I have a few conditions to meet with a new samba setup.I want to migrate a windows based share to a linux samba share. However this time the share is in the regular corporate LAN and I do not have the rights to add this samba server to the corporate windows domain.
I have a file share on a Windows 2008 R2 server in a AD domain (call it \SECURESERVER\STUFF) and I am not sure if I have the share and folder permissions set up right. I noticed the problem when I set up new server (WORKGROUP\FOREIGNSERVER) that was not joined to the domain and tried to copy some files off of \SECURESERVER\STUFF.
I am unable to promote my newly installed Windows Server 2012 machine to a domain controller.
Joining the domain as a server that is a member of the domain worked fine.
I'm using File Server role on it right now to share some hard drives through my network via SMB protocol and I've faced such problem:
I want to make it guest accessible, but I also want to have some folders to be connected to some users (with login and pass auth).
Hi all,
I am trying to access an NFS share set up on an AIX 5.2 box from Windows. I can either use my Windows 2008 server to connect to it and then connect the workstation to the server 2008 box, or directly map the XP workstation to it, whatever is most efficient.
A bit about current setup:
It is windows 2008 R2 AD servers (all of them are 2008R2) and couple locations which set as Sites. Each location has DFS on AD server. Roaming profiles are not used nor configured. Users have their home folder configured as mapped S: drive to DFS shared folder.
I have installed OpenSSH on my windows 2008 server by following the user guide here . Now I have some files on windows network share with UNC path as
\\corp\test\testdata
I want map this file system on network share to my windows 2008 server which is configred with SFTP so that I can access these files from my Java Program by doing SFTP to windows 2008 server.How can I do that?
Using a GPO I've tried to deploy (in this case) Chrome to a series of locked down workstations with limited usage. This is on a server 2008 R2 installation, with the clients running Windows 7 Professional.
So, what I've done is:
Setup a shared folder where the users in question only have read rights on the files (MSI-files), but not on the directory.
My server environment setup :
Server 1: DC1 , DNS, DFS Namespace Server & Storage (iSCSI)
Server 2: DC2 , DNS, DFS Namespace Server & Storage (iSCSI)
Server 3: IIS NLB Webfarm
Server 4: IIS NLB Webfarm
Server 5 & 6: SQL Server Failover Cluster
All running Windows Server 2008R2,
IIS hosting ASP.Net 4.0 Application using Shared Configuration and SMB shared path.
Basically everyth