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The CIFS VFS support for Linux supports many advanced network filesystem 
features such as hierarchical dfs like namespace, hardlinks, locking and more.  
It was designed to comply with the SNIA CIFS Technical Reference (which 
supersedes the 1992 X/Open SMB Standard) as well as to perform best practice 
practical interoperability with Windows 2000, Windows XP, Samba and equivalent 
servers.  

For questions or bug reports please contact:
    sfrench@samba.org (sfrench@us.ibm.com) 

Build instructions:
==================
For Linux 2.4:
1) Get the kernel source (e.g.from http://www.kernel.org)
and download the cifs vfs source (see the project page
at http://us1.samba.org/samba/Linux_CIFS_client.html)
and change directory into the top of the kernel directory
then patch the kernel (e.g. "patch -p1 < cifs_24.patch") 
to add the cifs vfs to your kernel configure options if
it has not already been added (e.g. current SuSE and UL
users do not need to apply the cifs_24.patch since the cifs vfs is
already in the kernel configure menu) and then
mkdir linux/fs/cifs and then copy the current cifs vfs files from
the cifs download to your kernel build directory e.g.

        cp <cifs_download_dir>/fs/cifs/* to <kernel_download_dir>/fs/cifs
        
2) make menuconfig (or make xconfig)
3) select cifs from within the network filesystem choices
4) save and exit
5) make dep
6) make modules (or "make" if CIFS VFS not to be built as a module)

For Linux 2.6:
1) Download the kernel (e.g. from http://www.kernel.org)
and change directory into the top of the kernel directory tree
(e.g. /usr/src/linux-2.5.73)
2) make menuconfig (or make xconfig)
3) select cifs from within the network filesystem choices
4) save and exit
5) make


Installation instructions:
=========================
If you have built the CIFS vfs as module (successfully) simply
type "make modules_install" (or if you prefer, manually copy the file to
the modules directory e.g. /lib/modules/2.4.10-4GB/kernel/fs/cifs/cifs.o).

If you have built the CIFS vfs into the kernel itself, follow the instructions
for your distribution on how to install a new kernel (usually you
would simply type "make install").

If you do not have the utility mount.cifs (in the Samba 3.0 source tree and on 
the CIFS VFS web site) copy it to the same directory in which mount.smbfs and 
similar files reside (usually /sbin).  Although the helper software is not  
required, mount.cifs is recommended.  Eventually the Samba 3.0 utility program 
"net" may also be helpful since it may someday provide easier mount syntax for
users who are used to Windows e.g.  net use <mount point> <UNC name or cifs URL>
Note that running the Winbind pam/nss module (logon service) on all of your
Linux clients is useful in mapping Uids and Gids consistently across the
domain to the proper network user.  The mount.cifs mount helper can be
trivially built from Samba 3.0 or later source e.g. by executing:

        gcc samba/source/client/mount.cifs.c -o mount.cifs

If cifs is built as a module, then the size and number of network buffers
and maximum number of simultaneous requests to one server can be configured.
Changing these from their defaults is not recommended. By executing modinfo
        modinfo kernel/fs/cifs/cifs.ko
on kernel/fs/cifs/cifs.ko the list of configuration changes that can be made
at module initialization time (by running insmod cifs.ko) can be seen.

Allowing User Mounts
====================
To permit users to mount and unmount over directories they own is possible
with the cifs vfs.  A way to enable such mounting is to mark the mount.cifs
utility as suid (e.g. "chmod +s /sbin/mount.cifs). To enable users to 
umount shares they mount requires
1) mount.cifs version 1.4 or later
2) an entry for the share in /etc/fstab indicating that a user may
unmount it e.g.
//server/usersharename  /mnt/username cifs user 0 0

Note that when the mount.cifs utility is run suid (allowing user mounts), 
in order to reduce risks, the "nosuid" mount flag is passed in on mount to
disallow execution of an suid program mounted on the remote target.
When mount is executed as root, nosuid is not passed in by default,
and execution of suid programs on the remote target would be enabled
by default. This can be changed, as with nfs and other filesystems, 
by simply specifying "nosuid" among the mount options. For user mounts 
though to be able to pass the suid flag to mount requires rebuilding 
mount.cifs with the following flag: 
 
        gcc samba/source/client/mount.cifs.c -DCIFS_ALLOW_USR_SUID -o mount.cifs

There is a corresponding manual page for cifs mounting in the Samba 3.0 and
later source tree in docs/manpages/mount.cifs.8 

