Date: Sat, 4 May 2002 21:43:37 +0600 (YEKST) From: Ilia Chipitsine <ilia@cgu.chel.su> To: Tim Boring <tboring@insight.rr.com> Cc: questions@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: exporting /home via SMB Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.4.10.10205042139330.495-100000@jane.poka.net> In-Reply-To: <1020526669.21538.16.camel@tim.dynofrog.com>
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Salut, Tim Boring ! On 4 May 2002, Tim Boring wrote: > On Sat, 2002-05-04 at 01:59, Ilia Chipitsine wrote: > > > > On Sat, 2002-05-04 at 00:52, Ilia Chipitsine wrote: > > > > anybody tried that ? > > > > > > What would be the point of that? You can set up the Samba config file > > > > the point of that would be setting a server which imports user database > > using NIS+Kerberos, and home directories would be imported using > > SMB. > > The server you're importing from...is it Unix or Windows? If it's a > Unix machine, why not just use NFS instead of SMB? Or do you have a > specific need to use SMB? NFS is piece of crap, it supports neither locking, nor quotas. on the other hand I already export [homes] via SMB. I just wanted that /home/someuser to be mounted at the time user logs in. It would be nice. Another advantage of SMB is that, I can export some directories with read/write permissions, some directories with read-only, an some directories I probably don't want to export. That machine has "/" on a single partition, so NFS makes me export "/" as read/write. I don't want that. > > Tim > Regards, (Наилучшие пожелания) Ilia Chipitsine (Илья Шипицин) To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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