I googled - got no answers.
Samba daemons: Why rcnmb instead of nmbd??
I googled - got no answers.
Samba daemons: Why rcnmb instead of nmbd??
As far as I can tell they are smb, nmb, and winbind and that is it. To which openSUSE version do you refer?
Thank You,
Hi
rc<some_init_daemon> are part of the LSB requirements for init scripts
it’s just a softlink to /etc/init.d/<some_init_daemon> have a look at
the file /etc/init.d/skeleton.
More here LSB Specifications
–
Cheers Malcolm °¿° (Linux Counter #276890)
SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 11 (x86_64) Kernel 3.0.13-0.27-default
up 1 day 0:43, 2 users, load average: 0.09, 0.32, 0.25
CPU Intel i5 CPU M520@2.40GHz | Intel Arrandale GPU
On 2012-02-27 02:56, spokesinger wrote:
>
> I googled - got no answers.
>
> Samba daemons: Why rcnmb instead of nmbd??
In opensuse, the startup scripts of all services are named "rc…something.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.4 x86_64 “Celadon” at Telcontar)
On 02/26/2012 09:43 PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
> On 2012-02-27 02:56, spokesinger wrote:
>>
>> I googled - got no answers.
>>
>> Samba daemons: Why rcnmb instead of nmbd??
>
> In opensuse, the startup scripts of all services are named "rc…something.
Use ‘ps ax’ to see the processes that are running. On my machines, they are smbd
and nmbd.
On 2012-02-27 06:55, Larry Finger wrote:
>> In opensuse, the startup scripts of all services are named "rc…something.
>
> Use ‘ps ax’ to see the processes that are running. On my machines, they are
> smbd and nmbd.
Yes, but the script to manually call them are the same name starting with
rc. It is a standard for openSUSE.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.4 x86_64 “Celadon” at Telcontar)
On 2012-02-27 04:26, jdmcdaniel3 wrote:
>
> spokesinger;2443751 Wrote:
>> I googled - got no answers.
>>
>> Samba daemons: Why rcnmb instead of nmbd??
>
> As far as I can tell they are smb, nmb, and winbind and that is it. To
> which openSUSE version do you refer?
Then look again. There is an rcnmb, has been there for ages. ALL the
startup scripts can be called by rcstartupscript, on any version you care
to try
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.4 x86_64 “Celadon” at Telcontar)
Malcolm, Carlos - thank you. Good answers - they are exactly what I was trying to find out.