Install Samba command Line

All commands must be done as root (precede each command with ‘sudo’ or use ‘sudo su’).

Install Samba

sudo apt-get update

sudo apt-get install samba

Set a password for your user in Samba

sudo smbpasswd -a <user_name>

Note: Samba uses a separate set of passwords than the standard Linux system accounts (stored in /etc/samba/smbpasswd), so you’ll need to create a Samba password for yourself. This tutorial implies that you will use your own user and it does not cover situations involving other users passwords, groups, etc…

Tip1: Use the password for your own user to facilitate.

Tip2: Remember that your user must have permission to write and edit the folder you want to share.

Eg.:

sudo chown <user_name> /var/opt/blah/blahblah sudo chown :<user_name> /var/opt/blah/blahblah

Tip3:

If you’re using another user than your own, it needs to exist in your system beforehand, you can create it without a shell access using the following command:

sudo useradd USERNAME –shell /bin/false

You can also hide the user on the login screen by adjusting lightdm’s configuration, in /etc/lightdm/users.conf add the newly created user to the line :

hidden-users=

Create a directory to be shared

mkdir /home/<user_name>/<folder_name>

Make a safe backup copy of the original smb.conf file to your home folder, in case you make an error

sudo cp /etc/samba/smb.conf ~

Edit the file “/etc/samba/smb.conf”

sudo nano /etc/samba/smb.conf

Once “smb.conf” has loaded, add this to the very end of the file:

[<folder_name>]

path = /home/<user_name>/<folder_name>

valid users = <user_name>

read only = no

Tip: There Should be in the spaces between the lines, and note que also there should be a single space both before and after each of the equal signs.

Restart the samba:

sudo service smbd restart Once Samba has restarted, use this command to check your smb.conf for any syntax errors

testparm

To access your network share

sudo apt-get install smbclient

# List all shares:

smbclient -L //<HOST_IP_OR_NAME>/<folder_name> -U <user>

# connect:

smbclient //<HOST_IP_OR_NAME>/<folder_name> -U <user>

To access your network share use your username (<user_name>) and password through the path “smb://<HOST_IP_OR_NAME>/<folder_name>/” (Linux users) or “\\<HOST_IP_OR_NAME>\<folder_name>\” (Windows users). Note that “<folder_name>” value is passed in “[<folder_name>]”, in other words, the share name you entered in “/etc/samba/smb.conf”.

Note: The default user group of samba is “WORKGROUP”