Thanks to Joachim, Chris, Tim and Claude who all answered my question, what a helpful group of people. Cheers guys. > You don't make it clear what you think the relationship is between your > problems with Samba shares and not knowing your server name. Just checking everything that my limited knowledge can throw back at me. I thought (wrongly ?) that \\servername\sharename was the core of SAMBA sharing. > For some insights into various issues that come into play when trying to > get Samba working see the recent thread on this list "Samba won't > dance"; you can find your Samba server name in the smb.conf file, which > is located in /etc/samba; there are a number of GUI's that you can use > to edit that file if you'd rather; 'system-config-samba' brings up the > minimalistic Redhat configuration utility; if you use the KDE desktop, > there's a comprehensive Samba configuration GUI built into the KDE > Control Center in the 'Internet & Network' section. To be honest, I have no idea what GUI I'm using, I know that's sad but I'm starting from nothing with linux. > Things to keep in mind (approaches will vary depending on whether you're > using KDE or Gnome): How do I find out? > You have to not only configure your Samba shares You have to make sure > that the smb and nmb services are started Ah. I had got as far as SMB services (guessed that much) didn't know about nmb and have started that now. > - you may have a nice GUI > command called 'Services' where you can turn services on and off Yes I have. > - look in your menus; else, 'man chkconfig' will explain to you how to > use that command to turn services on and off You have to configure your > firewall to allow smb and nmb traffic, specifically on ports 137, 138, > 139, and 445 - 'system-config-firewall' Indeed it does and after reading this I have changed the settings to allow SMB NMB. > gets you into the redhat firewall configuration utility if you're not > using any others such as Shorewall or Firestarter Test each machine you > want to participate in your network to see if you can ping it from the > others, and whether it can ping the others... There are Selinux related > commands you must run depending on what you want to do - watch your > Setroubleshoot warnings and messages to see if you're getting smb and > nmb related denials. Finally, you may run into some rather esoteric > issues if you're attempting to run the latest KDE4 with DCOP errors - > check your system logs for DCOP related errors if you think you've got > everything else right, and if you're running some flavor of KDE4... Now that got complicated and I don't understand that bit. I have now moved on a little but am now getting an error.... SELinux AVC Denial - flashing banner I can't stop!!!!! SELinux is preventing the Samba daemon from reading user's home directories. I'm stumped again! I suppose I should do some reading to find out what on earth SELinux is and then how to switch some of it off. Flipping complicated just to share a folder this linux stuff. <smile> Cheers, Bob. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list