€•z1Œsphinx.addnodes”Œdocument”“”)”}”(Œ rawsource”Œ”Œchildren”]”(Œ translations”Œ LanguagesNode”“”)”}”(hhh]”(hŒ pending_xref”“”)”}”(hhh]”Œdocutils.nodes”ŒText”“”ŒChinese (Simplified)”…””}”Œparent”hsbaŒ attributes”}”(Œids”]”Œclasses”]”Œnames”]”Œdupnames”]”Œbackrefs”]”Œ refdomain”Œstd”Œreftype”Œdoc”Œ reftarget”Œ1/translations/zh_CN/admin-guide/cifs/introduction”Œmodname”NŒ classname”NŒ refexplicit”ˆuŒtagname”hhh ubh)”}”(hhh]”hŒChinese (Traditional)”…””}”hh2sbah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”Œ refdomain”h)Œreftype”h+Œ reftarget”Œ1/translations/zh_TW/admin-guide/cifs/introduction”Œmodname”NŒ classname”NŒ refexplicit”ˆuh1hhh ubh)”}”(hhh]”hŒItalian”…””}”hhFsbah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”Œ refdomain”h)Œreftype”h+Œ reftarget”Œ1/translations/it_IT/admin-guide/cifs/introduction”Œmodname”NŒ classname”NŒ refexplicit”ˆuh1hhh ubh)”}”(hhh]”hŒJapanese”…””}”hhZsbah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”Œ refdomain”h)Œreftype”h+Œ reftarget”Œ1/translations/ja_JP/admin-guide/cifs/introduction”Œmodname”NŒ classname”NŒ refexplicit”ˆuh1hhh ubh)”}”(hhh]”hŒKorean”…””}”hhnsbah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”Œ refdomain”h)Œreftype”h+Œ reftarget”Œ1/translations/ko_KR/admin-guide/cifs/introduction”Œmodname”NŒ classname”NŒ refexplicit”ˆuh1hhh ubh)”}”(hhh]”hŒSpanish”…””}”hh‚sbah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”Œ refdomain”h)Œreftype”h+Œ reftarget”Œ1/translations/sp_SP/admin-guide/cifs/introduction”Œmodname”NŒ classname”NŒ refexplicit”ˆuh1hhh ubeh}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”Œcurrent_language”ŒEnglish”uh1h hhŒ _document”hŒsource”NŒline”NubhŒsection”“”)”}”(hhh]”(hŒtitle”“”)”}”(hŒ Introduction”h]”hŒ Introduction”…””}”(hh¨hžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h¦hh£hžhhŸŒK/var/lib/git/docbuild/linux/Documentation/admin-guide/cifs/introduction.rst”h KubhŒ block_quote”“”)”}”(hXM This is the client VFS module for the SMB3 NAS protocol as well as for older dialects such as the Common Internet File System (CIFS) protocol which was the successor to the Server Message Block (SMB) protocol, the native file sharing mechanism for most early PC operating systems. New and improved versions of CIFS are now called SMB2 and SMB3. Use of SMB3 (and later, including SMB3.1.1 the most current dialect) is strongly preferred over using older dialects like CIFS due to security reasons. All modern dialects, including the most recent, SMB3.1.1, are supported by the CIFS VFS module. The SMB3 protocol is implemented and supported by all major file servers such as Windows (including Windows 2019 Server), as well as by Samba (which provides excellent CIFS/SMB2/SMB3 server support and tools for Linux and many other operating systems). Apple systems also support SMB3 well, as do most Network Attached Storage vendors, so this network filesystem client can mount to a wide variety of systems. It also supports mounting to the cloud (for example Microsoft Azure), including the necessary security features. The intent of this module is to provide the most advanced network file system function for SMB3 compliant servers, including advanced security features, excellent parallelized high performance i/o, better POSIX compliance, secure per-user session establishment, encryption, high performance safe distributed caching (leases/oplocks), optional packet signing, large files, Unicode support and other internationalization improvements. Since both Samba server and this filesystem client support the CIFS Unix extensions, and the Linux client also supports SMB3 POSIX extensions, the combination can provide a reasonable alternative to other network and cluster file systems for fileserving in some Linux to Linux environments, not just in Linux to Windows (or Linux to Mac) environments. This filesystem has a mount utility (mount.cifs) and various user space tools (including smbinfo and setcifsacl) that can be obtained from https://git.samba.org/?p=cifs-utils.git or git://git.samba.org/cifs-utils.git mount.cifs should be installed in the directory with the other mount helpers. For more information on the module see the project wiki page at https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/LinuxCIFS and https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/LinuxCIFS_utils”h]”(hŒ paragraph”“”)”}”(hX[This is the client VFS module for the SMB3 NAS protocol as well as for older dialects such as the Common Internet File System (CIFS) protocol which was the successor to the Server Message Block (SMB) protocol, the native file sharing mechanism for most early PC operating systems. New and improved versions of CIFS are now called SMB2 and SMB3. Use of SMB3 (and later, including SMB3.1.1 the most current dialect) is strongly preferred over using older dialects like CIFS due to security reasons. All modern dialects, including the most recent, SMB3.1.1, are supported by the CIFS VFS module. The SMB3 protocol is implemented and supported by all major file servers such as Windows (including Windows 2019 Server), as well as by Samba (which provides excellent CIFS/SMB2/SMB3 server support and tools for Linux and many other operating systems). Apple systems also support SMB3 well, as do most Network Attached Storage vendors, so this network filesystem client can mount to a wide variety of systems. It also supports mounting to the cloud (for example Microsoft Azure), including the necessary security features.”h]”hX[This is the client VFS module for the SMB3 NAS protocol as well as for older dialects such as the Common Internet File System (CIFS) protocol which was the successor to the Server Message Block (SMB) protocol, the native file sharing mechanism for most early PC operating systems. New and improved versions of CIFS are now called SMB2 and SMB3. Use of SMB3 (and later, including SMB3.1.1 the most current dialect) is strongly preferred over using older dialects like CIFS due to security reasons. All modern dialects, including the most recent, SMB3.1.1, are supported by the CIFS VFS module. The SMB3 protocol is implemented and supported by all major file servers such as Windows (including Windows 2019 Server), as well as by Samba (which provides excellent CIFS/SMB2/SMB3 server support and tools for Linux and many other operating systems). Apple systems also support SMB3 well, as do most Network Attached Storage vendors, so this network filesystem client can mount to a wide variety of systems. It also supports mounting to the cloud (for example Microsoft Azure), including the necessary security features.”…””}”(hh¿hžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h½hŸh¶h Khh¹ubh¾)”}”(hXThe intent of this module is to provide the most advanced network file system function for SMB3 compliant servers, including advanced security features, excellent parallelized high performance i/o, better POSIX compliance, secure per-user session establishment, encryption, high performance safe distributed caching (leases/oplocks), optional packet signing, large files, Unicode support and other internationalization improvements. Since both Samba server and this filesystem client support the CIFS Unix extensions, and the Linux client also supports SMB3 POSIX extensions, the combination can provide a reasonable alternative to other network and cluster file systems for fileserving in some Linux to Linux environments, not just in Linux to Windows (or Linux to Mac) environments.”h]”hXThe intent of this module is to provide the most advanced network file system function for SMB3 compliant servers, including advanced security features, excellent parallelized high performance i/o, better POSIX compliance, secure per-user session establishment, encryption, high performance safe distributed caching (leases/oplocks), optional packet signing, large files, Unicode support and other internationalization improvements. Since both Samba server and this filesystem client support the CIFS Unix extensions, and the Linux client also supports SMB3 POSIX extensions, the combination can provide a reasonable alternative to other network and cluster file systems for fileserving in some Linux to Linux environments, not just in Linux to Windows (or Linux to Mac) environments.”