Mount cifs of shared windows folder problem
I've some issues with a windows share on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.
Installed
cifs
utils`:
sudo apt-get install cifs-utils
Created mountpoint
sudo mkdir /mnt/temp
Trying to mount a shared folder
sudo mount -t cifs //fileserver/share /mnt/temp -o username=user,password=xxx
My problem is that the console hangs forever. I've waiting several minutes. If I enter wrong user/password it tells me Permission denied.
Update:
Response from Ubuntu Host computer:
nmap -p -v 445 fileserver -P0
host seems down / Filesharing seems to work though!
Ubuntu client computer (Inside vmware):
nmap -p -v 445 fileserver -P0
Host seems down / Filesharing doesn't work!
Maybe a lead: To autorize the fileshare I have to login on the domain.
Any suggestions?
mount shared-folders cifs smb
add a comment |
I've some issues with a windows share on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.
Installed
cifs
utils`:
sudo apt-get install cifs-utils
Created mountpoint
sudo mkdir /mnt/temp
Trying to mount a shared folder
sudo mount -t cifs //fileserver/share /mnt/temp -o username=user,password=xxx
My problem is that the console hangs forever. I've waiting several minutes. If I enter wrong user/password it tells me Permission denied.
Update:
Response from Ubuntu Host computer:
nmap -p -v 445 fileserver -P0
host seems down / Filesharing seems to work though!
Ubuntu client computer (Inside vmware):
nmap -p -v 445 fileserver -P0
Host seems down / Filesharing doesn't work!
Maybe a lead: To autorize the fileshare I have to login on the domain.
Any suggestions?
mount shared-folders cifs smb
Doesdmesg | tail
show anything interesting at that point?
– Jos
Nov 12 '15 at 14:05
CIFS VFS: cifs_mount failed w/return code = -112
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:50
I'm not sure about this, because I have to ctrl-break the action to be able to continue.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:51
Please edit your question, if you want to add information. Especially file or program output listings (with the help of the{}
button in the editor toolbar) are much more readable there and overall it's best to have everything relevant in one place. Also, comments may be deleted for various reasons.
– David Foerster
Nov 13 '15 at 7:35
add a comment |
I've some issues with a windows share on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.
Installed
cifs
utils`:
sudo apt-get install cifs-utils
Created mountpoint
sudo mkdir /mnt/temp
Trying to mount a shared folder
sudo mount -t cifs //fileserver/share /mnt/temp -o username=user,password=xxx
My problem is that the console hangs forever. I've waiting several minutes. If I enter wrong user/password it tells me Permission denied.
Update:
Response from Ubuntu Host computer:
nmap -p -v 445 fileserver -P0
host seems down / Filesharing seems to work though!
Ubuntu client computer (Inside vmware):
nmap -p -v 445 fileserver -P0
Host seems down / Filesharing doesn't work!
Maybe a lead: To autorize the fileshare I have to login on the domain.
Any suggestions?
mount shared-folders cifs smb
I've some issues with a windows share on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.
Installed
cifs
utils`:
sudo apt-get install cifs-utils
Created mountpoint
sudo mkdir /mnt/temp
Trying to mount a shared folder
sudo mount -t cifs //fileserver/share /mnt/temp -o username=user,password=xxx
My problem is that the console hangs forever. I've waiting several minutes. If I enter wrong user/password it tells me Permission denied.
Update:
Response from Ubuntu Host computer:
nmap -p -v 445 fileserver -P0
host seems down / Filesharing seems to work though!
Ubuntu client computer (Inside vmware):
nmap -p -v 445 fileserver -P0
Host seems down / Filesharing doesn't work!
Maybe a lead: To autorize the fileshare I have to login on the domain.
Any suggestions?
mount shared-folders cifs smb
mount shared-folders cifs smb
edited Nov 16 '15 at 8:33
Fam Wired
asked Nov 12 '15 at 13:56
Fam WiredFam Wired
113
113
Doesdmesg | tail
show anything interesting at that point?
