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Friday, December 23, 2011
How To Add Users To Your Samba Domain - PART13
Adding The Users In Linux
Create the user
[root@bigboy tmp]# useradd -g 100 peter
Give them a Linux Password
[root@bigboy tmp]# passwd peter Changing password for user peter. New password: Retype new password: passwd: all authentication tokens updated successfully. [root@bigboy tmp]#
Mapping The Linux Users To An smbpassword
[root@bigboy tmp]# /usr/bin/smbpasswd -a username password
Mapping A Private Windows Drive Share
Mapping Using "My Computer"
- Let the user log into the domain.
- Right-click on the "My Computer" icon on the desktop.
- Click on "Map Network Drive".
- Select a drive letter.
- Browse to the HOMENET domain, then the Samba server, then the user's home directory.
- Click on the check box "Reconnect at Logon", to make the change permanent
Mapping from the Command Line
[root@bigboy tmp]# vi /home/samba/netlogon/login.bat
REM Drive Mapping Script net use P: \\bigboy\
[root@bigboy tmp]# chmod 644 /home/samba/netlogon/login.bat
[root@bigboy tmp]# unix2dos /home/samba/netlogon/login.bat unix2dos: converting file /home/samba/netlogon/login.bat to DOS format ... [root@bigboy tmp]#
[global] logon script = login.bat
Setup Microsoft Windows 2008 R2 Failover Cluster in VMware Workstation - PART1
( in this example,
Qurom disk – 512MB,
Storage disk1- 2GB,
Storage disk 2- 2GB,
Storage disk 3 – 2GB,
and Backup disk 4GB)
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Make Your PC Clients Aware Of Your Samba PDC (SAMBA) - PART12
Windows 95/98/ME and Windows XP Home
- Navigate to the Network section of the Control Panel (Start ->Settings->Control Panel->Network)
- Select the Configuration tab
- Highlight "Client for Microsoft Networks"
- Click the Properties button.
- Check "Log onto Windows NT Domain", and enter the domain name.
- Click all the OK buttons and reboot!
Windows NT
- Navigate to the Network section of the Control Panel (Start ->Settings->Control Panel->Network )
- Select the "Identification" tab
- Click the "Change" button
- Enter the domain name and computer name, do not check the box Create a Computer Account in the Domain. In this case, the existing machine trust account is used to join the machine to the domain.
- Click "OK". You should get "Welcome to <DOMAIN>" message as confirmation that you've been added.
- Reboot.
Windows 200x and Windows XP Professional
- Press the Windows and Break keys simultaneously to access the System Properties dialogue box.
- Click on the 'Network Identification' or 'Computer Name' tab on the top.
- Click the "Properties" button.
- Click on the "Member of Domain" button.
- Also enter your domain name and computer name and then click "OK"
- You will be prompted for a user account and password with rights to join a machine to the domain. Enter the information for your Samba administrator. In this home environment scenario, the user would be root with the corresponding smbpasswd password. Now, you should get a "Welcome to <DOMAIN>" message confirming that you've been added.
- Reboot.
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Netlogon\Parameters] "requiresignorseal"=dword:00000000 "signsecurechannel"=dword:00000000
Friday, December 16, 2011
Is That Grinding Sound the Death of My Hard Drive?
By Lincoln Spector, PCWorld Nov 17, 2011 7:44 AM
Ericuse165 has a friend with a PC that's making a grinding noise. Eric asked the Hard Drives, NAS Drives, Storage forum for advice.
First, backup that hard drive. And I mean now! That drive could die any minute, and when it does, it will cost hundreds or even thousands of dollars to retrieve your files--if the files can be retrieved.
Do a full image backup of the entire drive, including all partitions. EASEUS Todo Backup andMacrium Reflect Free are both free and either one will do the job just fine. You'll need an external hard drive to back the images onto.
Both programs also have an option for creating a bootable CD from which you can restore the backup. Create that CD.
Backed up? Good. Now you need to determine if it’s the hard drive making the noise, or just a fan.
If the PC is a desktop, open it up, turn it on, and try to locate the location of the noise. If you can't, find yourself a hollow tube--the cardboard one from a used-up paper towel roll works. Holding one end of tube to your ear, point the other end to various locations in the PC, especially towards the hard drive and fans. You'll easily pinpoint the source of the grinding.
Laptops aren't that easy. If you feel comfortable opening yours, use the desktop instructions above. Otherwise, try to determine the location of the fan and the hard drive from the outside. The fan is probably near a vent. Most laptops are designed to make hard drives easy to remove and replace. If you can't find where the drive is located, check your model's online manual.
Once you know where everything is, use the cardboard tube method described above.
If the noise is coming from a fan, and the PC is open, look for something obstructing the fan. Remove it if you find it. If the fan is loose; tighten it. Otherwise, replace it.
But if a fan is making the noise, and you're not comfortable opening the laptop, bring it to a professional and explain the problem.
And if it really is the hard drive making the noise? Buy a new hard drive, install it, and restore Windows and your files from that image backup.
Read the original forum discussion.
Contributing Editor Lincoln Spector writes about technology and cinema. Email your tech questions to him at answer@pcworld.com, or post them to a community of helpful folks on the PCW Answer Line forum. Follow Lincoln on Twitter, or subscribe to the Answer Line newsletter, e-mailed weekly.
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