_the_dude_
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Since you have the rights to change the policies, you may also be able to create a local user (use another name than the domain user to be sure) on the windows system. Do that and you will not need to specify a domain. I've put the domain user option on my todo list for a next version.

It's strange that the cifs mount (your network drive on windows) worked, but mounting the ISO file in it didn't work... Could you try to put a file in the smbmount/mountname directory with winscp. This will tell you if you can write in the directory where the .iso files reside with the current mount options/credentials. Log in with winscp as root, so you're sure that from the linux side you are allowed to write the file.

I'm suspecting the domain user configuration to be the problem, probably in combination with the share/directory/file permissions...

Reply
0 Kudos