I am running Samba on a CentOS server, and I am experiencing a problem where it allows me to connect to the server and see a share, but shows the share as an empty directory. I find this behavior strange.
Here is the stanza in my smb.conf for the given share:
[seanm]
path = /home/seanm
writeable = yes
valid users = seanm, root
read only = No
Here's what I see on the server side:
[seanm@server ~]$ ls -l
-rw-r--r-- 1 seanm seanm 40 Jan 4 13:45 pangram.txt
And yet:
[seanm@client ~]$ smbclient //server/seanm -U seanm -W WORKGROUP
Enter seanm's password:
Domain=[WORKGROUP] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 3.0.33-3.29.el5_5.1]
smb: \> ls
. D 0 Fri Jan 7 10:08:55 2011
.. D 0 Fri Jan 7 07:58:31 2011
58994 blocks of size 262144. 50356 blocks available
This behavior is present on both a Windows client and a Linux client system. The behavior is present with the firewall on and with the firewall off, so it's not that. Neither /var/log/messages nor /var/log/secure have any complaints about Samba. I doubt that SELinux is a problem: just in case, here are the relevant settings.
[root@server ~]# getsebool -a | grep samba
samba_domain_controller --> off
samba_enable_home_dirs --> on
samba_export_all_ro --> off
samba_export_all_rw --> off
samba_share_fusefs --> off
samba_share_nfs --> off
use_samba_home_dirs --> on
virt_use_samba --> off
What am I doing wrong here, and what can I do to fix it?
Edit: SELinux probably is the problem, judging by the fact that the issue goes away when I set SELinux to "permissive" or issue setsebool -P samba_export_all_rw on - both of which are unacceptable for production environments. What the heck kind of context does a directory need to have on it for Samba users to actually get files from it? I consider rolling your own rules and/or context to be deeply sub-optimal.