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author | Gerald Carter <jerry@samba.org> | 2001-02-22 21:48:19 +0000 |
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committer | Gerald Carter <jerry@samba.org> | 2001-02-22 21:48:19 +0000 |
commit | ec1dfb80b39f816faed702ace20a385aba9caf6b (patch) | |
tree | dbd6db6147d6bac400436e4f56539e5ec5e40a1f /docs/htmldocs | |
parent | 723bcb57e8bd54a36f2c217246f78a4301b6b25b (diff) | |
download | samba-ec1dfb80b39f816faed702ace20a385aba9caf6b.tar.gz samba-ec1dfb80b39f816faed702ace20a385aba9caf6b.tar.xz samba-ec1dfb80b39f816faed702ace20a385aba9caf6b.zip |
save as we go. More pages done.
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/htmldocs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/htmldocs/make_smbcodepage.1.html | 498 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/htmldocs/smbsh.1.html | 328 |
2 files changed, 591 insertions, 235 deletions
diff --git a/docs/htmldocs/make_smbcodepage.1.html b/docs/htmldocs/make_smbcodepage.1.html index 558a559f03b..456ea98b20c 100644 --- a/docs/htmldocs/make_smbcodepage.1.html +++ b/docs/htmldocs/make_smbcodepage.1.html @@ -1,144 +1,354 @@ - - - - - - -<html><head><title>make_smbcodepage (1)</title> - -<link rev="made" href="mailto:samba@samba.org"> -</head> -<body> - -<hr> - -<h1>make_smbcodepage (1)</h1> -<h2>Samba</h2> -<h2>23 Oct 1998</h2> - - - -<p><a name="NAME"></a> -<h2>NAME</h2> - make_codepage - Construct a codepage file for Samba -<p><a name="SYNOPSIS"></a> -<h2>SYNOPSIS</h2> - -<p><strong>make_smbcodepage</strong> [<a href="make_smbcodepage.1.html#cord">c|d</a>] <a href="make_smbcodepage.1.html#codepage">codepage</a> <a href="make_smbcodepage.1.html#inputfile">inputfile</a> <a href="make_smbcodepage.1.html#outputfile">outputfile</a> -<p><a name="DESCRIPTION"></a> -<h2>DESCRIPTION</h2> - -<p>This program is part of the <strong>Samba</strong> suite. -<p><strong>make_smbcodepage</strong> compiles or de-compiles codepage files for use -with the internationalization features of Samba 2.0 -<p><a name="OPTIONS"></a> -<h2>OPTIONS</h2> - -<p><dl> -<p><a name="cord"></a> -<p></p><dt><strong>c|d</strong><dd> This tells <strong>make_smbcodepage</strong> if it is compiling (<strong>c</strong>) a text -format code page file to binary, or (<strong>d</strong>) de-compiling a binary codepage -file to text. -<p><a name="codepage"></a> -<p></p><dt><strong>codepage</strong><dd> This is the codepage we are processing (a number, e.g. 850). -<p><a name="inputfile"></a> -<p></p><dt><strong>inputfile</strong><dd> This is the input file to process. In the '<strong>c</strong>' case this -will be a text codepage definition file such as the ones found in the -Samba <em>source/codepages</em> directory. In the '<strong>d</strong>' case this will be the -binary format codepage definition file normally found in the -<em>lib/codepages</em> directory in the Samba install directory path. -<p><a name="outputfile"></a> -<p></p><dt><strong>outputfile</strong><dd> This is the output file to produce. -<p></dl> -<p><a name="SambaCodepageFiles"></a> -<h2>Samba Codepage Files</h2> - -<p>A text Samba codepage definition file is a description that tells -Samba how to map from upper to lower case for characters greater than -ascii 127 in the specified DOS code page. Note that for certain DOS -codepages (437 for example) mapping from lower to upper case may be -non-symmetrical. For example, in code page 437 lower case a acute maps to -a plain upper case A when going from lower to upper case, but -plain upper case A maps to plain lower case a when lower casing a -character. -<p>A binary Samba codepage definition file is a binary representation of -the same information, including a value that specifies what codepage -this file is describing. -<p>As Samba does not yet use UNICODE (current for Samba version 2.0) you -must specify the client code page that your DOS and Windows clients -are using if you wish to have case insensitivity done correctly for -your particular language. The default codepage Samba uses is 850 -(Western European). Text codepage definition sample files are -provided in the Samba distribution for codepages 437 (USA), 737 -(Greek), 850 (Western European) 852 (MS-DOS Latin 2), 861 (Icelandic), -866 (Cyrillic), 932 (Kanji SJIS), 936 (Simplified Chinese), 949 -(Hangul) and 950 (Traditional Chinese). Users are encouraged to write -text codepage definition files for their own code pages and donate -them to <a href="mailto:samba@samba.org"><em>samba@samba.org</em></a>. All codepage files in the -Samba <em>source/codepages</em> directory are compiled and installed when a -<em>'make install'</em> command is issued there. -<p>The client codepage used by the <a href="smbd.8.html"><strong>smbd</strong></a> server is -configured using the <a href="smb.conf.5.html#clientcodepage"><strong>client code -page</strong></a> parameter in the -<a href="smb.conf.5.html"><strong>smb.conf</strong></a> file. -<p><a name="FILES"></a> -<h2>FILES</h2> - -<p><strong>codepage_def.