• samba problem - I think

    From pinnerite@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 10 19:25:11 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan




    --
    Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
    running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of
    DRAM.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Nic@21:1/5 to pinnerite on Fri Mar 10 14:55:29 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On 3/10/23 14:25, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan




    Can you look at your history of updates in the update manager to see
    what update has caused this problem?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jim.gm4dhj@21:1/5 to pinnerite on Fri Mar 10 19:26:43 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On 10/03/2023 19:25, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan




    bloody computers who would have them...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From David W. Hodgins@21:1/5 to pinnerite on Fri Mar 10 15:21:26 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On Fri, 10 Mar 2023 14:25:11 -0500, pinnerite <pinnerite@gmail.com> wrote:

    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Samba has made several fixes to tighten security. See for example https://www.samba.org/samba/history/samba-4.16.8.html

    You can choose to use an older version of samba, but be careful to ensure
    that it can not be accessed by untrusted software.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

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  • From John Rumm@21:1/5 to pinnerite on Fri Mar 10 21:47:57 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On 10/03/2023 19:25, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    Check the windows update has not disabled the "insecure" SMB1 client...
    there is a program (that you can turn off) that does that periodically!

    Got setings -> apps and features - Optional Features -> More windows
    features (down the bottom).

    Then scroll down to SMB 1.0/CIFS File Sharing Support

    Turn off the "Automatic Removal", bit and turn on the Client / server as required.



    --
    Cheers,

    John.

    /=================================================================\
    | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------|
    | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \=================================================================/

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  • From Paul@21:1/5 to pinnerite on Fri Mar 10 21:39:58 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan

    There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.

    WinXP has only SMB1. Win10 supports all three.

    The three of them aren't that much different, it's just
    that the later versions of SAMBA support operation
    across the Internet better, by using better crypto.

    In Win10

    Start : Run : control # Make control panel icon appear on task bar
    # Right click the icon, select "Pin to Taskbar"

    Programs and Features : Windows Features # Look for the SMB1 item, switch on two of three lines
    # You want the "automatic removal of this feature" to
    # be unticked.

    In services.msc on Win10, there are two services beginning
    with the word "Function" in their name. One of them has
    the modern version of nameserving in it (so you can refer
    to your machines by their symbolic name).

    Now, having checked all of that, the latest twist in the
    saga, is the more modern Windows OSes "brow beat" their legacy
    OS friends.

    If Windows 11 comes up first on a network, it will win
    the network browser election (become the Master), which is
    normal. But having done so, it will kick the shit out of
    WinXP or Windows 7 when they come up. The modern OSes ensure
    that the other OSes can't see anything.

    I noticed, that if you start the legacy OSes first, one of
    them becomes the network browser master, and the more modern
    OSes then play nicely with the protocol.

    But generally speaking, it is mostly a waste of time thinking
    symbolic access will work.

    nautilus smb://wallace/shared # You cannot expect this to work.
    # The network neighbourhood icon, never works on any box

    nautilus smb://102.168.0.2/shared # This works.

    On Windows, the name might work. Sometimes.

    explorer.exe \\wallace\shared # Works occasionally

    explorer.exe \\192.168.0.2\shared # Works a bit better

    Some VM hosts, don't use the same subnets as the
    rest of your physical machines. To make Win10 Guest
    play nicely, you can modify the netmask with a Powershell
    command. Then, your computing solutions can see one another.

    But generally, it's a mess, and they only seek to make it worse
    not better.

    For the person at Microsoft maintaining this stuff, the
    versions and dialects of SAMBA means the test matrix
    (proving it works) is huge. On the Linux side, nobody
    cares any more. It will remain in the same broken state
    from one release to the next. At the pinnacle of Linux SAMBA
    achievement, there was one release where it all worked.
    You could use the GUI, and the automation would wire up
    the needed bits (install package manager items for you),
    and it could "just work". But all of that work slipped
    back into the software ooze. The web articles on setting
    up a client manually, the suggestions may or may not work.
    You might need to be added to a particular group (sambausers?).

    Paul

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  • From Andrei Z.@21:1/5 to pinnerite on Sat Mar 11 11:05:08 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint

    pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan




    Bug #2009863
    Upgrade from Samba 4.13 to 4.15 results in "dlopen(pam_winbind.so): /lib/security/pam_winbind.so: cannot open shared object file: No such
    file or directory"

    https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/samba/+bug/2009863

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  • From SH@21:1/5 to pinnerite on Sat Mar 11 09:04:00 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On 10/03/2023 19:25, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan






    This sounds like SMB v1.0 and SMB v2.0 has been disabled on the Windows
    VMs so that SMB v3.0 is then the only "option" by default.

