F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks The device recognizes Ubuntu Samba but fails to establish a connection.

The device recognizes Ubuntu Samba but fails to establish a connection.

The device recognizes Ubuntu Samba but fails to establish a connection.

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Xelo24
Member
178
04-15-2024, 02:13 PM
#1
In short, I'm attempting to link my 2009 Mac (MacOS 10.13.6) to a Pop-Os Samba share on my Lenovo Yoga Book locally. I followed the provided tutorial and checked the shared settings in the Finder under 'Shared' SAMBA24, which matched the smb.conf file. Still, I keep receiving errors like "cannot connect...". After changing the share name in smb.conf, the issue persists. I've tried connecting manually via the command line using various samba URLs, but nothing works. It seems the problem might not be about name changes or server visibility, but possibly something else—like a hidden configuration on Pop-Os or an outdated guide. Could it be related to my Mac itself? Please let me know if you have any other details to share. Thank you in advance.
X
Xelo24
04-15-2024, 02:13 PM #1

In short, I'm attempting to link my 2009 Mac (MacOS 10.13.6) to a Pop-Os Samba share on my Lenovo Yoga Book locally. I followed the provided tutorial and checked the shared settings in the Finder under 'Shared' SAMBA24, which matched the smb.conf file. Still, I keep receiving errors like "cannot connect...". After changing the share name in smb.conf, the issue persists. I've tried connecting manually via the command line using various samba URLs, but nothing works. It seems the problem might not be about name changes or server visibility, but possibly something else—like a hidden configuration on Pop-Os or an outdated guide. Could it be related to my Mac itself? Please let me know if you have any other details to share. Thank you in advance.

C
57
04-15-2024, 09:40 PM
#2
Do you have another machine available for testing? It might be a permissions problem.
C
CamilloGamer13
04-15-2024, 09:40 PM #2

Do you have another machine available for testing? It might be a permissions problem.

D
DanTheMan_44
Junior Member
14
04-16-2024, 03:13 AM
#3
It might be possible that the iMac only allows SMBv2, while your SAMBA server is set up for SMBv3. Disabling SMBv2 could have affected access to your printer, scanner, and camera.
D
DanTheMan_44
04-16-2024, 03:13 AM #3

It might be possible that the iMac only allows SMBv2, while your SAMBA server is set up for SMBv3. Disabling SMBv2 could have affected access to your printer, scanner, and camera.

S
Sheikrik
Senior Member
441
04-21-2024, 05:19 AM
#4
You attempted to link to a server using another machine with Ubuntu Server 18 running Lubuntu, after setting up Samba. The issue is consistently "connection refused." It seems the problem might lie with Samba itself or network configuration rather than the firewall. You noticed that after installing Samba, the Ubuntu Server appeared as a gameserver on your Mac, and it worked fine there—no login issues or blank screens. This suggests the server might be handling connections differently depending on the environment.
S
Sheikrik
04-21-2024, 05:19 AM #4

You attempted to link to a server using another machine with Ubuntu Server 18 running Lubuntu, after setting up Samba. The issue is consistently "connection refused." It seems the problem might lie with Samba itself or network configuration rather than the firewall. You noticed that after installing Samba, the Ubuntu Server appeared as a gameserver on your Mac, and it worked fine there—no login issues or blank screens. This suggests the server might be handling connections differently depending on the environment.

S
Summer_Cool
Member
175
04-28-2024, 07:23 PM
#5
No clear confirmation exists for Mac OS 10.13.3 supporting smb3 directly. However, several discussions focus on setting up smb3 and its performance within the OS, suggesting it likely works.
S
Summer_Cool
04-28-2024, 07:23 PM #5

No clear confirmation exists for Mac OS 10.13.3 supporting smb3 directly. However, several discussions focus on setting up smb3 and its performance within the OS, suggesting it likely works.

E
ExlonTrantos
Member
215
05-19-2024, 03:10 AM
#6
You're not familiar with Ubuntu, but in Dolphin on KDE you can enter smb://server/ (using the server name or IP of your SAMBA server) to view a list of shares. Also, confirm your username and passwords are correctly set up—they won't automatically transfer from your regular login.
E
ExlonTrantos
05-19-2024, 03:10 AM #6

You're not familiar with Ubuntu, but in Dolphin on KDE you can enter smb://server/ (using the server name or IP of your SAMBA server) to view a list of shares. Also, confirm your username and passwords are correctly set up—they won't automatically transfer from your regular login.

D
deathtodawn
Member
216
05-19-2024, 09:26 AM
#7
No, I haven't created your SAMBA user accounts yet.
D
deathtodawn
05-19-2024, 09:26 AM #7

No, I haven't created your SAMBA user accounts yet.

I
Inf3rno
Member
186
05-19-2024, 09:54 AM
#8
I configured users according to the guidelines and found a folder with them. Did you make any other changes? Secondly, when using smb://SAMBABOOK/ on the hosting machine, it reported a connection refused error. I saw it listed under networks and tried that method too, but got the same issue. It seems the service can indeed connect and display its own shares.
I
Inf3rno
05-19-2024, 09:54 AM #8

I configured users according to the guidelines and found a folder with them. Did you make any other changes? Secondly, when using smb://SAMBABOOK/ on the hosting machine, it reported a connection refused error. I saw it listed under networks and tried that method too, but got the same issue. It seems the service can indeed connect and display its own shares.

I
Itay22
Member
111
05-19-2024, 01:49 PM
#9
I followed the instructions in the article. One 'caleb' was used instead of 'josh' (from the tutorial), and sadmin was added as per their recommendation.
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Itay22
05-19-2024, 01:49 PM #9

I followed the instructions in the article. One 'caleb' was used instead of 'josh' (from the tutorial), and sadmin was added as per their recommendation.

G
GansterHD
Junior Member
2
05-19-2024, 05:35 PM
#10
Your smb.config file is structured to define settings for the SMB protocol, including details like authentication methods, encryption options, and network configurations.
G
GansterHD
05-19-2024, 05:35 PM #10

Your smb.config file is structured to define settings for the SMB protocol, including details like authentication methods, encryption options, and network configurations.

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