<codepage></strong> -<p>These are the input (text) codepage files provided in the Samba -<em>source/codepages</em> directory. -<p>A text codepage definition file consists of multiple lines -containing four fields. These fields are : -<p><dl> -<p><li > <strong>lower</strong>: which is the (hex) lower case character mapped on this -line. -<p><li > <strong>upper</strong>: which is the (hex) upper case character that the lower -case character will map to. -<p><li > <strong>map upper to lower</strong> which is a boolean value (put either True -or False here) which tells Samba if it is to map the given upper case -character to the given lower case character when lower casing a -filename. -<p><li > <strong>map lower to upper</strong> which is a boolean value (put either True -or False here) which tells Samba if it is to map the given lower case -character to the given upper case character when upper casing a -filename. -<p></dl> -<p><strong>codepage.<codepage></strong> These are the output (binary) codepage files -produced and placed in the Samba destination <em>lib/codepage</em> -directory. -<p><a name="INSTALLATION"></a> -<h2>INSTALLATION</h2> - -<p>The location of the server and its support files is a matter for -individual system administrators. The following are thus suggestions -only. -<p>It is recommended that the <strong>make_smbcodepage</strong> program be installed -under the <em>/usr/local/samba</em> hierarchy, in a directory readable by -all, writeable only by root. The program itself should be executable -by all. The program should NOT be setuid or setgid! -<p><a name="VERSION"></a> -<h2>VERSION</h2> - -<p>This man page is correct for version 2.0 of the Samba suite. -<p><a name="SEEALSO"></a> -<h2>SEE ALSO</h2> - -<p><a href="smb.conf.5.html"><strong>smb.conf(5)</strong></a>, <a href="smbd.8.html"><strong>smbd (8)</strong></a> -<p><a name="AUTHOR"></a> -<h2>AUTHOR</h2> - -<p>The original Samba software and related utilities were created by -Andrew Tridgell <a href="mailto:samba@samba.org"><em>samba@samba.org</em></a>. Samba is now developed -by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar to the way the -Linux kernel is developed. -<p>The original Samba man pages were written by Karl Auer. The man page -sources were converted to YODL format (another excellent piece of Open -Source software, available at -<a href="ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/"><strong>ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/</strong></a>) -and updated for the Samba2.0 release by Jeremy Allison. -<a href="mailto:samba@samba.org"><em>samba@samba.org</em></a>. -<p>See <a href="samba.7.html"><strong>samba (7)</strong></a> to find out how to get a full -list of contributors and details on how to submit bug reports, -comments etc. -</body> -</html> +<HTML +><HEAD +><TITLE +>make_smbcodepage</TITLE +><META +NAME="GENERATOR" +CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.57"></HEAD +><BODY +CLASS="REFENTRY" +BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" +TEXT="#000000" +LINK="#0000FF" +VLINK="#840084" +ALINK="#0000FF" +><H1 +><A +NAME="FINDSMB" +>make_smbcodepage</A +></H1 +><DIV +CLASS="REFNAMEDIV" +><A +NAME="AEN5" +></A +><H2 +>Name</H2 +>make_smbcodepage -- construct a codepage file for Samba</DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSYNOPSISDIV" +><A +NAME="AEN8" +></A +><H2 +>Synopsis</H2 +><P +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>make_smbcodepage</B +> {c|d} {codepage} {inputfile} {outputfile}</P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN15" +></A +><H2 +>DESCRIPTION</H2 +><P +>This tool is part of the <A +HREF="samba.7.html" +TARGET="_top" +> Samba</A +> suite.</P +><P +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>make_smbcodepage</B +> compiles or de-compiles + codepage files for use with the internationalization features + of Samba 2.2</P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN21" +></A +><H2 +>OPTIONS</H2 +><P +></P +><DIV +CLASS="VARIABLELIST" +><DL +><DT +>c|d</DT +><DD +><P +>This tells <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>make_smbcodepage</B +> + if it is compiling (<TT +CLASS="PARAMETER" +><I +>c</I +></TT +>) a text format code + page file to binary, or (<TT +CLASS="PARAMETER" +><I +>d</I +></TT +>) de-compiling + a binary codepage file to text. </P +></DD +><DT +>codepage</DT +><DD +><P +>This is the codepage we are processing (a + number, e.g. 850). </P +></DD +><DT +>inputfile</DT +><DD +><P +>This is the input file to process. In t + he '<TT +CLASS="PARAMETER" +><I +>c</I +></TT +>' case this will be a text + codepage definition file such as the ones found in the Samba + <TT +CLASS="FILENAME" +>source/codepages</TT +> directory. In + the '<TT +CLASS="PARAMETER" +><I +>d</I +></TT +>' case this will be the + binary format codepage definition file normally found in + the <TT +CLASS="FILENAME" +>lib/codepages</TT +> directory in the + Samba install directory path.