via Amiga Forever!
I'm playing with full Samba at the moment. It installed easily, and Mikey_C's guide was perfect, but I can only access my shares with smbclient .. is there a way to mount it as an AmigaDOS volume? That would be very very handy.
You need smbfs, it should be in Aminet or OS4Depot, there's a OS4 native version. For more convinience I use Savvy for mounting/dismounting SMB shares.
I never got the damn thing to work with DHCP, I tried and I tried and I bloody tried again. In the end, Static was the only way.
Besides, setting the IP to static isn't too much of a chore surely?
Mikey, I am not sure, but if you ask your router's DNS server to pass clients hostnames connected via DHCP, it might work. I saw this setting on my router the other day. I am using a Dreytek Vigor2820n.
Yep, I remember Olafs words - I'm glad all my three Amiga setups are able to use smbfs in MY network configuration (with static IPs!). On two of them I have a running Samba, so I can connect from other machines to the Amigas. The only issue here is the impossible connection to the only Vista machine here (my wife's Subnotebook), but hey, nothin's perfect.
And, of course, *the guide* was really helpfull - thanks a lot.