Out of curiosity, what's wrong with samba (I'm asking that sincerely as I didn't know there were issues with it)?
I've been running some samba 4.x shares hosted on a linux box in a mixed linux and windows environment for about 8 months and haven't any issues to speak of. What should I be on the lookout for in terms of filesystem mischief? So far, the samba shares work for me just like any other windows network share. I'm not running FreeNAS, so I don't know if they're using an older version of Samba, but the current mainstream linux samba packages have been smooth as silk for me so far.
The only thing I can say that's suboptimal is that JRiver's auto-import misses filesystem events on the shares once in a while, but that happens to me with windows shares too (and local NTFS drives
), so I can't really fault samba for that.
Am I sitting on a timebomb? What sort of trouble should I be expecting?
Also, forgive me if this a dumb question, but I thought samba was just a specific opensource implementation of SMB/CIFS, but the discussion above seems to suggest they're meaningfully different? Is it just that samba is a poor SMB/CIFS implementation? Is there a better FOSS implementation out there?
Sorry for all the questions, I just hadn't ever heard anything bad about samba's performance before, other than configuration challenges. It did take me about 6-8 hours of fiddling to get everything working correctly, but I assumed that was attributable to me being a linux noob; after that it hasn't given me any trouble... yet