    You need to turn SMB 1.0 and SMB 2.0 back on and you will get the usual security warnings on the windows VMs.

    Or you could upgrade Linux to support SMB 3.0 or it could just need
    enabling?

    https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/storage/file-server/troubleshoot/detect-enable-and-disable-smbv1-v2-v3?tabs=server

    https://www.osetc.com/en/how-to-configure-samba-server-to-use-smbv2-or-smbv3-protocol-in-linux.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From pinnerite@21:1/5 to Nic on Sat Mar 11 13:30:08 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On Fri, 10 Mar 2023 14:55:29 -0500
    Nic <Nic@none.net> wrote:

    On 3/10/23 14:25, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan




    Can you look at your history of updates in the update manager to see
    what update has caused this problem?

    It looks like an update 2023-03-08 caused the problem.
    The earliest timeshift entry is for the same date.

    Presumably I can uninstall the installed version (2:4.15.12) from synaptic.

    But how do I install version 2:4.13.17?

    Oh! The Windows 10 problem was fixed by an smb.conf tweak.

    I had had: server max protocol = NT1 I changed it to min.


    --
    Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
    running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of DRAM.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Paul@21:1/5 to Paul on Sun Mar 12 03:06:11 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan

    There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.

    it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
    (A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)

    I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
    the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.

    I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.

    server min protocol = NT1
    client min protocol = NT1
    client lanman auth = yes
    ntlm auth = yes

    and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
    Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
    client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows Features.

    Paul

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to Paul on Sun Mar 12 07:40:13 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On 12/03/2023 07:06, Paul wrote:
    On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan

    There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.

    it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
    (A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)

    I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
    the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.

    I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.

    server min protocol = NT1
    client min protocol = NT1
    client lanman auth = yes
    ntlm auth = yes

    and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
    Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
    client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows
    Features.

       Paul
    I remember having too do similar back in the day when I still used samba.

    But I don't use it any more, not even for my windows VM.

    You don't need it to access a local hard drive under virtual box. And my
    NFS mounted server partitions appear as 'local drives' to windows.


    --
    Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as
    foolish, and by the rulers as useful.

    (Seneca the Younger, 65 AD)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From pinnerite@21:1/5 to Paul on Sun Mar 12 15:46:45 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
    Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan

    There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.

    it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
    (A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)

    I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
    the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.

    I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.

    server min protocol = NT1
    client min protocol = NT1
    client lanman auth = yes
    ntlm auth = yes

    and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
    Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
    client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows Features.

    Paul

    I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
    Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.

    Alan


    --
    Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
    running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of
    DRAM.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bobbie Sellers@21:1/5 to pinnerite on Sun Mar 12 09:50:22 2023
    On 3/12/23 08:46, pinnerite wrote:
    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
    Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan

    There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.

    it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
    (A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)

    I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
    the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.

    I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.

    server min protocol = NT1
    client min protocol = NT1
    client lanman auth = yes
    ntlm auth = yes

    and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
    Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
    client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows Features.

    Paul

    I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
    Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.

    Alan

    That is normal behavior for Windows. I think there
    maybe some Windows add-on that lets Windows read Linux files
    but most usable Linux distributions can read the various
    Windows file systems. My solution to interchange between the
    two systems is a partition in a Windows readable format where
    I copy files that I thought I wanted to use on Windows to the
    xchange partition. Windows prefers to be blind to Linux.

    bliss - “Nearly any fool can use a GNU/Linux computer. Many do.”
    After all here I am... Again

    --
    bliss dash SF 4 ever at dslextreme dot com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Nic@21:1/5 to pinnerite on Sun Mar 12 12:15:30 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 15:46:45 +0000
    pinnerite <pinnerite@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
    Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan

    There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.

    it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
    (A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)

    I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
    the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.

    I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.

    server min protocol = NT1
    client min protocol = NT1
    client lanman auth = yes
    ntlm auth = yes

    and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
    Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
    client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows Features.

    Paul

    I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
    Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.

    Alan


    --
    Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
    running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of
    DRAM.

    Given that you are using a m$ product to drive a machine, it might be more cost effective to look at some of those dell laptop latitudes selling for around $100. The cost of the machine includes a license for w7 or w10, the cost of the machine is almost
    equal to the cost of the license. Using a dedicated machine would seem to answer your problem.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rod Speed@21:1/5 to Nic on Mon Mar 13 04:51:08 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 03:15:30 +1100, Nic <Nic@none.net> wrote:

    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 15:46:45 +0000
    pinnerite <pinnerite@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
    Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last
    cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan

    There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.

    it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
    (A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)

    I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
    the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.