</P +></DD +><DT +>outputfile</DT +><DD +><P +>This is the output file to produce.</P +></DD +></DL +></DIV +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN47" +></A +><H2 +>Samba Codepage Files</H2 +><P +>A text Samba codepage definition file is a description + that tells Samba how to map from upper to lower case for + characters greater than ascii 127 in the specified DOS code page. + Note that for certain DOS codepages (437 for example) mapping + from lower to upper case may be non-symmetrical. For example, in + code page 437 lower case a acute maps to a plain upper case A + when going from lower to upper case, but plain upper case A maps + to plain lower case a when lower casing a character. </P +><P +>A binary Samba codepage definition file is a binary + representation of the same information, including a value that + specifies what codepage this file is describing. </P +><P +>As Samba does not yet use UNICODE (current for Samba version 2.2) + you must specify the client code page that your DOS and Windows + clients are using if you wish to have case insensitivity done + correctly for your particular language. The default codepage Samba + uses is 850 (Western European). Text codepage definition sample files + are provided in the Samba distribution for codepages 437 (USA), 737 (Greek), + 850 (Western European) 852 (MS-DOS Latin 2), 861 (Icelandic), 866 (Cyrillic), + 932 (Kanji SJIS), 936 (Simplified Chinese), 949 (Hangul) and 950 (Traditional + Chinese). Users are encouraged to write text codepage definition files for + their own code pages and donate them to samba@samba.org. All codepage files + in the Samba <TT +CLASS="FILENAME" +>source/codepages</TT +> directory are + compiled and installed when a <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>'make install'</B +> + command is issued there. </P +><P +>The client codepage used by the <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>smbd</B +> server + is configured using the <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>client code page</B +> parameter + in the <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>smb.conf</B +> file. </P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN58" +></A +><H2 +>Files</H2 +><P +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>codepage_def.<codepage></B +></P +><P +>These are the input (text) codepage files provided in the + Samba <TT +CLASS="FILENAME" +>source/codepages</TT +> directory.</P +><P +>A text codepage definition file consists of multiple lines + containing four fields. These fields are:</P +><P +></P +><UL +><LI +><P +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>lower</B +>: which is the + (hex) lower case character mapped on this line.</P +></LI +><LI +><P +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>upper</B +>: which is the (hex) + upper case character that the lower case character will map to. + </P +></LI +><LI +><P +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>map upper to lower</B +> which + is a boolean value (put either True or False here) which tells + Samba if it is to map the given upper case character to the + given lower case character when lower casing a filename. + </P +></LI +><LI +><P +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>map lower to upper</B +> which + is a boolean value (put either True or False here) which tells + Samba if it is to map the given lower case character to the + given upper case character when upper casing a filename. + </P +></LI +></UL +><P +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>codepage.<codepage></B +> - These are the + output (binary) codepage files produced and placed in the Samba + destination <TT +CLASS="FILENAME" +>lib/codepage</TT +> directory. </P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN81" +></A +><H2 +>Installation</H2 +><P +>The location of the server and its support files is a + matter for individual system administrators. The following are + thus suggestions only. </P +><P +>It is recommended that the <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>make_smbcodepage + </B +> program be installed under the <TT +CLASS="FILENAME" +>/usr/local/samba + </TT +> hierarchy, in a directory readable by all, writeable + only by root. The program itself should be executable by all. The + program should NOT be setuid or setgid! </P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN87" +></A +><H2 +>VERSION</H2 +><P +>This man page is correct for version 2.2 of + the Samba suite.