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With this platform we can manage in an easier way the transfer of files. We have to enter the host name or IP address.
We click “Quickconnect” and in the panel below will appear the local site and the remote site.
To manage the files we click on the right bottom of the mouse and it will appear all the options we have.
Samba
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Server (Linux 10.04)
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To share files between the guest OS we have to set the server and the client. The server will be the Linux guest OS. The steps to set the server are:
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In the \[ global \] section we have to put the name of our workgroup or domain and uncomment the security parameter: |
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workgroup = HOME
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security = user
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Now we can create a new section or uncomment one for the directory to be shared:
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sudo /etc/init.d/samba restart |
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Client (Windows XP)
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To set up the Samba client in Windows I follow these steps:
- Click Start -> Control Panel
- Click the "Network and Internet Connections" option
- Then click the "Network Connections" option
- Double click the icon labelled "Local Area Connection". The icon may have a number after it, for example "Local Area Connection 5"
- Click the Properties button
- Select "Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)" and click Properties
- Click Advanced
- On the WINS tab, click Add, then enter 192.168.122.130 (the address of the server) and click Add.
- OK and close
To join the domain of the server :
- Click Start -> Control Panel
- Click the "Performance and Maintenance" option, then click on System
- Click on "Change" button. The computer name should be set to the hostname "koneauto". The domain should be set to "HOME"
The problem is that when I click OK the message is "A domain controller for the domain HOME cannot be contacted" . After several trials trying different configurations in smb.conf it doesn't work.
The "How to" I was using to setup the server and the client was:
https://help.ubuntu.com/10.04/serverguide/C/samba-fileserver.html
RTAI
To install the RTAI I was following this documentation :https://www.rtai.org/RTAILAB/RTAI-TARGET-HOWTO.txt
We will try to install RTAI in the host OS Linux 10.04 (64bits). We download the latest version from www.rtai.org that is RTAI 3.8. We'll run the following command:
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wget --no-check-certificate https://www.rtai.org/RTAI/rtai-3.8.tar.bz2 |
We are going to switch the directory and unpack
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cd /usr/src tar xvf rtai-3.5.tar.bz2 |
We have to download a new kernel from http://www.kernel.org/ we can use the kernel we have in the distribution.
The first three numbers in the kernel have to match the
first three numbers in the patch.
So we downloaded 2.6.23.1 kernel and we will use the 2.6.23 patch
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*wget http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/linux-2.6.23.1.tar.gz* tar xvf linux-2.6.23.1.tar.gz |
Now we will aply the RTAI patch:
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cd /usr/src/linux-2.6.23.1 patch -p1 -b < ../rtai-3.8/base/arch/i386/patches/hal-linux-2.6.23-i386-1.12-03.patch |
Then we make a copy of the configuration file to the root folder.
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cp /boot/config-2.6.19-generic .config |
Lets finally run the kernel configuration menu
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make menuconfig CC=/usr/bin/gcc-3.4 CXX=/usr/bin/g++-3.4 |
incomplete code/drivers" option to 'yes'. In the "loadable module support" section,
make sure that the "Enable loadable module support" is set to 'yes', and set the
"Module Versioning support" is to 'no'. In the "processor type and features" section,
set the "Preemptible kernel" and the "Use register arguments" options to 'no',
and make sure to set the "interrupt pipeline" option, (aka IPIPE) to 'yes'.
Finally, make sure that the "/proc file system support", under the
"Pseudo filesystems" subsection of the "File systems" section is set to yes.
With this new configuration, the kernel has to compile with the following command:
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apt-get install kernel-package fakeroot make-kpkg clean fakeroot make-kpkg --initrd --app\end-to-version=-rtai \kernel_image kernel_headers |