    I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.

    server min protocol = NT1
    client min protocol = NT1
    client lanman auth = yes
    ntlm auth = yes

    and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
    Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
    client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows
    Features.

    Paul

    I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
    Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.

    Alan


    --
    Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
    running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of
    DRAM.

    Given that you are using a m$ product to drive a machine, it might be
    more cost effective to look at some of those dell laptop latitudes
    selling for around $100. The cost of the machine includes a license for
    w7 or w10, the cost of the machine is almost equal to the cost of the license.

    A W10 license doesn't cost anything like that.

    Using a dedicated machine would seem to answer your problem.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Peeler@21:1/5 to All on Sun Mar 12 19:59:58 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    "Who or What is Rod Speed?

    Rod Speed is an entirely modern phenomenon. Essentially, Rod Speed
    is an insecure and worthless individual who has discovered he can
    enhance his own self-esteem in his own eyes by playing "the big, hard
    man" on the InterNet."

    https://www.pcreview.co.uk/threads/rod-speed-faq.2973853/

    --
    Richard addressing senile Rodent Speed:
    "Shit you're thick/pathetic excuse for a troll."
    MID: <ogoa38$pul$1@news.mixmin.net>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Nic@21:1/5 to Rod Speed on Sun Mar 12 14:44:55 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On 3/12/23 13:51, Rod Speed wrote:
    On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 03:15:30 +1100, Nic <Nic@none.net> wrote:

    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 15:46:45 +0000
    pinnerite <pinnerite@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
    Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from
    Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access
    the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer
    access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last
    cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan

    There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.

    it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
    (A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)

    I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
    the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.

    I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.

    server min protocol = NT1
    client min protocol = NT1
    client lanman auth = yes
    ntlm auth = yes

    and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
    Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
    client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows
    Features.

        Paul

    I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
    Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.

    Alan


    --
    Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
    running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of
    DRAM.

    Given that you are using a m$ product to drive a machine, it might be
    more cost effective to look at some of those dell laptop latitudes
    selling for around $100. The cost of the machine includes a license
    for w7 or w10, the cost of the machine is almost equal to the cost of
    the license.

    A W10 license doesn't cost anything like that.

    Using a dedicated machine would seem to answer your problem.
    What does a license cost?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rod Speed@21:1/5 to Nic on Mon Mar 13 06:19:06 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 05:44:55 +1100, Nic <Nic@none.net> wrote:

    On 3/12/23 13:51, Rod Speed wrote:
    On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 03:15:30 +1100, Nic <Nic@none.net> wrote:

    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 15:46:45 +0000
    pinnerite <pinnerite@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
    Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines, >>>>> >> running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a >>>>> >> programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other >>>>> >> platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from
    Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access
    the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer
    access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last
    cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan

    There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.

    it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
    (A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)

    I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
    the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.

    I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.

    server min protocol = NT1
    client min protocol = NT1
    client lanman auth = yes
    ntlm auth = yes

    and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
    Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
    client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows
    Features.

    Paul

    I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
    Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.

    Alan


    -- Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
    running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of
    DRAM.

    Given that you are using a m$ product to drive a machine, it might be
    more cost effective to look at some of those dell laptop latitudes
    selling for around $100. The cost of the machine includes a license
    for w7 or w10, the cost of the machine is almost equal to the cost of
    the license.

    A W10 license doesn't cost anything like that.

    Using a dedicated machine would seem to answer your problem.
    What does a license cost?

    $5 or so, Rumm listed it recently.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From pinnerite@21:1/5 to Paul on Sun Mar 12 21:08:14 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
    Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan

    There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.

    it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
    (A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)

    I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
    the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.

    I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.

    server min protocol = NT1
    client min protocol = NT1
    client lanman auth = yes
    ntlm auth = yes

    and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
    Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
    client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows Features.

    Paul

    So on Mint 21.1, that seems to work for Windows 10 but not for XP.

    I tried using VBox's shared directories. They show up all right.

    Some programs could be made to run but the two important programs that
    make me still need XP just wouldn't.

    I have gone back to 20.3 until I can unblock this problem.

    I may be some time.

    Regards, Alan

    --
    Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
    running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of
    DRAM.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Paul@21:1/5 to pinnerite on Sun Mar 12 17:20:35 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On 3/12/2023 11:46 AM, pinnerite wrote:
    On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
    Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
    For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
    running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.

    I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
    programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.

    Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
    platform.

    The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
    using samba.

    I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
    data.

    Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
    the data.

    Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
    in December 2022.

