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  1. BillyCrook

    Controlling NMBD

    I edited /etc/sysconfig/samba to include the -s option for both smbd and nmbd. I set their conf files to /etc/samba/smb.conf and /etc/samba/nmb.conf accordingly. Then I renamed smb.conf to both.conf. I made two new files: smb.conf and nmb.conf, and added the following ---to smb.conf...
  2. BillyCrook

    Controlling NMBD

    You're probably right. I'm actually blocking the broadcasts with iptables for the short term. I just had an idea though. Could I have two separate configuration files? One, say, for smbd and another for nmbd? or even better what about using an includes file referenced by a variable...
  3. BillyCrook

    Controlling NMBD

    Unfortunately, that would keep smbd from responding to direct access on eth0. 'interfaces' is currently set = to '127.0.0.1/8 192.168.0.2/24 172.16.87.105/20' That last one is what puts samba on eth0. SMBd must be on eth0 so that certain good hosts on that network can connect to the server...
  4. BillyCrook

    Controlling NMBD

    I went ahead and restarted the whole smbd. No luck, it still was sending junk to that host. I tried to block it in iptables, and it got MAD. var/log/messages is getting entries from smbd about operation not permitted when it tries to transmit to 172.16.95.255!
  5. BillyCrook

    Controlling NMBD

    hrm, its not working yet. I saved the change, ran testparm, then ran 'service smb reload' the reload went OK, but I'm still seeing the broadcasts in tcpdump. I can schedule a restart of smb for tonite, but is there a way to force this change to take effect without restarting samba completely...
  6. BillyCrook

    Controlling NMBD

    My 'remote announce' was set to '192.168.0.255' originally (192.168.0.0/24 is the sub-net of eth1) At some point in trying to isolate this, I commented out the 'remote announce' line. Since you mentioned it, I looked it up in O’Reilly's 'Using Samba', which said: From this I assume 'remote...
  7. BillyCrook

    Controlling NMBD

    I run a samba server on Fedora Core 5. This machine has two nics, one wan, one lan. I want smbd (port 139 and 445) to be available to hosts on both networks. I want nmbd broadcasts and announcements to only occur on eth1 (lan). I am trying to minimize traffic on eth0. My server keeps...

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