Allowing User Unmounts
======================
To permit users to ummount directories that they have user mounted (see above),
the utility umount.cifs may be used.  It may be invoked directly, or if 
umount.cifs is placed in /sbin, umount can invoke the cifs umount helper
(at least for most versions of the umount utility) for umount of cifs
mounts, unless umount is invoked with -i (which will avoid invoking a umount
helper). As with mount.cifs, to enable user unmounts umount.cifs must be marked
as suid (e.g. "chmod +s /sbin/umount.cifs") or equivalent (some distributions
allow adding entries to a file to the /etc/permissions file to achieve the
equivalent suid effect).  For this utility to succeed the target path
must be a cifs mount, and the uid of the current user must match the uid
of the user who mounted the resource.

Also note that the customary way of allowing user mounts and unmounts is 
(instead of using mount.cifs and unmount.cifs as suid) to add a line
to the file /etc/fstab for each //server/share you wish to mount, but
this can become unwieldy when potential mount targets include many
or  unpredictable UNC names.

Samba Considerations 
==================== 
To get the maximum benefit from the CIFS VFS, we recommend using a server that 
supports the SNIA CIFS Unix Extensions standard (e.g.  Samba 2.2.5 or later or 
Samba 3.0) but the CIFS vfs works fine with a wide variety of CIFS servers.  
Note that uid, gid and file permissions will display default values if you do 
not have a server that supports the Unix extensions for CIFS (such as Samba 
2.2.5 or later).  To enable the Unix CIFS Extensions in the Samba server, add 
the line: 

        unix extensions = yes
        
to your smb.conf file on the server.  Note that the following smb.conf settings 
are also useful (on the Samba server) when the majority of clients are Unix or 
Linux: 

        case sensitive = yes
        delete readonly = yes 
        ea support = yes

Note that server ea support is required for supporting xattrs from the Linux
cifs client, and that EA support is present in later versions of Samba (e.g. 
3.0.6 and later (also EA support works in all versions of Windows, at least to
shares on NTFS filesystems).  Extended Attribute (xattr) support is an optional
feature of most Linux filesystems which may require enabling via
make menuconfig. Client support for extended attributes (user xattr) can be
disabled on a per-mount basis by specifying "nouser_xattr" on mount.

The CIFS client can get and set POSIX ACLs (getfacl, setfacl) to Samba servers
version 3.10 and later.  Setting POSIX ACLs requires enabling both XATTR and 
then POSIX support in the CIFS configuration options when building the cifs
module.  POSIX ACL support can be disabled on a per mount basic by specifying
"noacl" on mount.
 
Some administrators may want to change Samba's smb.conf "map archive" and 
"create mask" parameters from the default.  Unless the create mask is changed
newly created files can end up with an unnecessarily restrictive default mode,
which may not be what you want, although if the CIFS Unix extensions are
enabled on the server and client, subsequent setattr calls (e.g. chmod) can
fix the mode.  Note that creating special devices (mknod) remotely 
may require specifying a mkdev function to Samba if you are not using 
Samba 3.0.6 or later.  For more information on these see the manual pages
("man smb.conf") on the Samba server system.  Note that the cifs vfs,
unlike the smbfs vfs, does not read the smb.conf on the client system 
(the few optional settings are passed in on mount via -o parameters instead).  
Note that Samba 2.2.7 or later includes a fix that allows the CIFS VFS to delete
open files (required for strict POSIX compliance).  Windows Servers already 
supported this feature. Samba server does not allow symlinks that refer to files
outside of the share, so in Samba versions prior to 3.0.6, most symlinks to
files with absolute paths (ie beginning with slash) such as:
         ln -s /mnt/foo bar
would be forbidden. Samba 3.0.6 server or later includes the ability to create 
such symlinks safely by converting unsafe symlinks (ie symlinks to server 
files that are outside of the share) to a samba specific format on the server
that is ignored by local server applications and non-cifs clients and that will
not be traversed by the Samba server).  This is opaque to the Linux client
application using the cifs vfs. Absolute symlinks will work to Samba 3.0.5 or
later, but only for remote clients using the CIFS Unix extensions, and will
be invisbile to Windows clients and typically will not affect local
applications running on the same server as Samba.  

