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Managing SMB File Sharing and Windows Interoperability in Oracle Solaris 11.1 Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library |
1. Sharing Files Between Windows and Oracle Solaris Systems
2. Setting Up Identity Mapping Between Windows and Oracle Solaris Systems
3. Setting Up a Oracle Solaris SMB Server to Manage and Share Files
How to Disable the Samba Service
Configuring the SMB Server Operation Mode (Task Map)
How to Configure the SMB Server in Domain Mode
How to Configure the SMB Server in Workgroup Mode
Managing SMB Shares in This Release
Managing SMB Shares (Task Map)
How to Enable Cross-Protocol Locking
How to Create an SMB Share (zfs)
How to Enable Guest Access to an SMB Share
How to Enable Access-Based Enumeration for a Share
How to Modify SMB Share Properties (zfs)
How to Remove an SMB Share (zfs)
How to Create a Specific Autohome Share Rule
How to Restrict Client Host Access to an SMB Share (zfs)
Managing SMB Groups (Task Map)
How to Add a Member to an SMB Group
How to Remove a Member From an SMB Group
How to Modify SMB Group Properties
Configuring SMB Printing (Task Map)
How to Enable the SMB Print Service
Troubleshooting the SMB Service
Checking the DNS Configuration
Ensuring That Kerberos Is Correctly Configured
Ensuring That You Specify the Correct Password for Your Domain User
Ensuring the Firewall Software Does Not Filter Out Required Ports
Viewing Oracle Solaris SMB Service Property Settings
Excluding IP Addresses From WINS Name Resolution
Changes to Windows Group Membership and to User Mapping Do Not Take Effect
Cannot Set Share Security, All Shares Inherit the Security of the Directory Object
Older Versions of Windows Cannot Copy Files Larger Than Four Gbytes
Cannot See the Security Tab From Windows Clients
Microsoft Access or SQL Server Sessions Time Out After a Period of Inactivity
Cannot Add Windows Local Groups to Access Control List
SMB Browsing Fails When share.smb=on Is Set on a ZFS Pool
Samba or SMB Service Cannot Bind Various Ports
SMB Shares on a ZFS File System are Inaccessible After a Reboot
Invalid Password Errors Appear When Mapping a Drive or Browsing Computers in the Workgroup
Access Control List Inheritance Issues
Missing Security Tab on Windows XP Clients
The CATIA V4 product is only available for UNIX systems, but the CATIA V5 product is available for both UNIX and Windows systems. When creating files, the CATIA V4 product includes characters in file names that are invalid on Windows systems, which causes interoperability issues when files need to be shared between CATIA V4 on UNIX and CATIA V5 on Windows.
The following table lists the character translations that are available in order to support CATIA V4/V5 interoperability between UNIX and Windows clients. Note that this character translation is only required for interoperability between CATIA V4 on UNIX and CATIA V5 on Windows, and is disabled by default.
Table 3-1 CATIA Character Translation Table
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You can use the zfs command to specify whether to perform CATIA translation on a per-share basis by setting the catia property to true. By default, the value is false, which means that CATIA translation is not performed.
For more information, see How to Use Your Assigned Administrative Rights in Oracle Solaris 11.1 Administration: Security Services.
# zfs set share.smb.catia=true pool/dataset
The following example shows how to enable CATIA translation for the files/acme.sales.logs share:
# zfs set share.smb.catia=true files/acme.sales.logs