source: trunk/samba-3.0.25pre1/docs/manpages/smbmount.8@ 7

Last change on this file since 7 was 1, checked in by Paul Smedley, 18 years ago

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20.TH "SMBMOUNT" 8 "" "" ""
21.SH NAME
22smbmount \- mount an smbfs filesystem
23.SH "SYNOPSIS"
24.ad l
25.hy 0
26.HP 9
27\fBsmbmount\fR {service} {mount\-point} [\-o\ options]
28.ad
29.hy
30
31.SH "DESCRIPTION"
32
33.PP
34\fBsmbmount\fR mounts a Linux SMB filesystem\&. It is usually invoked as \fBmount\&.smbfs\fR by the \fBmount\fR(8) command when using the "\-t smbfs" option\&. This command only works in Linux, and the kernel must support the smbfs filesystem\&.
35
36.PP
37Options to \fBsmbmount\fR are specified as a comma\-separated list of key=value pairs\&. It is possible to send options other than those listed here, assuming that smbfs supports them\&. If you get mount failures, check your kernel log for errors on unknown options\&.
38
39.PP
40\fBsmbmount\fR is a daemon\&. After mounting it keeps running until the mounted smbfs is umounted\&. It will log things that happen when in daemon mode using the "machine name" smbmount, so typically this output will end up in \fIlog\&.smbmount\fR\&. The \fB smbmount\fR process may also be called mount\&.smbfs\&.
41
42.RS
43.Sh "Note"
44
45.PP
46 \fBsmbmount\fR calls \fBsmbmnt\fR(8) to do the actual mount\&. You must make sure that \fBsmbmnt\fR is in the path so that it can be found\&.
47
48.RE
49
50.SH "OPTIONS"
51
52.TP
53username=<arg>
54specifies the username to connect as\&. If this is not given, then the environment variable \fB USER\fR is used\&. This option can also take the form "user%password" or "user/workgroup" or "user/workgroup%password" to allow the password and workgroup to be specified as part of the username\&.
55
56.TP
57password=<arg>
58specifies the SMB password\&. If this option is not given then the environment variable PASSWD is used\&. If it can find no password\fBsmbmount\fR will prompt for a password, unless the guest option is given\&.
59
60Note that passwords which contain the argument delimiter character (i\&.e\&. a comma ',') will failed to be parsed correctly on the command line\&. However, the same password defined in the PASSWD environment variable or a credentials file (see below) will be read correctly\&.
61
62.TP
63credentials=<filename>
64specifies a file that contains a username and/or password\&. The format of the file is:
65
66.nf
67
68username = <value>
69password = <value>
70
71.fi
72
73
74This is preferred over having passwords in plaintext in a shared file, such as \fI/etc/fstab\fR\&. Be sure to protect any credentials file properly\&.
75
76.TP
77krb
78Use kerberos (Active Directory)\&.
79
80.TP
81netbiosname=<arg>
82sets the source NetBIOS name\&. It defaults to the local hostname\&.
83
84.TP
85uid=<arg>
86sets the uid that will own all files on the mounted filesystem\&. It may be specified as either a username or a numeric uid\&.
87
88.TP
89gid=<arg>
90sets the gid that will own all files on the mounted filesystem\&. It may be specified as either a groupname or a numeric gid\&.
91
92.TP
93port=<arg>
94sets the remote SMB port number\&. The default is 445, fallback is 139\&.
95
96.TP
97fmask=<arg>
98sets the file mask\&. This determines the permissions that remote files have in the local filesystem\&. This is not a umask, but the actual permissions for the files\&. The default is based on the current umask\&.
99
100.TP
101dmask=<arg>
102Sets the directory mask\&. This determines the permissions that remote directories have in the local filesystem\&. This is not a umask, but the actual permissions for the directories\&. The default is based on the current umask\&.
103
104.TP
105debug=<arg>
106Sets the debug level\&. This is useful for tracking down SMB connection problems\&. A suggested value to start with is 4\&. If set too high there will be a lot of output, possibly hiding the useful output\&.
