![]() ![]() When this happens please follow these instructions: When this happens the most common result is that the Finder Sidebar doesn’t show servers from the network or that OS X can’t share itself as before. When removing SMBUp sometimes the uninstaller fails to reset the native services as they should be. A workaround is to connect to shared drives directly and drag them to the sidebar to create shortcuts for them.įinder doesn’t show network drives in the sidebar after removing SMBUp These replace the native OS X ones, which is what OS X uses to “discover” network servers. This is because samba installs its own netbios and SMB managers. To correct this you need to create custom sharing-only users in OS X and add them to Samba directly from the terminal.įollow the steps in question “ How to add sharing-only users to SMBUp/Samba shares” to create these users.įinder doesn’t show network drives in the sidebarĪs mentioned in the main SMBUp page this is a necessary side effect of insalling Samba. When this happens, SMBUp will show a warning message: Samba has a problem with this as the methods it uses to know how many groups a user belongs to don’t work properly in Lion. ![]() Mac OS X uses a special inheritance method for groups that means many users (and admin users as a rule) will belong to more than 15 groups. SMBUp warns that user has more than 16 groups NOTE: You can use the force user parameter in smb.conf to map access to this folder to this single user You should then be able to connect to the new shared folder with the newly-created user and permissions should work.
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