First, upgrade VisionFS to 3.10.911; this is a *must* to work with XP. You
can
get 3.10 from http://www.tarantella.com/download/ and the 911
patch from http://www.tarantella.com/support/updates/vision/p.vfs.3.10.911/
Next, use VisionFS encrypted passwords. Finally, XP does not always
report the correct user name and password to VisionFS. Check this with
"visionfs status".
The solution is to set up XP to report correctly by defining the network
user and password to use for the VisionFS server. You can do this by doing
the following (disclaimer: I'm reporting this from memory, so the details
may vary slightly):
Click on control panel --> user account --> change account (click on
account) --> related tasks --> my network passwords --> add --> login info
properties --> set the server, user, password. Restart the XP machine, and
it should work. Note: this method means that *anyone* logged into the XP
machine will have access to the the server under the selected user name!
--
Richard Seeder
aa...@att.net
I have seen that when you change the name of an account. It sends the
old name and the new password if I remember right.
The only solutions I found were to either add the name/password it wants
to use to Visionfs/Samba or abandon that user account on XP (rename it
if you like) and create a new account with the user name and password
you would like to use. See http://aplawrence.com/Bofcusm/1862.html
XP obviously still has some rough edges.
--
Tony Lawrence
Free SCO, Mac OS X and Linux Skills Tests:
http://aplawrence.com/skillstest.html
Yup, but you can properly change the name if you go into the user/group
manager. It's somewhat burried under XP, but it's the same interface as
under W2K.
Start/Settings/Control panel/Administrative Tools/Computer Browser
In there, there's a User's section. You'll have the actual user/account
names of the XP machine listed in there.
> The only solutions I found were to either add the name/password it wants
> to use to Visionfs/Samba or abandon that user account on XP (rename it
> if you like) and create a new account with the user name and password
> you would like to use. See http://aplawrence.com/Bofcusm/1862.html
>
> XP obviously still has some rough edges.
Yea, and it's just too bright and bubbly :P
bkx
I'm quite sure that's where I changed the names to no help.
<SNIP>
> > Yup, but you can properly change the name if you go into the user/group
> > manager. It's somewhat burried under XP, but it's the same interface as
> > under W2K.
> >
> > Start/Settings/Control panel/Administrative Tools/Computer Browser
> >
> > In there, there's a User's section. You'll have the actual user/account
> > names of the XP machine listed in there.
>
> I'm quite sure that's where I changed the names to no help.
*nod* okie. Have done it there on two in the office successfully.
bkx
I have noticed the same problem on more sites. It seems that the first
user created/modified on XP may not work with Vision, because the wrong
user ID is being sent.
And some new edges have turned up.
An XP PRO desktop system could browse and mount from NT server, but
was being denied from Vision. The packet sniffer showed that the
user eduardol was using a id of eduardo across the lan. The user
was login into XP as eduardol, had an account of eduardol on NT,
but the 'l' was dropped over the lan. Even stranger was a test
login of eduardo into the XP desktop, it worked. I found no mention
of a seven character limit on user names.
An XP PRO laptop could not browse the network, but a sniffer showed
that the netbios broadcasts were being answered correctly. A find
of computer name failed, but a find by IP address worked, and the
user could mount the required resource. Examination of the packet
trace showed no obvious problem. The XP network properties indicated
that the interface was being firewalled, but the firewall properties
were configured as pass all in, pass all out. Removing the firewall
filter on that interface solved the problem, which leads to the
question(s) of what does pass all mean, and how effective is a rule
that blocks a netbios response by name but not by IP address. The
packet only differs in content.
I'm sure more will follow.
Mike
--
Michael Brown
The Kingsway Group
Sorry for the delay; been out of the office. Unfortunately, I don't have
access to the XP machine; the above was done over the phone at a customer
site with a third-party at the controls. Is the networking set up and
working before you try to manage the network passwords? What is XP
reporting to VisionFS?
--
Richard Seeder
aa...@att.net
***********************8
Hello all,
As we all know Mr Bill Gates has put some strange things into
windows XP which are causing us some problems. So here is a bit of
info on how to work round some of these problems.