– Jos
Nov 12 '15 at 14:05
CIFS VFS: cifs_mount failed w/return code = -112
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:50
I'm not sure about this, because I have to ctrl-break the action to be able to continue.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:51
Please edit your question, if you want to add information. Especially file or program output listings (with the help of the{}
button in the editor toolbar) are much more readable there and overall it's best to have everything relevant in one place. Also, comments may be deleted for various reasons.
– David Foerster
Nov 13 '15 at 7:35
add a comment |
Doesdmesg | tail
show anything interesting at that point?
– Jos
Nov 12 '15 at 14:05
CIFS VFS: cifs_mount failed w/return code = -112
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:50
I'm not sure about this, because I have to ctrl-break the action to be able to continue.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:51
Please edit your question, if you want to add information. Especially file or program output listings (with the help of the{}
button in the editor toolbar) are much more readable there and overall it's best to have everything relevant in one place. Also, comments may be deleted for various reasons.
– David Foerster
Nov 13 '15 at 7:35
Does
dmesg | tail
show anything interesting at that point?– Jos
Nov 12 '15 at 14:05
Does
dmesg | tail
show anything interesting at that point?– Jos
Nov 12 '15 at 14:05
CIFS VFS: cifs_mount failed w/return code = -112
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:50
CIFS VFS: cifs_mount failed w/return code = -112
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:50
I'm not sure about this, because I have to ctrl-break the action to be able to continue.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:51
I'm not sure about this, because I have to ctrl-break the action to be able to continue.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:51
Please edit your question, if you want to add information. Especially file or program output listings (with the help of the
{}
button in the editor toolbar) are much more readable there and overall it's best to have everything relevant in one place. Also, comments may be deleted for various reasons.– David Foerster
Nov 13 '15 at 7:35
Please edit your question, if you want to add information. Especially file or program output listings (with the help of the
{}
button in the editor toolbar) are much more readable there and overall it's best to have everything relevant in one place. Also, comments may be deleted for various reasons.– David Foerster
Nov 13 '15 at 7:35
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
This is firewall issue for me . Install nmap on your ubuntu box with apt-get install nmap
and run nmap -p 445 fileserver
to see if the samba port is blocked by firewall or not.
Other way is to put -v sudo mount -v -t cifs //fileserver/share /mnt/temp -o username=user,password=xxx
to see the verbose message from the mounting.
Hope it helps
Thanks. I got nmap response: Host seems down. I'm running this ubuntu inside another ubuntu host (vmware)
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:37
I think you have right about the firewall. Do you know how to open the port?
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:38
So, runnmap -p 445 fileserver -P0
. 100% this is firewall issue!
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:39
If the machine is windows , go to windows firewall settings. If it is ubuntu , maybe you should stop apparmor
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:40
It works OK on the ubuntu host computer. It's the ubuntu inside the ubuntu that failes.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:53
|
show 1 more comment
Another possibility:
If you are using a standard VMWare Network-Configuration for that Virtual machine and following the documentation at http://pubs.vmware.com/workstation-10/index.jsp?topic=%2Fcom.vmware.ws.using.doc%2FGUID-4B9B4A82-D0F7-4939-BD7B-B6BF92FF7350.html
In a typical configuration, the New Virtual Machine wizard sets up NAT
for the virtual machine. You must select the custom configuration
option to configure bridged networking or host-only networking. The
wizard connects the virtual machine to the appropriate virtual
network.
Check out the VM's Network-Configuration and switch to bridged networking so that the VM has access to the same network-resources as your host machine.
Hope it helps.
NOTE: It was intended to be a comment, but I cannot do that yet :)
Thanks, the net on the virtual machine is bridge configured as you pointed out. It also got a ip-address in the same subnet as the fileserver. :)
– Fam Wired
Nov 16 '15 at 9:04
Your solution was going to be my next answer :-D Glad you sorted this out.