    Everything worked perfectly.

    So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.

    Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?

    TIA, Alan

    There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.

    it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
    (A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)

    I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
    the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.

    I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.

    server min protocol = NT1
    client min protocol = NT1
    client lanman auth = yes
    ntlm auth = yes

    and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
    Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
    client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows Features.

    Paul

    I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
    Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.

    Alan

    OK, the 4.15 SAMBA is a rat bastard. But I did get around it.

    [Picture]

    https://i.postimg.cc/W1f4W1Mj/drop-that-security.gif

    The evidence suggests there is an authentication problem
    when logging into LM211 with its 4.15 Samba version. But doing my Googling, there is more than one way to authenticate, so I am unable to
    determine what "method" happens to be failing. It might be PAM,
    it might be something else. But ripping the arms off the thing,
    makes it behave. You can declare the share LM211 is offering,
    to be a public one.

    LM211 was already on my hard drive, and all it
    required is a giant update to prepare for experiments.
    This is the hard drive that did not restore nicely from
    a backup, but ripping more arms off that, got it running again :-)
    The root cause there, was (apparently) leaving some GPT partition
    tables on a drive (not sufficient cleaning) before starting
    brand new experiments. A mistake made months ago. Oops.
    I had to clean it with a hex editor.

    Paul

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Paul@21:1/5 to Bobbie Sellers on Sun Mar 12 17:47:27 2023
    On 3/12/2023 12:50 PM, Bobbie Sellers wrote:

        That is normal behavior for Windows.  I think there
    maybe some Windows add-on that lets Windows read Linux files
    but most usable Linux distributions can read the various
    Windows file systems.  My solution to interchange between the
    two systems is a partition in a Windows readable format where
    I copy files that I thought I wanted to use on Windows to the
    xchange partition.   Windows prefers to be blind to Linux.

    bliss - “Nearly any fool can use a GNU/Linux computer. Many do.”
                After all here I am...  Again


    Such a bleak world you live in.

    I don't have a problem getting around.

    I have a hex editor on Windows that really works.
    I can burrow into /dev/sda1. I can burrow into /dev/sda (whole disk scan).
    I can edit whole disks. For example, I just removed leftover GPT partition tables from a disk, using the hex editor.

    In addition, I have 7ZIP (Igor Pavlov), which also can burrow into anything.
    It can burrow into an EXT4 and pull files out. It can burrow into a dd'ed partition
    and pull files out. It can take a .docx (or FOSS equivalent) and pull
    the images you pasted into the document, out of the document for examination. It can open a WIM. It can open a .vhd . And other virtual containers (with
    an EXT4 inside). It can open an EXE file and you can look for icon resources
    in there. it can open an MSI file (a Windows installer thing), but it does not render the naming in a sensible manner (there is a separate tool written by
    a USENET poster, for that).

    There aren't too many formats I can't rip to bits.

    So I don't know where you got the idea the world
    was a limited place, with limited possibilities.
    The world is your oyster. Enjoy.

    I can set up portable Cygwin applications, without
    keeping the Cygwin tree or being limited to keeping them
    in the Cygwin tree. That's how I can run "disktype.exe"
    on Windows -- it's a Cygwin port.

    I was also doing things this way, when I was on a Mac G4
    and had virtualization and foreign environments. All in
    the name of "having many Swiss army knives". I had Linux
    on the G4, back when Ubuntu had a PPC version of the LiveDVD.

    When I was on a Sparc at work, I had SoftWindows for company.
    When I was on a Mac, I had Connectix Virtual PC. The same Virtual PC
    that was bought by Microsoft. That's why they bought Connectix
    and chucked away their hardware business.

    Windows 10 and Windows 11 have the bash shell, complete with graphics capability (WSLg). On a regular basis, you can see a Ubuntu Firefox running
    on my Windows Desktop via bash shell. There is a little Penguin icon
    on the Firefox icon when I do that :-)

    Paul

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Paul@21:1/5 to Nic on Sun Mar 12 17:54:41 2023
    XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y

    On 3/12/2023 2:44 PM, Nic wrote:
    On 3/12/23 13:51, Rod Speed wrote:
    On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 03:15:30 +1100, Nic <Nic@none.net> wrote:

    A W10 license doesn't cost anything like that.

    Using a dedicated machine would seem to answer your problem.
    What does a license cost?

    There are sources of discount licenses. People would not be
    interested in them, unless they were $30 or less. Versus $100
    or $150 or whatever, at retail.

    It's pretty hard to tell just where these licenses have come
    from, because Microsoft does not offer a public tool for
    "lineage" work. I don't think MGAdiag will tell you where they
    got that license from.