Use instructions:
================
Once the CIFS VFS support is built into the kernel or installed as a module 
(cifs.o), you can use mount syntax like the following to access Samba or Windows 
servers: 

  mount -t cifs //9.53.216.11/e$ /mnt -o user=myname,pass=mypassword

Before -o the option -v may be specified to make the mount.cifs
mount helper display the mount steps more verbosely.  
After -o the following commonly used cifs vfs specific options
are supported:

  user=<username>
  pass=<password>
  domain=<domain name>
  
Other cifs mount options are described below.  Use of TCP names (in addition to
ip addresses) is available if the mount helper (mount.cifs) is installed. If
you do not trust the server to which are mounted, or if you do not have
cifs signing enabled (and the physical network is insecure), consider use
of the standard mount options "noexec" and "nosuid" to reduce the risk of 
running an altered binary on your local system (downloaded from a hostile server
or altered by a hostile router).

Although mounting using format corresponding to the CIFS URL specification is
not possible in mount.cifs yet, it is possible to use an alternate format
for the server and sharename (which is somewhat similar to NFS style mount
syntax) instead of the more widely used UNC format (i.e. \\server\share):
  mount -t cifs tcp_name_of_server:share_name /mnt -o user=myname,pass=mypasswd

When using the mount helper mount.cifs, passwords may be specified via alternate
mechanisms, instead of specifying it after -o using the normal "pass=" syntax
on the command line:
1) By including it in a credential file. Specify credentials=filename as one
of the mount options. Credential files contain two lines
        username=someuser
        password=your_password
2) By specifying the password in the PASSWD environment variable (similarly
the user name can be taken from the USER environment variable).
3) By specifying the password in a file by name via PASSWD_FILE
4) By specifying the password in a file by file descriptor via PASSWD_FD

If no password is provided, mount.cifs will prompt for password entry

Restrictions
============
Servers must support either "pure-TCP" (port 445 TCP/IP CIFS connections) or RFC 
1001/1002 support for "Netbios-Over-TCP/IP." This is not likely to be a 
problem as most servers support this.

Valid filenames differ between Windows and Linux.  Windows typically restricts
filenames which contain certain reserved characters (e.g.the character : 
which is used to delimit the beginning of a stream name by Windows), while
Linux allows a slightly wider set of valid characters in filenames. Windows
servers can remap such characters when an explicit mapping is specified in
the Server's registry.  Samba starting with version 3.10 will allow such 
filenames (ie those which contain valid Linux characters, which normally
would be forbidden for Windows/CIFS semantics) as long as the server is
configured for Unix Extensions (and the client has not disabled
/proc/fs/cifs/LinuxExtensionsEnabled).
  

