For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
On 3/10/23 14:25, pinnerite wrote:
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
Can you look at your history of updates in the update manager to see
what update has caused this problem?
On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.
On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:I remember having too do similar back in the day when I still used samba.
On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.
it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
(A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)
I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.
I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.
server min protocol = NT1
client min protocol = NT1
client lanman auth = yes
ntlm auth = yes
and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows Features.
Paul
On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.
it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
(A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)
I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.
I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.
server min protocol = NT1
client min protocol = NT1
client lanman auth = yes
ntlm auth = yes
and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows Features.
Paul
On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:
On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.
it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
(A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)
I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.
I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.
server min protocol = NT1
client min protocol = NT1
client lanman auth = yes
ntlm auth = yes
and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows Features.
Paul
I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.
Alan
--
Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of
DRAM.
On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 15:46:45 +0000
pinnerite <pinnerite@gmail.com> wrote:
On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:
On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:cloned
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.
it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
(A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)
I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.
I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.
server min protocol = NT1
client min protocol = NT1
client lanman auth = yes
ntlm auth = yes
and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows
Features.
Paul
I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.
Alan
--
Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of
DRAM.
Given that you are using a m$ product to drive a machine, it might be
more cost effective to look at some of those dell laptop latitudes
selling for around $100. The cost of the machine includes a license for
w7 or w10, the cost of the machine is almost equal to the cost of the license.
Using a dedicated machine would seem to answer your problem.
On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 03:15:30 +1100, Nic <Nic@none.net> wrote:What does a license cost?
On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 15:46:45 +0000
pinnerite <pinnerite@gmail.com> wrote:
On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:
On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:Windows
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from
theusing samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access
accessdata.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer
clonedthe data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.
it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
(A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)
I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.
I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.
server min protocol = NT1
client min protocol = NT1
client lanman auth = yes
ntlm auth = yes
and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows
Features.
Paul
I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.
Alan
--
Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of
DRAM.
Given that you are using a m$ product to drive a machine, it might be
more cost effective to look at some of those dell laptop latitudes
selling for around $100. The cost of the machine includes a license
for w7 or w10, the cost of the machine is almost equal to the cost of
the license.
A W10 license doesn't cost anything like that.
Using a dedicated machine would seem to answer your problem.
On 3/12/23 13:51, Rod Speed wrote:
On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 03:15:30 +1100, Nic <Nic@none.net> wrote:What does a license cost?
On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 15:46:45 +0000
pinnerite <pinnerite@gmail.com> wrote:
On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:
On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:Windows
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines, >>>>> >> running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a >>>>> >> programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other >>>>> >> platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from
accessusing samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access >>>>> the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer
clonedthe data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.
it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
(A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)
I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.
I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.
server min protocol = NT1
client min protocol = NT1
client lanman auth = yes
ntlm auth = yes
and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows >>>>> Features.
Paul
I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.
Alan
-- Mint 20.3, kernel 5.4.0-139-generic, Cinnamon 5.2.7
running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 16GB of
DRAM.
Given that you are using a m$ product to drive a machine, it might be
more cost effective to look at some of those dell laptop latitudes
selling for around $100. The cost of the machine includes a license
for w7 or w10, the cost of the machine is almost equal to the cost of
the license.
A W10 license doesn't cost anything like that.
Using a dedicated machine would seem to answer your problem.
On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.
it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
(A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)
I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.
I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.
server min protocol = NT1
client min protocol = NT1
client lanman auth = yes
ntlm auth = yes
and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows Features.
Paul
On Sun, 12 Mar 2023 03:06:11 -0400
Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:
On 3/10/2023 9:39 PM, Paul wrote:
On 3/10/2023 2:25 PM, pinnerite wrote:
For many years I have had to retain two Windows virtual machines,
running on a Linux host and VirtualBox.
I need Windows XP for a large home-grown 16 bit programe and for a
programme that drives a Fujitsu cut-sheet feeder-scanner.
Windows 10 is for professional software not available on any other
platform.
The data files are all on Linux partitions and accessed from Windows
using samba.
I have to use the lowest security protocol for Windows to access the
data.
Today, I discovered that from both Windows I could not longer access
the data.
Eventually I powered down and then up again using a drive last cloned
in December 2022.
Everything worked perfectly.
So it seems an update has clobbered my machine.
Has anyone else using samba suffered from this problem?
TIA, Alan
There is SMB1, SMB2, SMB3.
it took me quite a while to tip my Linux drive upright again.
(A restore from backup didn't quite do what it was supposed to do.)
I did a do-partial-upgrade on a 20.04.3 to 20.04.5 and
the 4.15 SAMBA came in. Initially, nothing worked.
I added these to smb.conf, as an experiment.
server min protocol = NT1
client min protocol = NT1
client lanman auth = yes
ntlm auth = yes
and EVERYTHING worked after that. My test share ("server test") on
Ubuntu 20.04.5 worked (it was set up a while back), as well as the
client worked with a Windows 11 that had SMBV1 turned on in Windows Features.
Paul
I just ran up a clean 21.1 installation.
Virtual XP still cannot access the Linux folders.
Alan
On 3/12/23 13:51, Rod Speed wrote:
On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 03:15:30 +1100, Nic <Nic@none.net> wrote:What does a license cost?
A W10 license doesn't cost anything like that.
Using a dedicated machine would seem to answer your problem.
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