</P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN90" +></A +><H2 +>SEE ALSO</H2 +><P +><A +HREF="smbd.8.html" +TARGET="_top" +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>smbd(8)</B +></A +>, + <A +HREF="smb.conf.5.html" +TARGET="_top" +>smb.conf(5)</A +> + </P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN96" +></A +><H2 +>AUTHOR</H2 +><P +>The original Samba software and related utilities + were created by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed + by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar + to the way the Linux kernel is developed.</P +><P +>The original Samba man pages were written by Karl Auer. + The man page sources were converted to YODL format (another + excellent piece of Open Source software, available at + <A +HREF="ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/" +TARGET="_top" +> ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/</A +>) and updated for the Samba 2.0 + release by Jeremy Allison. The conversion to DocBook for + Samba 2.2 was done by Gerald Carter</P +></DIV +></BODY +></HTML +>
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/docs/htmldocs/smbsh.1.html b/docs/htmldocs/smbsh.1.html index ac5162b306e..1264e241ba4 100644 --- a/docs/htmldocs/smbsh.1.html +++ b/docs/htmldocs/smbsh.1.html @@ -1,91 +1,237 @@ - - - - - - -<html><head><title>smbsh (1)</title> - -<link rev="made" href="mailto:samba@samba.org"> -</head> -<body> - -<hr> - -<h1>smbsh (1)</h1> -<h2>Samba</h2> -<h2>23 Oct 1998</h2> - - - -<p><a name="NAME"></a> -<h2>NAME</h2> - smbsh - Allows access to Windows NT filesystem using UNIX commands -<p><a name="SYNOPSIS"></a> -<h2>SYNOPSIS</h2> - -<p><strong>smbsh</strong> -<p><a name="DESCRIPTION"></a> -<h2>DESCRIPTION</h2> - -<p>This program is part of the <strong>Samba</strong> suite. -<p><strong>smbsh</strong> allows you to access an NT filesystem using UNIX commands -such as <strong>ls</strong>, <strong>egrep</strong>, and <strong>rcp</strong>. You must use a shell that -is dynmanically linked in order for <strong>smbsh</strong> to work correctly. -<p>To use the <strong>smbsh</strong> command, execute <strong>smbsh</strong> from the prompt and -enter the username and password that authenticate you to the -machine running the Windows NT operating system. -<p><pre> - -system% smbsh -Username: user -Password: - -</pre> - -<p>Any dynamically linked command you execute from this shell will -access the <strong>/smb</strong> directory using the smb protocol. -For example, the command -<p><code>ls /smb</code> -<p>will show all the machines in your workgroup. -The command -<p><code>ls /smb/<machine-name></code> -<p>will show the share names for that machine. You could then, for example, use the -<strong>cd</strong> command to change directories, <strong>vi</strong> to edit files, and <strong>rcp</strong> - to copy files. -<p><a name="VERSION"></a> -<h2>VERSION</h2> - -<p>This man page is correct for the 2.0.3 of the Samba suite. -<p><a name="BUGS"></a> -<h2>BUGS</h2> - -<p><strong>smbsh</strong> works by intercepting the standard libc calls with the dynamically loaded -versions in <strong>smbwrapper.o</strong>. Not all calls have been "wrapped" so some programs -may not function correctly under <strong>smbsh</strong>. -<p>Programs which are not dynamically linked cannot make use of <strong>smbsh</strong>'s -functionality. Most versions of UNIX have a <strong>file</strong> command that will describe how -a program was linked. -<p><a name="SEEALSO"></a> -<h2>SEE ALSO</h2> - -<p><a href="smb.conf.5.html"><strong>smb.conf (5)</strong></a>, -<a href="smbd.8.html"><strong>smbd (8)</strong></a>. -<p><a name="AUTHOR"></a> -<h2>AUTHOR</h2> - -<p>The original Samba software and related utilities were created by -Andrew Tridgell (samba@samba.org). Samba is now developed -by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar to the way the -Linux kernel is developed. -<p>The original Samba man pages were written by Karl Auer. The man page -sources were converted to YODL format (another excellent piece of Open -Source software, available at -<a href="ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/"><strong>ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/</strong></a>) -and updated for the Samba2.0 release by Jeremy Allison. -<a href="mailto:samba@samba.org"><em>samba@samba.org</em></a>. -<p>See <a href="samba.7.html"><strong>samba (7)</strong></a> to find out how to get a full -list of contributors and details on how to submit bug reports, -comments