CIFS VFS Mount Options
======================
A partial list of the supported mount options follows:
  user          The user name to use when trying to establish
                the CIFS session.
  password      The user password.  If the mount helper is
                installed, the user will be prompted for password
                if it is not supplied.
  ip            The ip address of the target server
  unc           The target server Universal Network Name (export) to 
                mount.  
  domain        Set the SMB/CIFS workgroup name prepended to the
                username during CIFS session establishment
  uid           Set the default uid for inodes. For mounts to servers
                which do support the CIFS Unix extensions, such as a
                properly configured Samba server, the server provides
                the uid, gid and mode so this parameter should  not be
                specified unless the server and clients uid and gid
                numbering differ.  If the server and client are in the
                same domain (e.g. running winbind or nss_ldap) and
                the server supports the Unix Extensions then the uid
                and gid can be retrieved from the server (and uid
                and gid would not have to be specifed on the mount. 
                For servers which do not support the CIFS Unix
                extensions, the default uid (and gid) returned on lookup
                of existing files will be the uid (gid) of the person
                who executed the mount (root, except when mount.cifs
                is configured setuid for user mounts) unless the "uid=" 
                (gid) mount option is specified.  For the uid (gid) of newly
                created files and directories, ie files created since 
                the last mount of the server share, the expected uid 
                (gid) is cached as long as the inode remains in 
                memory on the client.   Also note that permission
                checks (authorization checks) on accesses to a file occur
                at the server, but there are cases in which an administrator
                may want to restrict at the client as well.  For those
                servers which do not report a uid/gid owner
                (such as Windows), permissions can also be checked at the
                client, and a crude form of client side permission checking 
                can be enabled by specifying file_mode and dir_mode on 
                the client.  Note that the mount.cifs helper must be
                at version 1.10 or higher to support specifying the uid
                (or gid) in non-numberic form.
  gid           Set the default gid for inodes (similar to above).
  file_mode     If CIFS Unix extensions are not supported by the server
                this overrides the default mode for file inodes.
  dir_mode      If CIFS Unix extensions are not supported by the server 
                this overrides the default mode for directory inodes.
  port          attempt to contact the server on this tcp port, before
                trying the usual ports (port 445, then 139).
  iocharset     Codepage used to convert local path names to and from
                Unicode. Unicode is used by default for network path
                names if the server supports it.  If iocharset is
                not specified then the nls_default specified
                during the local client kernel build will be used.
                If server does not support Unicode, this parameter is
                unused.
  rsize         default read size (usually 16K). The client currently
                can not use rsize larger than CIFSMaxBufSize. CIFSMaxBufSize
                defaults to 16K and may be changed (from 8K to the maximum
                kmalloc size allowed by your kernel) at module install time
                for cifs.ko. Setting CIFSMaxBufSize to a very large value
                will cause cifs to use more memory and may reduce performance
                in some cases.  To use rsize greater than 127K (the original
                cifs protocol maximum) also requires that the server support
                a new Unix Capability flag (for very large read) which some
                newer servers (e.g. Samba 3.0.26 or later) do. rsize can be
                set from a minimum of 2048 to a maximum of 130048 (127K or
                CIFSMaxBufSize, whichever is smaller)
  wsize         default write size (default 57344)
                maximum wsize currently allowed by CIFS is 57344 (fourteen
                4096 byte pages)
  rw            mount the network share read-write (note that the
                server may still consider the share read-only)
  ro            mount network share read-only
  version       used to distinguish different versions of the
                mount helper utility (not typically needed)
  sep           if first mount option (after the -o), overrides
                the comma as the separator between the mount
                parms. e.g.
                        -o user=myname,password=mypassword,domain=mydom
                could be passed instead with period as the separator by
                        -o sep=.user=myname.password=mypassword.domain=mydom
                this might be useful when comma is contained within username
                or password or domain. This option is less important
                when the cifs mount helper cifs.mount (version 1.1 or later)
                is used.
  nosuid        Do not allow remote executables with the suid bit 
                program to be executed.  This is only meaningful for mounts
                to servers such as Samba which support the CIFS Unix Extensions.
                If you do not trust the servers in your network (your mount
                targets) it is recommended that you specify this option for
                greater security.
  exec          Permit execution of binaries on the mount.
  noexec        Do not permit execution of binaries on the mount.
  dev           Recognize block devices on the remote mount.
  nodev         Do not recognize devices on the remote mount.
  suid          Allow remote files on this mountpoint with suid enabled to 
                be executed (default for mounts when executed as root,
                nosuid is default for user mounts).
  credentials   Although ignored by the cifs kernel component, it is used by 
                the mount helper, mount.cifs. When mount.cifs is installed it
                opens and reads the credential file specified in order  
                to obtain the userid and password arguments which are passed to
                the cifs vfs.
  guest         Although ignored by the kernel component, the mount.cifs
                mount helper will not prompt the user for a password
                if guest is specified on the mount options.  If no
                password is specified a null password will be used.
  perm          Client does permission checks (vfs_permission check of uid
                and gid of the file against the mode and desired operation),
                Note that this is in addition to the normal ACL check on the
                target machine done by the server software. 
                Client permission checking is enabled by default.
  noperm        Client does not do permission checks.  This can expose
                files on this mount to access by other users on the local
                client system. It is typically only needed when the server
                supports the CIFS Unix Extensions but the UIDs/GIDs on the
                client and server system do not match closely enough to allow
                access by the user doing the mount, but it may be useful with
                non CIFS Unix Extension mounts for cases in which the default
                mode is specified on the mount but is not to be enforced on the
                client (e.g. perhaps when MultiUserMount is enabled)
                Note that this does not affect the normal ACL check on the
                target machine done by the server software (of the server
