Difference between revisions of "Mounting CIFS Shares from the command line"
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= Mount the share = | = Mount the share = | ||
*<code>sudo mount -t cifs -o username='''USER''',password='''PASSWORD''' //'''SERVERNAME'''/'''SHARENAME''' | *<code>sudo mount -t cifs -o username='''USER''',password='''PASSWORD''' //'''SERVERNAME'''/'''SHARENAME''' /'''MOUNTPOINT'''</code> | ||
== Permissions == | == Permissions == | ||
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*<code>sudo vi /etc/fstab</code> | *<code>sudo vi /etc/fstab</code> | ||
Add a line: | Add a line: | ||
//'''SERVERNAME'''/'''SHARENAME''' /'''MOUNTPOINT''' cifs user,username='''USER''',password='''PASSWORD''',_netdev 0 0 | //'''SERVERNAME'''/'''SHARENAME''' /'''MOUNTPOINT''' cifs user,username='''USER''',password='''PASSWORD''',_netdev 0 0 |
Revision as of 23:09, 19 January 2022
Install cifs-utils and samba-client
sudo apt install cifs-utils samba-client -y
Create a mount point
sudo mkdir /MOUNTPOINT
sudo mount -t cifs -o username=USER,password=PASSWORD //SERVERNAME/SHARENAME /MOUNTPOINT
Permissions
Changing that mount command to
sudo mount -t cifs -o username=USER,password=PASSWORD,dir_mode=0777,file_mode=0666 //SERVERNAME/SHARENAME /MOUNTPOINT
allows actual access for ANYONE...
sudo mount -t cifs -o username=USER,password=PASSWORD,uid=1000,gid=1000 //SERVERNAME/SHARENAME /MOUNTPOINT
Allows full access by the user with UID 1000 & GID 1000...
(Gotta be a better way...)
Persistent mounting
sudo vi /etc/fstab
Add a line:
//SERVERNAME/SHARENAME /MOUNTPOINT cifs user,username=USER,password=PASSWORD,_netdev 0 0
Check it out
ls /MOUNTPOINT
Usage Notes
sudo smbclient -L HOSTNAME