    And these licenses are not VLK, or they'd be broken by now.
    These are not materials from a "rogue mom and pop computer store".
    And considering the price, they're not from a MSDN subscription
    either. With an MSDN subscription, you get some licenses with that.

    Paul

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bobbie Sellers@21:1/5 to Paul on Sun Mar 12 18:21:39 2023
    On 3/12/23 14:47, Paul wrote:
    On 3/12/2023 12:50 PM, Bobbie Sellers wrote:

         That is normal behavior for Windows.  I think there
    maybe some Windows add-on that lets Windows read Linux files
    but most usable Linux distributions can read the various
    Windows file systems.  My solution to interchange between the
    two systems is a partition in a Windows readable format where
    I copy files that I thought I wanted to use on Windows to the
    xchange partition.   Windows prefers to be blind to Linux.

    bliss - “Nearly any fool can use a GNU/Linux computer. Many do.”
                 After all here I am...  Again


    Such a bleak world you live in.
    Well I am 85 and took up the Commmodore 64 in my 50s, never had
    any Computer Science classes and am physically challenged due to several conditions. What I see is nothing like the future we hoped for as
    fossil fuel use messed up the Global Cllimate and Exxon sat on that
    report for quite a while.


    I don't have a problem getting around.

    I do! Carrying my laundry to the machine the building
    basement exhausts me but I do it multiple times every month.


    I have a hex editor on Windows that really works.

    And I had one on the Amiga to do patches on executable files.

    I can burrow into /dev/sda1. I can burrow into /dev/sda (whole disk scan).
    I can edit whole disks. For example, I just removed leftover GPT partition tables from a disk, using the hex editor.



    In addition, I have 7ZIP (Igor Pavlov), which also can burrow into
    anything.
    It can burrow into an EXT4 and pull files out. It can burrow into a
    dd'ed partition
    and pull files out. It can take a .docx (or FOSS equivalent) and pull
    the images you pasted into the document, out of the document for
    examination.
    It can open a WIM. It can open a .vhd . And other virtual containers (with
    an EXT4 inside). It can open an EXE file and you can look for icon
    resources
    in there. it can open an MSI file (a Windows installer thing), but it
    does not
    render the naming in a sensible manner (there is a separate tool written by
    a USENET poster, for that).

    There aren't too many formats I can't rip to bits.

    Pinnerite wants to read linux files from a Windows installation.
    Tell him how to do it. Ah I see that you did that with 7Zip
    which can recognize and read ext4 files.



    So I don't know where you got the idea the world
    was a limited place, with limited possibilities.
    The world is your oyster. Enjoy.

    Enjoyment exhausts me. Holding up a book to read
    it is exhausting though i get more pleasure from reading
    than any other source.

    I can set up portable Cygwin applications, without
    keeping the Cygwin tree or being limited to keeping them
    in the Cygwin tree. That's how I can run "disktype.exe"
    on Windows -- it's a Cygwin port.

    I was also doing things this way, when I was on a Mac G4
    and had virtualization and foreign environments. All in
    the name of "having many Swiss army knives". I had Linux
    on the G4, back when Ubuntu had a PPC version of the LiveDVD.

    When I was on a Sparc at work, I had SoftWindows for company.
    When I was on a Mac, I had Connectix Virtual PC. The same Virtual PC
    that was bought by Microsoft. That's why they bought Connectix
    and chucked away their hardware business.

    Windows 10 and Windows 11 have the bash shell, complete with graphics capability (WSLg). On a regular basis, you can see a Ubuntu Firefox running on my Windows Desktop via bash shell. There is a little Penguin icon
    on the Firefox icon when I do that :-)

       Paul

    Congratulations. I can barely keep up with my email but I manage to keep my machine updated. I hope to update my more powerful
    6540 sometime this year. But I am tasked with removing my late room
    mates's leftover clothing and books this year as well. Sometimes
    friends give me things and I hope for a Ryzen with 6 or 8 cores.

    bliss - on the ever-faithful Dell Latitude E7450, PCLinuxOS 2022
    KDE Plasma 5.27.2 Kernel Version: 6.1.16-pclos1 (64-bit)
    KDE Frameworks 5.103.0 - Qt Version: 5.15.6
    Graphics : X11 - Mesa Intel® HD Graphics 5500
    15.5 GiB of RAM CPU 4 × Intel® Core™ i7-5600U CPU @ 2.60GHz
    Actually 2 real cores and 2 virtual cores.

    --
    bliss dash SF 4 ever at dslextreme dot com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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