etc. -<p></body> -</html> +<HTML +><HEAD +><TITLE +>smbsh</TITLE +><META +NAME="GENERATOR" +CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.57"></HEAD +><BODY +CLASS="REFENTRY" +BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" +TEXT="#000000" +LINK="#0000FF" +VLINK="#840084" +ALINK="#0000FF" +><H1 +><A +NAME="FINDSMB" +>smbsh</A +></H1 +><DIV +CLASS="REFNAMEDIV" +><A +NAME="AEN5" +></A +><H2 +>Name</H2 +>smbsh -- Allows access to Windows NT filesystem + using UNIX commands</DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSYNOPSISDIV" +><A +NAME="AEN8" +></A +><H2 +>Synopsis</H2 +><P +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>smbsh</B +> </P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN11" +></A +><H2 +>DESCRIPTION</H2 +><P +>This tool is part of the <A +HREF="samba.7.html" +TARGET="_top" +> Samba</A +> suite.</P +><P +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>smbsh</B +> allows you to access an NT filesystem + using UNIX commands such as <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>ls</B +>, <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +> egrep</B +>, and <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>rcp</B +>. You must use a + shell that is dynmanically linked in order for <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>smbsh</B +> + to work correctly.</P +><P +>To use the <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>smbsh</B +> command, execute <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +> smbsh</B +> from the prompt and enter the username and password + that authenticate you to the machine running the Windows NT + operating system.</P +><P +><PRE +CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING" +> <TT +CLASS="PROMPT" +>system% </TT +><TT +CLASS="USERINPUT" +><B +>smbsh</B +></TT +> + <TT +CLASS="PROMPT" +>Username: </TT +><TT +CLASS="USERINPUT" +><B +>user</B +></TT +> + <TT +CLASS="PROMPT" +>Password: </TT +><TT +CLASS="USERINPUT" +><B +>XXXXXXX</B +></TT +> + </PRE +></P +><P +>Any dynamically linked command you execute from + this shell will access the <TT +CLASS="FILENAME" +>/smb</TT +> directory + using the smb protocol. For example, the command <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>ls /smb + </B +> will show all the machines in your workgroup. The command + <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>ls /smb/<machine-name></B +> will show the share + names for that machine. You could then, for example, use the <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +> cd</B +> command to change directories, <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>vi</B +> to + edit files, and <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>rcp</B +> to copy files.</P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN39" +></A +><H2 +>VERSION</H2 +><P +>This man page is correct for version 2.2 of + the Samba suite.</P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN42" +></A +><H2 +>BUGS</H2 +><P +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>smbsh</B +> works by intercepting the standard + libc calls with the dynamically loaded versions in <TT +CLASS="FILENAME" +> smbwrapper.o</TT +>. Not all calls have been "wrapped", so + some programs may not function correctly under <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>smbsh + </B +>.</P +><P +>Programs which are not dynamically linked cannot make + use of <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>smbsh</B +>'s functionality. Most versions + of UNIX have a <B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>file</B +> command that will + describe how a program was linked.</P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN51" +></A +><H2 +>SEE ALSO</H2 +><P +><A +HREF="smbd.8.html" +TARGET="_top" +><B +CLASS="COMMAND" +>smbd(8)</B +></A +>, + <A +HREF="smb.conf.5.html" +TARGET="_top" +>smb.conf(5)</A +> + </P +></DIV +><DIV +CLASS="REFSECT1" +><A +NAME="AEN57" +></A +><H2 +>AUTHOR</H2 +><P +>The original Samba software and related utilities + were created by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed + by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar + to the way the Linux kernel is developed.</P +><P +>The original Samba man pages were written by Karl Auer. + The man page sources were converted to YODL format (another + excellent piece of Open Source software, available at + <A +HREF="ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/" +TARGET="_top" +> ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/</A +>) and updated for the Samba 2.0 + release by Jeremy Allison. The conversion to DocBook for + Samba 2.2 was done by Gerald Carter</P +></DIV +></BODY +></HTML +>
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