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man pages section 1: User Commands     Oracle Solaris 11 Express 11/10
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Preface

Introduction

User Commands

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smbutil

- Solaris SMB client utility

Synopsis

/usr/bin/smbutil crypt
/usr/bin/smbutil login [-c] [[domain/]user]
/usr/bin/smbutil login [-c] [user[@domain]]
/usr/bin/smbutil logout [[domain/]user]
/usr/bin/smbutil logout [user[@domain]]
/usr/bin/smbutil logout -a
/usr/bin/smbutil logoutall
/usr/bin/smbutil lookup name
/usr/bin/smbutil status server
/usr/bin/smbutil view [-A | -U user] //[domain;][user[:password]@]server
/usr/bin/smbutil [-?dv]

Description

The smbutil command controls the Solaris SMB client and issues various commands.

Subcommands

The smbutil command supports the following subcommands:

crypt

Creates a hash of a password. This subcommand prompts for a password and writes the hash to standard output. This hash value is suitable for use as a value for the password property in the $HOME/.nsmbrc file.

The hashed password begins with two dollar signs ($$). If you assign this hashed password to the password property in your $HOME/.nsmbrc, be sure that you escape the special characters in the password.

If you plan to store hashed passwords in your $HOME/.nsmbrc file, ensure that the file permissions are set so that only the owner can read or write the file (400 or 600), or the passwords are ignored.

login [-c] [ [[domain/]user] | [user[@domain] ]

Specifies persistent password information to be used for an SMB server user account. When you specify this information, mounts can be done without a password prompt in non-Kerberos configurations. Kerberos sites should use Kerberos automatically, not prompt for a password. If a default domain is available in SMF or nsmbrc(4), the domain can be omitted. If a user name is not specified, the Solaris user account name is used.

Use the -c to check whether a persistent password is set for the specified user.

Passwords can also be stored for a specific server by using a server name in place of the domain name. This capability is useful with servers that are configured for “workgroup mode.”

logout [ [[domain/]user] | [user[@domain] ]

Erases the persistent passwords for the user running the command.

The user name and domain name portions of the name are optional. If these names are not specified, the user name and domain name values are taken from the properties set in your environment. See the nsmbrc(4) manual page.

If you stored your password for a specific server, specify the server name in place of the domain name.

logout -a

Erases all of the persistent passwords that are stored for the user who is running the command.

logoutall

Erases all the persistent passwords that are stored by all users running the smbutil login command.

This command must be run as superuser.

lookup name

Resolves the specified name to an IP address.

This subcommand is only supported if an NBNS/WINS name server is available.

status server

Resolves the specified server to the NetBIOS domain and system name. server can be an IP address or a DNS name.

view [-A | -U user] //[domain;][user[:password]@]server

Lists the resources available to user on the specified server.

You can specify the -A option to view the resources as an anonymous user or the -U user option to view the resources as the specified user. These options are mutually exclusive.

If the resource includes a domain, you must escape the semicolon that appears after the domain name to prevent it from being interpreted by the command shell. For instance, surround the entire resource name with single quotes: smbutil view '//SALES;george@RSERVER'.

Options

The following global options are supported:

-d

Produces debugging output.

-v

Produces verbose output.

-?

Prints a short help message.

Examples

Example 1 Creating a Password Hash for the $HOME/.nsmbrc File

The following example shows how to use the smbutil crypt command to create a hash of the password you specify. Then, you can use the hash as the value for the $HOME/.nsmbrc file.

Be sure to escape the two dollar-sign prefix of the hashed password if you store it as a value of the password property.

$ smbutil crypt
Password:
$$178465324253e0c07

The following $HOME/.nsmbrc file fragment shows how the password hash value is set:

[RSERVER:george]
charsets=koi8-r:cp866
password='$$178465324253e0c07'

Example 2 Storing a Password for an SMB Server

The following example shows how to use the smbutil login command to store the root@example user's password.

$ smbutil login root@example
Password:

Example 3 Erasing the Stored Password

The following example shows how to use the smbutil logout command to remove the root@example user's password.

$ smbutil logout root@example

Example 4 Viewing Available Shares

The following example shows how to use the smbutil view command to see the available shares for user root on server example.

$ smbutil view //root@example
Password:
Share        Type       Comment
-------------------------------
netlogon     disk       Network Logon Service
ipc$         IPC        IPC Service (Samba Server)
tmp          disk       Temporary file space
public       disk       Public Stuff
root         disk       Home Directories

5 shares listed from 5 available

Example 5 Viewing Available Shares as an Anonymous User

The following example shows how to use the smbutil view command to anonymously view the available shares on the example server.

$ smbutil view -A //example
Share        Type       Comment
-------------------------------
netlogon     disk       Network Logon Service
ipc$         IPC        IPC Service (Samba Server)
tmp          disk       Temporary file space
public       disk       Public Stuff
ethereal     disk       /export/ethereal
myshare      disk       Jan's stuff

6 shares listed from 6 available

Example 6 Obtaining the IP Address From a Server Name

The following example shows how to use the smbutil lookup command to obtain the IP address of the example server.

$ smbutil lookup example
Got response from 192.168.168.210
IP address of example: 192.168.168.210

Example 7 Obtaining the NetBIOS Domain and System Name Using the Server Name

The following example shows how to use the smbutil status command to obtain the NetBIOS domain and system name of the example server. The server name, example, is specified on the command line.

$ smbutil status example
Domain: WORKGROUP
Server: EXAMPLE

Example 8 Obtaining the NetBIOS Domain and System Name Using the IP Address

The following example shows how to use the smbutil status command to obtain the NetBIOS domain and system name of the example server. The IP address, 192.168.168.210, is specified on the command line.

$ smbutil status 192.168.168.210
Domain: WORKGROUP
Server: EXAMPLE

Files

$HOME/.nsmbrc

User-settable mount point configuration file to store the description for each connection.

Attributes

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE
ATTRIBUTE VALUE
Availability
SUNWsmbfscu
Interface Stability
See below.

The output is Uncommitted. The rest of the interface is Committed.

See Also

mount_smbfs(1M), nsmbrc(4), attributes(5), smbfs(7FS)

Authors

This manual page contains material originally authored by Boris Popov, bp@butya.kz, bp@FreeBSD.org.

Notes

The Solaris SMB client always attempts to use gethostbyname() to resolve host names. If the host name cannot be resolved, the SMB client uses NetBIOS name resolution (NBNS). By default, the Solaris SMB client permits the use of NBNS to enable Solaris SMB clients in Windows environments to work without additional configuration.

Since NBNS has been exploited in the past, you might want to disable it. To disable NBNS, set the nbns-enabled service management facility property to false. By default, nbns-enabled is set to true.