HP CIFS Client A.02.02.03 Administrator's Guide

# netbiosDebug,
# netbiosTrace,
# nfsTrace,
# rare,
# cacheDebug,
# cifsTrace,
# oplock,
warn,
# smbSequence,
# debugAttributes,
smbConnect,
# uiTrace,
# nbnsTrace,
# diskarb,
# disk arbitration
# authentication,
);
The log file records only errors or warnings. But, many log
levels can be enabled for checking activities of various
modules within the CIFS Client.
If you report a problem to HP, your support representative
may ask you to enable one or more log levels. This is done
by editing the CIFS Client configuration file and
uncommenting the particular log level, by removing the
preceding # character of the logging mode and saving the
file.
Note that increased logging consumes more disk space and
slows the performance of the CIFS Client. Hence, when you
do not need logging, it is best to not change the default
logging setting, unless your support representative asks you
to enable it.
cfgParseInterval HP CIFS Client can reparse the configuration file while
running. For this feature to work, the HP CIFS Client must
poll the file regularly. The variable cfgParseInterval
defines the time of this poll cycle in milliseconds. The default
is 5000.
Parameters that are negotiated upon connection to the server
will not reflect changed configuration values until all shares
on the server are unmounted and a new connection is
established, whereas other changes take effect within the
time specified in cfsParseInterval.
sockMode sockOwner sockGroup File access mode and ownership for the UNIX domain socket
that is used for communication between the HP CIFS Client
daemon and the command line utilities. The access mode
may be given in octal notation, if prefixed with a leading
0; in hexadecimal notation if prefixed with a leading 0x;
or in decimal notation if not prefixed with any of the above.
Owner and group may be given by name or as numeric id.
Do not set these values to anything other than mode=0600
and owner=root unless you really know what you are doing.
The file access modes of this UNIX domain socket are used
to provide secure authentication of the user that requests a
service to the daemon. If these variables are not configured
from the file, they default to the correct values.
50 Configuration File