                ACL against the user name provided at mount time).
  serverino     Use server's inode numbers instead of generating automatically
                incrementing inode numbers on the client.  Although this will
                make it easier to spot hardlinked files (as they will have
                the same inode numbers) and inode numbers may be persistent,
                note that the server does not guarantee that the inode numbers
                are unique if multiple server side mounts are exported under a
                single share (since inode numbers on the servers might not
                be unique if multiple filesystems are mounted under the same
                shared higher level directory).  Note that some older
                (e.g. pre-Windows 2000) do not support returning UniqueIDs
                or the CIFS Unix Extensions equivalent and for those
                this mount option will have no effect.  Exporting cifs mounts
                under nfsd requires this mount option on the cifs mount.
  noserverino   Client generates inode numbers (rather than using the actual one
                from the server) by default.
  setuids       If the CIFS Unix extensions are negotiated with the server
                the client will attempt to set the effective uid and gid of
                the local process on newly created files, directories, and
                devices (create, mkdir, mknod).  If the CIFS Unix Extensions
                are not negotiated, for newly created files and directories
                instead of using the default uid and gid specified on
                the mount, cache the new file's uid and gid locally which means
                that the uid for the file can change when the inode is
                reloaded (or the user remounts the share).
  nosetuids     The client will not attempt to set the uid and gid on
                on newly created files, directories, and devices (create, 
                mkdir, mknod) which will result in the server setting the
                uid and gid to the default (usually the server uid of the
                user who mounted the share).  Letting the server (rather than
                the client) set the uid and gid is the default. If the CIFS
                Unix Extensions are not negotiated then the uid and gid for
                new files will appear to be the uid (gid) of the mounter or the
                uid (gid) parameter specified on the mount.
  netbiosname   When mounting to servers via port 139, specifies the RFC1001
                source name to use to represent the client netbios machine 
                name when doing the RFC1001 netbios session initialize.
  direct        Do not do inode data caching on files opened on this mount.
                This precludes mmaping files on this mount. In some cases
                with fast networks and little or no caching benefits on the
                client (e.g. when the application is doing large sequential
                reads bigger than page size without rereading the same data) 
                this can provide better performance than the default
                behavior which caches reads (readahead) and writes 
                (writebehind) through the local Linux client pagecache 
                if oplock (caching token) is granted and held. Note that
                direct allows write operations larger than page size
                to be sent to the server.
  acl           Allow setfacl and getfacl to manage posix ACLs if server
                supports them.  (default)
  noacl         Do not allow setfacl and getfacl calls on this mount
  user_xattr    Allow getting and setting user xattrs as OS/2 EAs (extended
                attributes) to the server (default) e.g. via setfattr 
                and getfattr utilities. 
  nouser_xattr  Do not allow getfattr/setfattr to get/set/list xattrs 
  mapchars      Translate six of the seven reserved characters (not backslash)
                        *?<>|:
                to the remap range (above 0xF000), which also
                allows the CIFS client to recognize files created with
                such characters by Windows's POSIX emulation. This can
                also be useful when mounting to most versions of Samba
                (which also forbids creating and opening files
                whose names contain any of these seven characters).
                This has no effect if the server does not support
                Unicode on the wire.
 nomapchars     Do not translate any of these seven characters (default).
 nocase         Request case insensitive path name matching (case
                sensitive is the default if the server suports it).
 posixpaths     If CIFS Unix extensions are supported, attempt to
                negotiate posix path name support which allows certain
                characters forbidden in typical CIFS filenames, without
                requiring remapping. (default)
 noposixpaths   If CIFS Unix extensions are supported, do not request
                posix path name support (this may cause servers to
                reject creatingfile with certain reserved characters).
 nounix         Disable the CIFS Unix Extensions for this mount (tree
                connection). This is rarely needed, but it may be useful
                in order to turn off multiple settings all at once (ie
                posix acls, posix locks, posix paths, symlink support
                and retrieving uids/gids/mode from the server) or to
                work around a bug in server which implement the Unix
                Extensions.
 nobrl          Do not send byte range lock requests to the server.
                This is necessary for certain applications that break
                with cifs style mandatory byte range locks (and most
                cifs servers do not yet support requesting advisory
                byte range locks).
 remount        remount the share (often used to change from ro to rw mounts
                or vice versa)
 cifsacl        Report mode bits (e.g. on stat) based on the Windows ACL for
                the file. (EXPERIMENTAL)
 servern        Specify the server 's netbios name (RFC1001 name) to use
                when attempting to setup a session to the server.  This is
                This is needed for mounting to some older servers (such
                as OS/2 or Windows 98 and Windows ME) since they do not
                support a default server name.  A server name can be up
                to 15 characters long and is usually uppercased.
 sfu            When the CIFS Unix Extensions are not negotiated, attempt to
                create device files and fifos in a format compatible with
                Services for Unix (SFU).  In addition retrieve bits 10-12
                of the mode via the SETFILEBITS extended attribute (as
                SFU does).  In the future the bottom 9 bits of the
                mode also will be emulated using queries of the security
                descriptor (ACL).
 sign           Must use packet signing (helps avoid unwanted data modification
                by intermediate systems in the route).  Note that signing
                does not work with lanman or plaintext authentication.
 sec            Security mode.  Allowed values are:
                        none    attempt to connection as a null user (no name)
                        krb5    Use Kerberos version 5 authentication
                        krb5i   Use Kerberos authentication and packet signing
                        ntlm    Use NTLM password hashing (default)
                        ntlmi   Use NTLM password hashing with signing (if
                                /proc/fs/cifs/PacketSigningEnabled on or if
                                server requires signing also can be the default) 
                        ntlmv2  Use NTLMv2 password hashing      
                        ntlmv2i Use NTLMv2 password hashing with packet signing
                        lanman  (if configured in kernel config) use older
                                lanman hash

