Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7
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 Didn't find a how to on the subject in Mangolassi and we were discussing about it in another thread so I decided to create one. I started with a CentOS 7.2 minimal install: -All commands were run as root. 
 -Installing the packages needed.
 yum install samba samba-client samba-common firewalld-Enabling and starting firewalld 
 systemctl enable firewalld
 systemctl start firewalld-Changing to the samba directory, making a backup of the original file and creating a master file which will be turned into our smb.conf file with testparm -s. 
 cd /etc/samba/
 mv smb.conf smb.conf.bak
 cp smb.conf.bak smb.conf.master
 vi smb.conf.master-While editing our file, in the global parameters we need to add the map to guest = Bad Useroption and then define our share:[sharename] path = /chosen/path read only = No guest ok = Yes browseable = Yes public = Yes-Testing our smb.conf.master file for errors and create smb.conf file if none are found. 
 testparm -s smb.conf.master > smb.confThe final file should look something like this. [global] workgroup = MYGROUP server string = Samba Server Version %v security = USER map to guest = Bad User log file = /var/log/samba/log.%m max log size = 50 idmap config * : backend = tdb cups options = raw # User defined share [public] path = /home/public read only = No guest ok = Yes browseable = Yes public = YesNo we need to create our share in our filesystem, taking careful consideration of what path we specified in our smb.conf file. In this case I choose to create my share inside home and give it a name of public. 
 cd /home
 mkdir publicWe change the owner of the folder and its permissions: 
 chown nobody:nobody public/
 chmod 777 public/Enabling the needed services and starting them. 
 systemctl enable smb.service
 systemctl enable nmb.service
 systemctl restart smb.service
 systemctl restart nmb.serviceAllowing samba through our firewall. 
 firewall-cmd --permanent --add-service=samba
 firewall-cmd --reloadAnd finally getting SELinux to allow clients to access the share. 
 setsebool -P samba_export_all_ro=1 samba_export_all_rw=1
 getsebool โa | grep samba_export
 yum install policycoreutils-python
 semanage fcontext โat samba_share_t "/home/public(/.*)?"
 restorecon /home/publicYou should have a writable anonymous share that can be accessed from your Windows Clients. ** Edit 
 Checking the ip address of my samba host
 ip addr show[root@localhost ~]# ip addr show 1: lo: <LOOPBACK,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00 inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever inet6 ::1/128 scope host valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever 2: enp0s3: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast state UP qlen 1000 link/ether 08:00:27:9f:69:b6 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff inet 192.168.1.100/24 brd 192.168.1.255 scope global enp0s3 valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever inet6 fe80::a00:27ff:fe9f:69b6/64 scope link valid_lft forever preferred_lft foreverThe ip address of my samba host is 192.168.1.100. Now we can access the share from our windows pc using\\192.168.1.100\public- 
Verifying our samba share exists in our server [root@localhost ~]# smbclient -L 192.168.1.100 Enter root's password: Domain=[MYGROUP] OS=[Windows 6.1] Server=[Samba 4.2.10] Sharename Type Comment --------- ---- ------- public Disk IPC$ IPC IPC Service (Samba Server Version 4.2.10) Domain=[MYGROUP] OS=[Windows 6.1] Server=[Samba 4.2.10] Server Comment --------- ------- LOCALHOST Samba Server Version 4.2.10 Workgroup Master --------- ------- MYGROUP LOCALHOST WORKGROUP TECHNICOLOR
 -We can see samba properly shows our share, it is indeed named public as per our smb.conf file. -No we can mount our share in windows 
  -Using \\192.168.1.100\publicto connect to share
  Our share is now properly mounted and available in our Windows PC.  
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 Great write up! 
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 @Romo don't try to steal my heart so quickly 
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 Starting this now. 
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 @scottalanmiller said in Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7: @wirestyle22 said in Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7: Starting this now. And...... Two things: - For some reason the CentOS 7 iso doesn't start with the network interface enabled.
- Lost power last night  Starting again now. Starting again now.
 
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 @wirestyle22 Ran into that in the past as well, i set it to automatic using nmtui and never have to worry about it again. 
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 @tiagom Yeah. I did that to apply updates etc but now I'm setting up a static ip as this is a server. 
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 @Romo said in Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7: semanage fcontext โat samba_share_t "/home /public(/.*)?"need to delete the space between /home and /public to make it /home/public
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 @wirestyle22 said in Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7: @Romo said in Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7: semanage fcontext โat samba_share_t "/home /public(/.*)?"need to delete the space between /home and /public to make it /home/publicEdited, thanks 
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 So I finished this guide but my CentOS 7 file server isn't discoverable. Ideas? 
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 @wirestyle22 Discoverable? You couldn't access using \\server-ip-address\sharename ? 
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 @wirestyle22 said in Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7: So I finished this guide but my CentOS 7 file server isn't discoverable. Ideas? Are you a Windows shop? Did you add it to DNS? 
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 @Romo No but maybe I did it wrong. Does the path look like this? \\192.168.1.202\etc\home\public
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 @BRRABill said in Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7: @wirestyle22 said in Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7: So I finished this guide but my CentOS 7 file server isn't discoverable. Ideas? Are you a Windows shop? Did you add it to DNS? Yes I want to acces it from a Windows PC. No I didn't add it to DNS. Can we add this to the guide? 
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 @wirestyle22 said Yes I want to acces it from a Windows PC. No I didn't add it to DNS. Can we add this to the guide? I meant if you are used to the Windows world (which I am), the devices just automagically add themselves to DNS. I have memorized all my Linux box IPs because I haven't had the desire to add them into DNS manually yet. Which made me wonder if it was the same issue. 
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 @BRRABill said in Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7: @wirestyle22 said Yes I want to acces it from a Windows PC. No I didn't add it to DNS. Can we add this to the guide? I meant if you are used to the Windows world (which I am), the devices just automagically add themselves to DNS. I have memorized all my Linux box IPs because I haven't had the desire to add them into DNS manually yet. Which made me wonder if it was the same issue. I'm just attempting to mount the drive. With a static IP I don't think that's required, right? Or do you mean to make it discoverable on the network? It's probably required for that. 
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 @wirestyle22 said in Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7: @BRRABill said in Creating an anonymous samba share in CentOS 7: @wirestyle22 said Yes I want to acces it from a Windows PC. No I didn't add it to DNS. Can we add this to the guide? I meant if you are used to the Windows world (which I am), the devices just automagically add themselves to DNS. I have memorized all my Linux box IPs because I haven't had the desire to add them into DNS manually yet. Which made me wonder if it was the same issue. I'm just attempting to mount the drive. With a static IP I don't think that's required, right? Or do you mean to make it discoverable on the network? It's probably required for that. Right, I was answering the "discoverable on the network", but actually "by name" which I now realize isn't what you are asking. 