…””}”(hhÍhžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h½hŸh¶h Khh¹ubh¾)”}”(hŒŠThis filesystem has a mount utility (mount.cifs) and various user space tools (including smbinfo and setcifsacl) that can be obtained from”h]”hŒŠThis filesystem has a mount utility (mount.cifs) and various user space tools (including smbinfo and setcifsacl) that can be obtained from”…””}”(hhÛhžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h½hŸh¶h K$hh¹ubh¸)”}”(hŒ(https://git.samba.org/?p=cifs-utils.git ”h]”h¾)”}”(hŒ'https://git.samba.org/?p=cifs-utils.git”h]”hŒ reference”“”)”}”(hhïh]”hŒ'https://git.samba.org/?p=cifs-utils.git”…””}”(hhóhžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”Œrefuri”hïuh1hñhhíubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h½hŸh¶h K'hhéubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h·hŸh¶h K'hh¹ubh¾)”}”(hŒor”h]”hŒor”…””}”(hj hžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h½hŸh¶h K)hh¹ubh¸)”}”(hŒ#git://git.samba.org/cifs-utils.git ”h]”h¾)”}”(hŒ"git://git.samba.org/cifs-utils.git”h]”hŒ"git://git.samba.org/cifs-utils.git”…””}”(hjhžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h½hŸh¶h K+hjubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h·hŸh¶h K+hh¹ubh¾)”}”(hŒMmount.cifs should be installed in the directory with the other mount helpers.”h]”hŒMmount.cifs should be installed in the directory with the other mount helpers.”…””}”(hj3hžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h½hŸh¶h K-hh¹ubh¾)”}”(hŒ?For more information on the module see the project wiki page at”h]”hŒ?For more information on the module see the project wiki page at”…””}”(hjAhžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h½hŸh¶h K/hh¹ubh¸)”}”(hŒ+https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/LinuxCIFS ”h]”h¾)”}”(hŒ*https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/LinuxCIFS”h]”hò)”}”(hjUh]”hŒ*https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/LinuxCIFS”…””}”(hjWhžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”Œrefuri”jUuh1hñhjSubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h½hŸh¶h K1hjOubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h·hŸh¶h K1hh¹ubh¾)”}”(hŒand”h]”hŒand”…””}”(hjqhžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h½hŸh¶h K3hh¹ubh¸)”}”(hŒ0https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/LinuxCIFS_utils”h]”h¾)”}”(hjh]”hò)”}”(hjh]”hŒ0https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/LinuxCIFS_utils”…””}”(hj†hžhhŸNh Nubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”Œrefuri”juh1hñhjƒubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h½hŸh¶h K5hjubah}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h·hŸh¶h K5hh¹ubeh}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”uh1h·hŸh¶h Khh£hžhubeh}”(h]”Œ introduction”ah ]”h"]”Œ introduction”ah$]”h&]”uh1h¡hhhžhhŸh¶h Kubeh}”(h]”h ]”h"]”h$]”h&]”Œsource”h¶uh1hŒcurrent_source”NŒ current_line”NŒsettings”Œdocutils.frontend”ŒValues”“”)”}”(h¦NŒ generator”NŒ datestamp”NŒ source_link”NŒ source_url”NŒ toc_backlinks”Œentry”Œfootnote_backlinks”KŒ sectnum_xform”KŒstrip_comments”NŒstrip_elements_with_classes”NŒ strip_classes”NŒ report_level”KŒ halt_level”KŒexit_status_level”KŒdebug”NŒwarning_stream”NŒ traceback”ˆŒinput_encoding”Œ utf-8-sig”Œinput_encoding_error_handler”Œstrict”Œoutput_encoding”Œutf-8”Œoutput_encoding_error_handler”jÑŒerror_encoding”Œutf-8”Œerror_encoding_error_handler”Œbackslashreplace”Œ language_code”Œen”Œrecord_dependencies”NŒconfig”NŒ id_prefix”hŒauto_id_prefix”Œid”Œ dump_settings”NŒdump_internals”NŒdump_transforms”NŒdump_pseudo_xml”NŒexpose_internals”NŒstrict_visitor”NŒ_disable_config”NŒ_source”h¶Œ _destination”NŒ _config_files”]”Œ7/var/lib/git/docbuild/linux/Documentation/docutils.conf”aŒfile_insertion_enabled”ˆŒ raw_enabled”KŒline_length_limit”M'Œpep_references”NŒ pep_base_url”Œhttps://peps.python.org/”Œpep_file_url_template”Œpep-%04d”Œrfc_references”NŒ rfc_base_url”Œ&https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/”Œ tab_width”KŒtrim_footnote_reference_space”‰Œsyntax_highlight”Œlong”Œ smart_quotes”ˆŒsmartquotes_locales”]”Œcharacter_level_inline_markup”‰Œdoctitle_xform”‰Œ docinfo_xform”KŒsectsubtitle_xform”‰Œ image_loading”Œlink”Œembed_stylesheet”‰Œcloak_email_addresses”ˆŒsection_self_link”‰Œenv”NubŒreporter”NŒindirect_targets”]”Œsubstitution_defs”}”Œsubstitution_names”}”Œrefnames”}”Œrefids”}”Œnameids”}”j«j¨sŒ nametypes”}”j«‰sh}”j¨h£sŒ footnote_refs”}”Œ citation_refs”}”Œ autofootnotes”]”Œautofootnote_refs”]”Œsymbol_footnotes”]”Œsymbol_footnote_refs”]”Œ footnotes”]”Œ citations”]”Œautofootnote_start”KŒsymbol_footnote_start”KŒ id_counter”Œ collections”ŒCounter”“”}”…”R”Œparse_messages”]”Œtransform_messages”]”Œ transformer”NŒ include_log”]”Œ decoration”Nhžhub.