7/21/2023 0 Comments Raspberry pi samba subnet![]() ![]() ![]() Simply stop nmbd, delete them, restart nmbd and you’re happy. It turns out ( thanks a lot Matt Godbolt) that nmbd keeps caches in two files (paths as they are on my Ubuntu 12.04 server): nmbd/nmbd_browsesync.c:248(domain_master_node_status_fail)ĭoing a node status request to the domain master browserįor workgroup SENW at IP 192.168.10.23 failed.Įven after restarting smbd and nmbd, and checking my smb.conf thoroughly, these kept showing up. There is already a domain master browser at IP 192.168.10.23 for workgroup SENW registered on subnet UNICAST_SUBNET. With this command, we can set the password. nmbd/nmbd_become_dmb.c:237(become_domain_master_query_success) To control the access to this folder, I add a user and a password. In the Samba log files I noticed some references to the old IP address (192.168.10.23), e.g.: Am I at risk of having a raspberry pi running samba as a home file server falling to sambacry I keep hearing about sambacry but I havent heard anything related to bugfixes or patches. This lead to problems when I logged into Windows (which is tied to my Samba domain), Windows complained that my roaming profile wasn’t completely synced and browsing network shares didn’t work, copying from (mounted) network shares didn’t work, etc. Change permission of the NFS mount point to pi. You should now be able to access your Samba share with Read/Write permissions. Type in the storeuser username and password. Type in the server name or IP address of your RPi device. Select Network / LAN from the app menu and then add a new connection with New. While moving my DHCP server to a Raspberry Pi I also changed some of the IPs handed out to my (virtual) servers. Create the mount point for your NFS share, this is the local virtual folder you will use to access the folder on the NFS server. Here's a quick setup overview of ES File Explorer. ![]()
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