Defaults for xenial (samba 4.3.11): client min protocol = CORE client max protocol = default (which is NT1 in this version of samba)
Defaults for artful (samba 4.6.7): client min protocol = CORE client max protocol = default (which is NT1 in this version of samba) Defaults for bionic (samba 4.7.6): client min protocol = CORE client max protocol = default (which is SMB3_11 in this version of samba) So before bionic, if you wanted a more secure protocol, you had to specify it (like smbclient's -m SMB3 option). Now in bionic, if you want a *less* secure protocol. you have to specify it. Ideally, computer browsing and actually connecting to shares should happen with different protocol versions. smbclient in bionic does a quick downgrade to NT1 when needed. Notice the "Reconnecting" message intertwined in the output below: ubuntu@bionic-desktop:~$ smbclient -L xenial -N -m SMB3 Anonymous login successful Sharename Type Comment --------- ---- ------- print$ Disk Printer Drivers public Disk Public share IPC$ IPC IPC Service (xenial-desktop server (Samba, Ubuntu)) Reconnecting with SMB1 for workgroup listing. Anonymous login successful Server Comment --------- ------- Workgroup Master --------- ------- UBUNTU XENIAL In artful, that downgrade does not happen, and we don't get the workgroup listing: ubuntu@artful-desktop:~$ smbclient -L xenial -N -m SMB3 Anonymous login successful Sharename Type Comment --------- ---- ------- print$ Disk Printer Drivers public Disk Public share IPC$ IPC IPC Service (xenial-desktop server (Samba, Ubuntu)) Anonymous login successful Server Comment --------- ------- Workgroup Master --------- ------- ubuntu@artful-desktop:~$ I suspect smbtree does the same. In bionic, where max protocol is SMB3_11 by default, it works out of the box. But in artful, if I set client max protocol to SMB3_11, it stops working: ubuntu@artful-desktop:~$ testparm -s -v 2>/dev/null|grep "client max protocol" client max protocol = default ubuntu@artful-desktop:~$ smbtree UBUNTU \\XENIAL xenial-desktop server (Samba, Ubuntu) \\XENIAL\IPC$ IPC Service (xenial-desktop server (Samba, Ubuntu)) \\XENIAL\public Public share \\XENIAL\print$ Printer Drivers \\BIONIC bionic-desktop server (Samba, Ubuntu) \\BIONIC\IPC$ IPC Service (bionic-desktop server (Samba, Ubuntu)) \\BIONIC\public Public share \\BIONIC\print$ Printer Drivers \\ARTFUL artful-desktop server (Samba, Ubuntu) \\ARTFUL\IPC$ IPC Service (artful-desktop server (Samba, Ubuntu)) \\ARTFUL\public Public share \\ARTFUL\print$ Printer Drivers ubuntu@artful-desktop:~$ sudo vi /etc/samba/smb.conf ubuntu@artful-desktop:~$ testparm -s -v 2>/dev/null|grep "client max protocol" client max protocol = SMB3 ubuntu@artful-desktop:~$ smbtree ubuntu@artful-desktop:~$ So in summay, bionic samba's own tools seem to know when NT1 is needed and downgrade appropriately. Ideally the rest of the smb ecosystem should do the same, assuming there is no way to get the computer listing with non-NT1 protocols. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Desktop Packages, which is subscribed to nautilus in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1767454 Title: "Other Locations" does not automatically find Samba servers in Ubuntu 18.04 Status in gvfs: Confirmed Status in samba: Unknown Status in nautilus package in Ubuntu: New Status in samba package in Ubuntu: New Bug description: Ubuntu: 18.04 clean install Nautilus: 1:3.26.3-0ubuntu4 The actions taken to produce the problem: Click on “Other Locations” in Nautilus. The expected result of these actions: Samba servers to automatically show up under “Networks”. This is the behavior in Ubuntu 17.10 using Nautilus 1:3.26.0-0ub. Also, clicking on “”Windows Network” immediately shows "Folder is Empty". The actual result of these actions: The Samba servers never show up under “Networks” and clicking on "Windows Network" always immediately comes up with "Folder is Empty". Further information: This happens on both machines with a clean Ubuntu 18.04 install. My Ubuntu 17.10 machines still work like expected. I can still manually type in the Samba information in "Connect to Server" and the 18.04 machines connect just fine. From syslog: Apr 27 13:49:34 david-HP-ProBook-440-G2 dbus-daemon[1333]: [session uid=1000 pid=1333] Activating service name='org.gnome.Nautilus' requested by ':1.13' (uid=1000 pid=1468 comm="/usr/bin/gnome-shell " label="unconfined") Apr 27 13:49:34 david-HP-ProBook-440-G2 dbus-daemon[1333]: [session uid=1000 pid=1333] Successfully activated service 'org.gnome.Nautilus' Apr 27 13:49:35 david-HP-ProBook-440-G2 dbus-daemon[754]: [system] Activating via systemd: service name='org.freedesktop.hostname1' unit='dbus-org.freedesktop.hostname1.service' requested by ':1.131' (uid=1000 pid=4857 comm="/usr/bin/nautilus --gapplication-service " label="unconfined") Apr 27 13:49:35 david-HP-ProBook-440-G2 systemd[1]: Starting Hostname Service... Apr 27 13:49:35 david-HP-ProBook-440-G2 nautilus[4857]: Called "net usershare info" but it failed: Failed to execute child process “net” (No such file or directory) Apr 27 13:49:35 david-HP-ProBook-440-G2 dbus-daemon[754]: [system] Successfully activated service 'org.freedesktop.hostname1' Apr 27 13:49:35 david-HP-ProBook-440-G2 systemd[1]: Started Hostname Service. Apr 27 13:49:40 david-HP-ProBook-440-G2 gvfsd[1432]: mkdir failed on directory /var/cache/samba: Permission denied To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/gvfs/+bug/1767454/+subscriptions -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~desktop-packages Post to : desktop-packages@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~desktop-packages More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp