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Determining whether it's a true "server"

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Mark Carson

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Mar 8, 2017, 7:02:30 PM3/8/17
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Our company is mixed Mac and Windows, and has a huge number of "servers"; I
put that in quotes because I don't know if they're using "Windows Server" or
just a bunch of Windows machines with "shared" drives. Is there a way I can
tell . . . at least for the particular drive our department uses?

I ask for two reasons: One is that it is abysmally slow. The other is that I
copied a Mac font with resource fork to the server and it came up zero bytes.
I thought when Windows broke a Mac font it created a file _fontname that was
the old resource fork, that was normally hidden because it started wth an
underscore, but I did not see one.

I don't know of support of Mac files is a setting or how it's normally
enabled.

Anyway, any ideas what I can look for?

Auric__

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Mar 9, 2017, 3:36:16 AM3/9/17
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If you're allowed to install programs, you could try nmap, which includes
remote OS detection in its bag of tricks:

https://nmap.org/book/man-os-detection.html

--
My "arrogance" comes not from my skill,
but from the knowledge that I am simply better than you.
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