107
108.TP
109ip=<arg>
110Sets the destination host or IP address\&.
111
112.TP
113workgroup=<arg>
114Sets the workgroup on the destination
115
116.TP
117sockopt=<arg>
118Sets the TCP socket options\&. See the \fBsmb\&.conf\fR(5) \fIsocket options\fR option\&.
119
120.TP
121scope=<arg>
122Sets the NetBIOS scope
123
124.TP
125guest
126Don't prompt for a password
127
128.TP
129ro
130mount read\-only
131
132.TP
133rw
134mount read\-write
135
136.TP
137iocharset=<arg>
138sets the charset used by the Linux side for codepage to charset translations (NLS)\&. Argument should be the name of a charset, like iso8859\-1\&. (Note: only kernel 2\&.4\&.0 or later)
139
140.TP
141codepage=<arg>
142sets the codepage the server uses\&. See the iocharset option\&. Example value cp850\&. (Note: only kernel 2\&.4\&.0 or later)
143
144.TP
145ttl=<arg>
146sets how long a directory listing is cached in milliseconds (also affects visibility of file size and date changes)\&. A higher value means that changes on the server take longer to be noticed but it can give better performance on large directories, especially over long distances\&. Default is 1000ms but something like 10000ms (10 seconds) is probably more reasonable in many cases\&. (Note: only kernel 2\&.4\&.2 or later)
147
148.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES"
149
150.PP
151The variable \fBUSER\fR may contain the username of the person using the client\&. This information is used only if the protocol level is high enough to support session\-level passwords\&. The variable can be used to set both username and password by using the format username%password\&.
152
153.PP
154The variable \fBPASSWD\fR may contain the password of the person using the client\&. This information is used only if the protocol level is high enough to support session\-level passwords\&.
155
156.PP
157The variable \fBPASSWD_FILE\fR may contain the pathname of a file to read the password from\&. A single line of input is read and used as the password\&.
158
159.SH "OTHER COMMANDS"
160
161.PP
162File systems that have been mounted using the \fBsmbmount\fR can be unmounted using the \fBsmbumount\fR or the UNIX system\fBumount\fR command\&.
163
164.SH "BUGS"
165
166.PP
167Passwords and other options containing , can not be handled\&. For passwords an alternative way of passing them is in a credentials file or in the PASSWD environment\&.
168
169.PP
170The credentials file does not handle usernames or passwords with leading space\&.
171
172.PP
173One smbfs bug is important enough to mention here, even if it is a bit misplaced:
174
175.TP 3
176\(bu
177Mounts sometimes stop working\&. This is usually caused by smbmount terminating\&. Since smbfs needs smbmount to reconnect when the server disconnects, the mount will eventually go dead\&. An umount/mount normally fixes this\&. At least 2 ways to trigger this bug are known\&.
178.LP
179
180.PP
181Note that the typical response to a bug report is suggestion to try the latest version first\&. So please try doing that first, and always include which versions you use of relevant software when reporting bugs (minimum: samba, kernel, distribution)
182
183.SH "SEE ALSO"
184
185.PP
186Documentation/filesystems/smbfs\&.txt in the linux kernel source tree may contain additional options and information\&.
187
188.PP
189FreeBSD also has a smbfs, but it is not related to smbmount
190
191.PP
192For Solaris, HP\-UX and others you may want to look at \fBsmbsh\fR(1) or at other solutions, such as Sharity or perhaps replacing the SMB server with a NFS server\&.
193
194.SH "AUTHOR"
195
196.PP
197Volker Lendecke, Andrew Tridgell, Michael H\&. Warfield and others\&.
198
199.PP
200The current maintainer of smbfs and the userspace tools \fBsmbmount\fR, \fBsmbumount\fR, and \fBsmbmnt\fR is Urban Widmark\&. The SAMBA Mailing list is the preferred place to ask questions regarding these programs\&.
201
202.PP
203The conversion of this manpage for Samba 2\&.2 was performed by Gerald Carter\&. The conversion to DocBook XML 4\&.2 for Samba 3\&.0 was done by Alexander Bokovoy\&.
204
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