Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora
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@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@JaredBusch Isn't that automounting?
I really like the idea of cred file. That would make things easy.
Instead of autoconfig, I would like a script that I could use for connecting that breaks connection at reboot
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@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@IRJ said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@JaredBusch said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
Put your username and password in a text file in your hidden
/home/user/.config
folder.
Create this file/home/user/.config/smb_creds
With this contentusername=SMBUser password=SMBPassword
Can I store domain there as well?
You'd just enter the username as
domain@user
iircok. That is easy enough.
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@IRJ said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@IRJ said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@JaredBusch said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
Put your username and password in a text file in your hidden
/home/user/.config
folder.
Create this file/home/user/.config/smb_creds
With this contentusername=SMBUser password=SMBPassword
Can I store domain there as well?
You'd just enter the username as
domain@user
iircok. That is easy enough.
I'd make another script to unmount the shares when your done with them as well.
#!/bin/bash umount /mount/point
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@IRJ said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@JaredBusch Isn't that automounting?
I really like the idea of cred file. That would make things easy.
Instead of autoconfig, I would like a script that I could use for connecting that breaks connection at reboot
You still should dismount the share (in a normal circumstance), but at least the approach @travisdh1 posted won't automount.
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@IRJ said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@JaredBusch Isn't that automounting?
I really like the idea of cred file. That would make things easy.
Instead of autoconfig, I would like a script that I could use for connecting that breaks connection at reboot
Combine the two suggestions.
Don't use fstab, use the mount. But don't prompt for the user/pass, read it from a config file.
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@travisdh1 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@IRJ said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@IRJ said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@JaredBusch said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
Put your username and password in a text file in your hidden
/home/user/.config
folder.
Create this file/home/user/.config/smb_creds
With this contentusername=SMBUser password=SMBPassword
Can I store domain there as well?
You'd just enter the username as
domain@user
iircok. That is easy enough.
I'd make another script to unmount the shares when your done with them as well.
#!/bin/bash unmount /mount/point
Might make that one big general dismount for all of the shares you might even use. Rather than a script per SMB server.
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@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@IRJ said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@JaredBusch said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
Put your username and password in a text file in your hidden
/home/user/.config
folder.
Create this file/home/user/.config/smb_creds
With this contentusername=SMBUser password=SMBPassword
Can I store domain there as well?
You'd just enter the username as
domain@user
iircor domain\username depending on what type of domain you're connecting to.
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@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@travisdh1 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@IRJ said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@IRJ said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@JaredBusch said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
Put your username and password in a text file in your hidden
/home/user/.config
folder.
Create this file/home/user/.config/smb_creds
With this contentusername=SMBUser password=SMBPassword
Can I store domain there as well?
You'd just enter the username as
domain@user
iircok. That is easy enough.
I'd make another script to unmount the shares when your done with them as well.
#!/bin/bash unmount /mount/point
Might make that one big general dismount for all of the shares you might even use. Rather than a script per SMB server.
I don't like unmounting multiple things with a single command. I've been burned by unmounting important things in the past.
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On a side question, how do you guys deal with password changes and SMB shares that get mounted like this? Seems like it would be a pain in the rear to have to go and constantly update several files with new passwords every 90 days or so.
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@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
On a side question, how do you guys deal with password changes and SMB shares that get mounted like this? Seems like it would be a pain in the rear to have to go and constantly update several files with new passwords every 90 days or so.
I know of no one who changes domain passwords that frequently - thank the maker. EHR passwords - that's another story.
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@Dashrender said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
On a side question, how do you guys deal with password changes and SMB shares that get mounted like this? Seems like it would be a pain in the rear to have to go and constantly update several files with new passwords every 90 days or so.
I know of no one who changes domain passwords that frequently - thank the maker. EHR passwords - that's another story.
You know me
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@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
On a side question, how do you guys deal with password changes and SMB shares that get mounted like this? Seems like it would be a pain in the rear to have to go and constantly update several files with new passwords every 90 days or so.
That's why I suggested prompting for the password in that sample script.
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@travisdh1 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
On a side question, how do you guys deal with password changes and SMB shares that get mounted like this? Seems like it would be a pain in the rear to have to go and constantly update several files with new passwords every 90 days or so.
That's why I suggested prompting for the password in that sample script.
Would you manually set the username instead though? (because users)
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@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@Dashrender said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
On a side question, how do you guys deal with password changes and SMB shares that get mounted like this? Seems like it would be a pain in the rear to have to go and constantly update several files with new passwords every 90 days or so.
I know of no one who changes domain passwords that frequently - thank the maker. EHR passwords - that's another story.
You know me
WTH are you doing that to your users?
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@Dashrender said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@Dashrender said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
On a side question, how do you guys deal with password changes and SMB shares that get mounted like this? Seems like it would be a pain in the rear to have to go and constantly update several files with new passwords every 90 days or so.
I know of no one who changes domain passwords that frequently - thank the maker. EHR passwords - that's another story.
You know me
WTH are you doing that to your users?
Because they choose to use Apple. . .
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Also the command is
umount
notunmount
atleast on Fedora 29. -
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
Also the command is
umount
notunmount
atleast on Fedora 29.Typo by me
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@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@Dashrender said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@Dashrender said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
@DustinB3403 said in Looking for an effective way to quickly access SMB shares from Fedora:
On a side question, how do you guys deal with password changes and SMB shares that get mounted like this? Seems like it would be a pain in the rear to have to go and constantly update several files with new passwords every 90 days or so.
I know of no one who changes domain passwords that frequently - thank the maker. EHR passwords - that's another story.
You know me
WTH are you doing that to your users?
Because they choose to use Apple. . .
what? why would t hat matter?