** Changing Usernames **
When you change a username in XP this does not actually change the
name which the machine logs into the Unix server. So really all that
is changed is the display name in XP, not the underlying username.
So if you do need to change a username don't do it the normal way
through control panel then User Accounts. Instead do the following.
Log in as an Admin user on the XP machine - don't worry, you can
change anyone's username.
Start > Settings > Control panel > Performance and Maintenance >
Administration tools > Computer Management > Local user and groups >
Users > Right click on user you wish to change > rename > Put in the
new username.
If you also want to update the password then do this the normal way
through Control Panel > User Accounts
** Server login name **
Say the user already has a username they want to keep on their XP
machine. I'll use the example of someone who logs in to his machine as
'John Smith' If he now tries to access any of the Unix shares,
Visionfs will see him as logging is as a guest user and he will not be
able to access everything.
What you need to do is tell the XP machine that when it logs onto a
particular server to use a certain username. You do this by.
Start > Settings > Control Panel > User Accounts > Select the account
> Manage my network passwords > Add (or modify if there is already
one) > server 'servername' > username 'servername\user' > password
'visionfs password for user' > OK > Log off windows > Log back on
again.
Now every time you try to access a network share on 'servername' XP
will use the username specified and normal access should be restored.
Note: To change this you need to be logged in as the user in question.
Note: If you get asked if you want to update domain password then say
No.
Hope this explains a couple of things which should make our lives a
bit easier.
Keith
I don't find any "Local User and Groups" tab or option under "Computer
Management"
I have a major heading of "System Tools" with subheadings for Event
Viewer, Shared Folders, Performance Logs and Alerts, and Device Manager.
I have a major heading of Storage ...
I have a major heading of service and Applications with subheadings of
Services, WMI Control and Indexing Service
Where did I go wrong ?
> Local user and groups >
> Users > Right click on user you wish to change > rename > Put in the
> new username.
>
> If you also want to update the password then do this the normal way
> through Control Panel > User Accounts
>
> ** Server login name **
> Say the user already has a username they want to keep on their XP
> machine. I'll use the example of someone who logs in to his machine as
> 'John Smith' If he now tries to access any of the Unix shares,
> Visionfs will see him as logging is as a guest user and he will not be
> able to access everything.
>
> What you need to do is tell the XP machine that when it logs onto a
> particular server to use a certain username. You do this by.
>
> Start > Settings > Control Panel > User Accounts > Select the account
>
>>Manage my network passwords
Whend I have selected the account, and click on Manange my network
Passwords, I am presented with an empty list and no "Add button"
Also is it XP Pro or Home - I've not tested this on XP home (but I
have had XP home working when the username and password are the same
as the vision username/password.)
Keith
bill <nob...@spamcop.net> wrote in message news:<3E3E79D6...@spamcop.net>...
THis is XP Home
Yes it works when the username and password are the same as the VFS ones,
but XP Home insists that the username (which should be deborah) is
\\Portable\deborah, and won't give up.
The web site says to apply the patch from
http://www.tarantella.com/support/updates/vision/p.vfs.3.10.911/
to ONLY SCO VisionFS 3.10.xxx. If we have VisionFS 3.00.925 on the
unixbox, how can we upgrade to 3.10.911? I do not see the 3.10.xxx
listed on the Tarentella website.
--
...ndc
Nelson D. Coleman eme...@bright.net Emerald Computer Service
Go Bucks - the 2002 National Champion Ohio State Buckeyes!
Well, actually www.tarantella.com/download where you select the Vision2K
product family, check the VisionFS 3.1 box, fill in the form, and download
the product. You can ignore the 30-day trial issue if you are already
running a version of OpenServer which came with a VisionFS license; the
update will automatically be fully licensed.
--
Richard Seeder
aa...@att.net
Thank you, Richard & J.P.. My question should have been "I do not see
the 3.10.xxx UPGRADE listed on the Tarentella website." The upgrade is
what I could not find. I am assuming that the download will already
have the necessary patch regarding encrypted passwords/XP resolution.