The mount.cifs mount helper also accepts a few mount options before -o
including:

        -S      take password from stdin (equivalent to setting the environment
                variable "PASSWD_FD=0"
        -V      print mount.cifs version
        -?      display simple usage information

With most 2.6 kernel versions of modutils, the version of the cifs kernel
module can be displayed via modinfo.

Misc /proc/fs/cifs Flags and Debug Info
=======================================
Informational pseudo-files:
DebugData               Displays information about active CIFS sessions
                        and shares, as well as the cifs.ko version.
Stats                   Lists summary resource usage information as well as per
                        share statistics, if CONFIG_CIFS_STATS in enabled
                        in the kernel configuration.

Configuration pseudo-files:
MultiuserMount          If set to one, more than one CIFS session to 
                        the same server ip address can be established
                        if more than one uid accesses the same mount
                        point and if the uids user/password mapping
                        information is available. (default is 0)
PacketSigningEnabled    If set to one, cifs packet signing is enabled
                        and will be used if the server requires 
                        it.  If set to two, cifs packet signing is
                        required even if the server considers packet
                        signing optional. (default 1)
SecurityFlags           Flags which control security negotiation and
                        also packet signing. Authentication (may/must)
                        flags (e.g. for NTLM and/or NTLMv2) may be combined with
                        the signing flags.  Specifying two different password
                        hashing mechanisms (as "must use") on the other hand 
                        does not make much sense. Default flags are 
                                0x07007 
                        (NTLM, NTLMv2 and packet signing allowed).  Maximum 
                        allowable flags if you want to allow mounts to servers
                        using weaker password hashes is 0x37037 (lanman,
                        plaintext, ntlm, ntlmv2, signing allowed):
 
