Aug 15, 2007

General Information. Microsoft discontinued the official support for NT4 domains in the Windows operating systems. However, with some modifications, you are still able to use later released Windows operating systems with a Samba NT4 domain. Accessing files on network devices using SMBv1 on Windows 10 May 23, 2018 The Official Samba 3.5.x HOWTO and Reference Guide MS Windows 200x/XP Professional Policies Managing Account/User Policies Management Tools Samba Editreg Toolset Windows NT4/200x Samba PDC System Startup and Logon Processing Overview Common Errors Policy Does Not Work 27. Desktop Profile Management Features and Benefits Roaming Profiles Samba Configuration for Profile Handling Roaming Windows User Profiles - SambaWiki

Samba can also act as a Windows domain controller. This is an outstanding tool for ensuring seamless integration of Linux servers and the office desktop machines still running Windows. 11.5.1.

Unix Samba and Windows XP Solutions | Experts Exchange Unix Samba and Windows XP. chasepack asked on 2004-08-13. Networking; 18 Comments. 1 Solution. 27,053 Views. Last Modified: 2013-12-23. Hello all, I just got assigned to this 'little' task of solving a Samba conflict my department has had ever since XP came around. (the previous lab tech who set up the server got assigned elsewhere).

Oct 05, 2007 · How To Samba With openSuse 10.3 And Windows XP. Formerly, How To Samba With Suse 9.3 And Windows XP and then How To Samba With Suse 10.1 And Windows XP . This guide will work with Suse / openSUSE Linux versions 9.3-10.3. Version 2.2. Last edited October 05, 2007

Same thing could happen on your XP firewall. For example, i have assigned specific IP can access to XP box and if the IP you have in Linux not matching up the IP in XP you probably would able to access as well. Make sure the setting is the similar between the 2 files. /etc/hosts /etc/samba/lmhosts Make sure you samba user also exist in XP or vice versa. Enable SMB1 Sharing Protocol in Windows 10 The SMBv1 protocol is outdated and insecure. It was the only choice till Windows XP. It was superseded by SMB2 and later versions which offer superior performance and better security. SMB v1 is not recommended for use any more by Microsoft. Starting in Windows Vista, Microsoft implemented a new version of SMB, known as SMB2. Windows XP can't connect to Samba on CentOS 7.x