– Eduardo López
Nov 16 '15 at 9:39
add a comment |
Finally I got it to work.
I used the ip-address (192.168.1.11) instead of fileserver.
When ping:ing the fileserver name on the client I got ping response from another ip/computer (192.168.1.16) than I got from the host computer (192.168.1.11) !
Don't know why the dns name was linked to wrong ip on the client computer?
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
This is firewall issue for me . Install nmap on your ubuntu box with apt-get install nmap
and run nmap -p 445 fileserver
to see if the samba port is blocked by firewall or not.
Other way is to put -v sudo mount -v -t cifs //fileserver/share /mnt/temp -o username=user,password=xxx
to see the verbose message from the mounting.
Hope it helps
Thanks. I got nmap response: Host seems down. I'm running this ubuntu inside another ubuntu host (vmware)
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:37
I think you have right about the firewall. Do you know how to open the port?
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:38
So, runnmap -p 445 fileserver -P0
. 100% this is firewall issue!
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:39
If the machine is windows , go to windows firewall settings. If it is ubuntu , maybe you should stop apparmor
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:40
It works OK on the ubuntu host computer. It's the ubuntu inside the ubuntu that failes.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:53
|
show 1 more comment
This is firewall issue for me . Install nmap on your ubuntu box with apt-get install nmap
and run nmap -p 445 fileserver
to see if the samba port is blocked by firewall or not.
Other way is to put -v sudo mount -v -t cifs //fileserver/share /mnt/temp -o username=user,password=xxx
to see the verbose message from the mounting.
Hope it helps
Thanks. I got nmap response: Host seems down. I'm running this ubuntu inside another ubuntu host (vmware)
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:37
I think you have right about the firewall. Do you know how to open the port?
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:38
So, runnmap -p 445 fileserver -P0
. 100% this is firewall issue!
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:39
If the machine is windows , go to windows firewall settings. If it is ubuntu , maybe you should stop apparmor
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:40
It works OK on the ubuntu host computer. It's the ubuntu inside the ubuntu that failes.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:53
|
show 1 more comment
This is firewall issue for me . Install nmap on your ubuntu box with apt-get install nmap
and run nmap -p 445 fileserver
to see if the samba port is blocked by firewall or not.
Other way is to put -v sudo mount -v -t cifs //fileserver/share /mnt/temp -o username=user,password=xxx
to see the verbose message from the mounting.
Hope it helps
This is firewall issue for me . Install nmap on your ubuntu box with apt-get install nmap
and run nmap -p 445 fileserver
to see if the samba port is blocked by firewall or not.
Other way is to put -v sudo mount -v -t cifs //fileserver/share /mnt/temp -o username=user,password=xxx
to see the verbose message from the mounting.
Hope it helps
answered Nov 12 '15 at 14:08
Nikolay NikolovNikolay Nikolov
3,0611613
3,0611613
Thanks. I got nmap response: Host seems down. I'm running this ubuntu inside another ubuntu host (vmware)
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:37
I think you have right about the firewall. Do you know how to open the port?
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:38
So, runnmap -p 445 fileserver -P0
. 100% this is firewall issue!
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:39
If the machine is windows , go to windows firewall settings. If it is ubuntu , maybe you should stop apparmor
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:40
It works OK on the ubuntu host computer. It's the ubuntu inside the ubuntu that failes.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:53
|
show 1 more comment
Thanks. I got nmap response: Host seems down. I'm running this ubuntu inside another ubuntu host (vmware)
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:37
I think you have right about the firewall. Do you know how to open the port?
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:38
So, runnmap -p 445 fileserver -P0
. 100% this is firewall issue!