                        may use packet signing                          0x00001
                        must use packet signing                         0x01001
                        may use NTLM (most common password hash)        0x00002
                        must use NTLM                                   0x02002
                        may use NTLMv2                                  0x00004
                        must use NTLMv2                                 0x04004
                        may use Kerberos security (not implemented yet) 0x00008
                        must use Kerberos (not implemented yet)         0x08008
                        may use lanman (weak) password hash             0x00010
                        must use lanman password hash                   0x10010
                        may use plaintext passwords                     0x00020
                        must use plaintext passwords                    0x20020
                        (reserved for future packet encryption)         0x00040

cifsFYI                 If set to non-zero value, additional debug information
                        will be logged to the system error log.  This field
                        contains three flags controlling different classes of
                        debugging entries.  The maximum value it can be set
                        to is 7 which enables all debugging points (default 0).
                        Some debugging statements are not compiled into the
                        cifs kernel unless CONFIG_CIFS_DEBUG2 is enabled in the
                        kernel configuration. cifsFYI may be set to one or
                        nore of the following flags (7 sets them all):

                        log cifs informational messages                 0x01
                        log return codes from cifs entry points         0x02
                        log slow responses (ie which take longer than 1 second)
                          CONFIG_CIFS_STATS2 must be enabled in .config 0x04
                                
                                
traceSMB                If set to one, debug information is logged to the
                        system error log with the start of smb requests
                        and responses (default 0)
LookupCacheEnable       If set to one, inode information is kept cached
                        for one second improving performance of lookups
                        (default 1)
OplockEnabled           If set to one, safe distributed caching enabled.
                        (default 1)
LinuxExtensionsEnabled  If set to one then the client will attempt to
                        use the CIFS "UNIX" extensions which are optional
                        protocol enhancements that allow CIFS servers
                        to return accurate UID/GID information as well
                        as support symbolic links. If you use servers
                        such as Samba that support the CIFS Unix
                        extensions but do not want to use symbolic link
                        support and want to map the uid and gid fields 
                        to values supplied at mount (rather than the 
                        actual values, then set this to zero. (default 1)
Experimental            When set to 1 used to enable certain experimental
                        features (currently enables multipage writes
                        when signing is enabled, the multipage write
                        performance enhancement was disabled when
                        signing turned on in case buffer was modified
                        just before it was sent, also this flag will
                        be used to use the new experimental directory change 
                        notification code).

These experimental features and tracing can be enabled by changing flags in 
/proc/fs/cifs (after the cifs module has been installed or built into the 
kernel, e.g.  insmod cifs).  To enable a feature set it to 1 e.g.  to enable 
tracing to the kernel message log type: 

        echo 7 > /proc/fs/cifs/cifsFYI
        
cifsFYI functions as a bit mask. Setting it to 1 enables additional kernel
logging of various informational messages.  2 enables logging of non-zero
SMB return codes while 4 enables logging of requests that take longer
than one second to complete (except for byte range lock requests). 
Setting it to 4 requires defining CONFIG_CIFS_STATS2 manually in the
source code (typically by setting it in the beginning of cifsglob.h),
and setting it to seven enables all three.  Finally, tracing
the start of smb requests and responses can be enabled via:

        echo 1 > /proc/fs/cifs/traceSMB

Two other experimental features are under development. To test these
requires enabling CONFIG_CIFS_EXPERIMENTAL

        cifsacl support needed to retrieve approximated mode bits based on
                the contents on the CIFS ACL.

        DNOTIFY fcntl: needed for support of directory change 
                            notification and perhaps later for file leases)

Per share (per client mount) statistics are available in /proc/fs/cifs/Stats
if the kernel was configured with cifs statistics enabled.  The statistics
represent the number of successful (ie non-zero return code from the server) 
SMB responses to some of the more common commands (open, delete, mkdir etc.).
Also recorded is the total bytes read and bytes written to the server for
that share.  Note that due to client caching effects this can be less than the
number of bytes read and written by the application running on the client.
The statistics for the number of total SMBs and oplock breaks are different in
that they represent all for that share, not just those for which the server
returned success.
        
Also note that "cat /proc/fs/cifs/DebugData" will display information about 
the active sessions and the shares that are mounted.
Enabling Kerberos (extended security) works when CONFIG_CIFS_EXPERIMENTAL is enabled
but requires a user space helper (from the Samba project). NTLM and NTLMv2 and
LANMAN support do not require this helpr.

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