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Protected: Penelitian 2019–> Mahaputra Hidayat Bin
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Filed under: Penelitian
Protected: Catatan Penelitian PDP 2019
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Filed under: Penelitian
Surat Pernyataan Penerima Sertifikat KKN
tanda terima sertifikat + kop … Read entire article »
Filed under: 7. Operating System
Hapus Reservasi Hotel
Berdasarkan Checkout SELECT * FROM db_reservasi_hotel WHERE departure_expected LIKE ‘%2019-11%’ ORDER BY arrival DESC —- Berdasarkan Tanggal Check In SELECT * FROM db_reservasi_hotel WHERE arrival LIKE ‘%2019-10-21%’ ORDER BY arrival DESC … Read entire article »
Filed under: 7. Operating System
Samba CIFS
MountWindowsSharesPermanently Contents Prerequisites CIFS installation Mounting unprotected (guest) network folders Mount password protected network folders Special permissions Mount password protected shares using libpam_mount (Ubuntu 9.04) Troubleshooting Login errors Unprotected network folder won’t automount Mount during login instead of boot Slow shutdown due to a CIFS/Network Manager bug CIFS Options Deprecated Use of tilde in pathnames such as “credentials=~/.smbcredentials” This document describes how to mount CIFS shares permanently. The shares might be hosted on a Windows computer/server, or on a Linux/UNIX server running Samba. This document also applies to SMBFS shares, which are similar to CIFS but are deprecated and should be avoided if possible (link). (This document does not describe how to host the shares yourself, only how to access shares that are hosted somewhere else. For hosting shares, use Samba.) Prerequisites We’re assuming that: Network connections have been configured properly. Your local (Ubuntu) username is ubuntuusername. Share username on Windows computer is msusername. Share password on Windows … Read entire article »
Filed under: 7. Operating System
Samba CLient
Configure a system to automount a Samba share with /etc/fstab last updated December 23, 2017 in CategoriesLinux, UNIX, Windows How do I configure a Linux based system to automount a Samba share on a Linux? As explained earlier you can use the mount command to mount a remote windows partition or a windows share under Linux. The /etc/fstab file contains static information about the filesystems. The file fstab contains descriptive information about the various file systems. fstab is only read by programs, and not written; it is the duty of the system administrator to properly create and maintain this file.To mount a Samba share to be mounted when a Linux system comes up after reboot edit the /etc/fstab file and put entry as follows for your Windows/Samba share: //ntserver/share /mnt/samba smbfs username=username,password=password 0 0 For example, if you want to mount a share called … Read entire article »
Filed under: 7. Operating System