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:39
If the machine is windows , go to windows firewall settings. If it is ubuntu , maybe you should stop apparmor
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:40
It works OK on the ubuntu host computer. It's the ubuntu inside the ubuntu that failes.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:53
Thanks. I got nmap response: Host seems down. I'm running this ubuntu inside another ubuntu host (vmware)
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:37
Thanks. I got nmap response: Host seems down. I'm running this ubuntu inside another ubuntu host (vmware)
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:37
I think you have right about the firewall. Do you know how to open the port?
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:38
I think you have right about the firewall. Do you know how to open the port?
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:38
So, run
nmap -p 445 fileserver -P0
. 100% this is firewall issue!– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:39
So, run
nmap -p 445 fileserver -P0
. 100% this is firewall issue!– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:39
If the machine is windows , go to windows firewall settings. If it is ubuntu , maybe you should stop apparmor
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:40
If the machine is windows , go to windows firewall settings. If it is ubuntu , maybe you should stop apparmor
– Nikolay Nikolov
Nov 12 '15 at 14:40
It works OK on the ubuntu host computer. It's the ubuntu inside the ubuntu that failes.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:53
It works OK on the ubuntu host computer. It's the ubuntu inside the ubuntu that failes.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:53
|
show 1 more comment
Another possibility:
If you are using a standard VMWare Network-Configuration for that Virtual machine and following the documentation at http://pubs.vmware.com/workstation-10/index.jsp?topic=%2Fcom.vmware.ws.using.doc%2FGUID-4B9B4A82-D0F7-4939-BD7B-B6BF92FF7350.html
In a typical configuration, the New Virtual Machine wizard sets up NAT
for the virtual machine. You must select the custom configuration
option to configure bridged networking or host-only networking. The
wizard connects the virtual machine to the appropriate virtual
network.
Check out the VM's Network-Configuration and switch to bridged networking so that the VM has access to the same network-resources as your host machine.
Hope it helps.
NOTE: It was intended to be a comment, but I cannot do that yet :)
Thanks, the net on the virtual machine is bridge configured as you pointed out. It also got a ip-address in the same subnet as the fileserver. :)
– Fam Wired
Nov 16 '15 at 9:04
Your solution was going to be my next answer :-D Glad you sorted this out.
– Eduardo López
Nov 16 '15 at 9:39
add a comment |
Another possibility:
If you are using a standard VMWare Network-Configuration for that Virtual machine and following the documentation at http://pubs.vmware.com/workstation-10/index.jsp?topic=%2Fcom.vmware.ws.using.doc%2FGUID-4B9B4A82-D0F7-4939-BD7B-B6BF92FF7350.html
In a typical configuration, the New Virtual Machine wizard sets up NAT
for the virtual machine. You must select the custom configuration
option to configure bridged networking or host-only networking. The
wizard connects the virtual machine to the appropriate virtual
network.
Check out the VM's Network-Configuration and switch to bridged networking so that the VM has access to the same network-resources as your host machine.
Hope it helps.
NOTE: It was intended to be a comment, but I cannot do that yet :)
Thanks, the net on the virtual machine is bridge configured as you pointed out. It also got a ip-address in the same subnet as the fileserver. :)
– Fam Wired
Nov 16 '15 at 9:04
Your solution was going to be my next answer :-D Glad you sorted this out.
– Eduardo López
Nov 16 '15 at 9:39
add a comment |
Another possibility:
If you are using a standard VMWare Network-Configuration for that Virtual machine and following the documentation at http://pubs.vmware.com/workstation-10/index.jsp?topic=%2Fcom.vmware.ws.using.doc%2FGUID-4B9B4A82-D0F7-4939-BD7B-B6BF92FF7350.html
In a typical configuration, the New Virtual Machine wizard sets up NAT
for the virtual machine. You must select the custom configuration
option to configure bridged networking or host-only networking. The
wizard connects the virtual machine to the appropriate virtual
network.
Check out the VM's Network-Configuration and switch to bridged networking so that the VM has access to the same network-resources as your host machine.
Hope it helps.
NOTE: It was intended to be a comment, but I cannot do that yet :)
Another possibility:
If you are using a standard VMWare Network-Configuration for that Virtual machine and following the documentation at http://pubs.vmware.com/workstation-10/index.jsp?topic=%2Fcom.vmware.ws.using.doc%2FGUID-4B9B4A82-D0F7-4939-BD7B-B6BF92FF7350.html
In a typical configuration, the New Virtual Machine wizard sets up NAT
for the virtual machine. You must select the custom configuration
option to configure bridged networking or host-only networking. The
wizard connects the virtual machine to the appropriate virtual
network.
Check out the VM's Network-Configuration and switch to bridged networking so that the VM has access to the same network-resources as your host machine.
Hope it helps.
NOTE: It was intended to be a comment, but I cannot do that yet :)
answered Nov 16 '15 at 8:44
Eduardo LópezEduardo López
76159
76159
Thanks, the net on the virtual machine is bridge configured as you pointed out. It also got a ip-address in the same subnet as the fileserver. :)
– Fam Wired
Nov 16 '15 at 9:04
Your solution was going to be my next answer :-D Glad you sorted this out.
– Eduardo López
Nov 16 '15 at 9:39
add a comment |
Thanks, the net on the virtual machine is bridge configured as you pointed out. It also got a ip-address in the same subnet as the fileserver. :)
– Fam Wired
Nov 16 '15 at 9:04
Your solution was going to be my next answer :-D Glad you sorted this out.
– Eduardo López
Nov 16 '15 at 9:39
Thanks, the net on the virtual machine is bridge configured as you pointed out. It also got a ip-address in the same subnet as the fileserver. :)
– Fam Wired
Nov 16 '15 at 9:04
Thanks, the net on the virtual machine is bridge configured as you pointed out. It also got a ip-address in the same subnet as the fileserver. :)
– Fam Wired
Nov 16 '15 at 9:04
Your solution was going to be my next answer :-D Glad you sorted this out.
– Eduardo López
Nov 16 '15 at 9:39
Your solution was going to be my next answer :-D Glad you sorted this out.
– Eduardo López
Nov 16 '15 at 9:39
add a comment |
Finally I got it to work.
I used the ip-address (192.168.1.11) instead of fileserver.
When ping:ing the fileserver name on the client I got ping response from another ip/computer (192.168.1.16) than I got from the host computer (192.168.1.11) !
Don't know why the dns name was linked to wrong ip on the client computer?
add a comment |
Finally I got it to work.
I used the ip-address (192.168.1.11) instead of fileserver.
When ping:ing the fileserver name on the client I got ping response from another ip/computer (192.168.1.16) than I got from the host computer (192.168.1.11) !
Don't know why the dns name was linked to wrong ip on the client computer?
add a comment |
Finally I got it to work.
I used the ip-address (192.168.1.11) instead of fileserver.
When ping:ing the fileserver name on the client I got ping response from another ip/computer (192.168.1.16) than I got from the host computer (192.168.1.11) !
Don't know why the dns name was linked to wrong ip on the client computer?
Finally I got it to work.
I used the ip-address (192.168.1.11) instead of fileserver.
When ping:ing the fileserver name on the client I got ping response from another ip/computer (192.168.1.16) than I got from the host computer (192.168.1.11) !
Don't know why the dns name was linked to wrong ip on the client computer?
answered Nov 16 '15 at 8:50
Fam WiredFam Wired
113
113
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Does
dmesg | tail
show anything interesting at that point?– Jos
Nov 12 '15 at 14:05
CIFS VFS: cifs_mount failed w/return code = -112
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:50
I'm not sure about this, because I have to ctrl-break the action to be able to continue.
– Fam Wired
Nov 12 '15 at 14:51
Please edit your question, if you want to add information. Especially file or program output listings (with the help of the
{}
button in the editor toolbar) are much more readable there and overall it's best to have everything relevant in one place. Also, comments may be deleted for various reasons.– David Foerster
Nov 13 '15 at 7:35