SMB HOWTO
 David Wood, [email protected]
 v1.0, 10 August 1996

 This is the SMB HOWTO.  This document describes how to use the Session
 Message Block (SMB) protocol, also called the NetBIOS or LanManager
 protocol, with Linux.

 1.  Introduction

 This is the SMB HOWTO.  This document describes how to use the Session
 Message Block (SMB) protocol, also called the NetBIOS or LanManager
 protocol, with Linux.

 This document is maintained by David Wood ([email protected]).
 Additions, modifications or corrections may be mailed there for
 inclusion in the next release.

 The SMB protocol is used by Microsoft Windows 3.11, NT and 95 to share
 disks and printers.  Using the Samba suite of tools by Andrew
 Tridgell, UNIX (including Linux) machines can share disk and printers
 with Windows hosts.

 There are four things that one can do with Samba:

 1. Share a linux drive with Windows machines.

 2. Share a Windows drive with linux machines.

 3. Share a linux printer with Windows machines.

 4. Share a Windows printer with linux machines.

 All of these are covered in this document.

 Disclaimer: The procedures and scripts either work for the author or
 have been reported to work by the people that provided them.
 Different configurations may not work with the information given here.
 If you encounter such a situation, you may e-mail the author with
 suggestions for improvement in this document, but the author
 guarantees nothing.  What did you expect?  The author is, after all, a
 consultant...

 2.  Further Information

 This HOWTO attempts to explain how to configure basic SMB file and
 print services on a linux machine.  Samba is a very complex and
 complete package.  There would be no point in attempting to duplicate
 all of the documentation for Samba here.

 For further information, please see the following documents:

 �  The Samba documentation, available as part of the Samba
    distribution.  The distribution is available at:
    ftp://nimbus.anu.edu.au/pub/tridge/samba/
    <ftp://nimbus.anu.edu.au/pub/tridge/samba/>

 �  The linux Printing HOWTO.

 �  The Print2Win Mini-HOWTO.

 3.  Installation

 The latest source version of Samba is available from:

 ftp://nimbus.anu.edu.au/pub/tridge/samba/
 <ftp://nimbus.anu.edu.au/pub/tridge/samba/>

 However, if you have installed the Redhat distribution of linux, you
 have the option of installing it as a package.  Some other
 distributions also include the Samba binaries.

 The following two daemons are required for the Samba package.  They
 are typically installed in /usr/sbin and run either on boot from the
 systems startup scripts or from inetd.  Example scripts are shown in
 ``Running the Daemons''.

 ______________________________________________________________________
         smbd (The SMB daemon)
         nmbd (Provides NetBIOS nameserver support to clients)
 ______________________________________________________________________

 Typically, the following Samba binaries are installed in /usr/bin,
 although the location is optional.

 ______________________________________________________________________
         smbclient       (An SMB client for UNIX machines)
         smbprint        (A script to print to a printer on an SMB host)
         smbprint.sysv   (As above, but for SVR4 UNIX machines)
         smbstatus       (Lists the cuurent SMB connections for the local host)
         smbrun          (A 'glue' script to facilitate runnning applciations
                          on SMB hosts)
 ______________________________________________________________________

 Additionally, a script called 'print' is included with this HOWTO,
 which serves as a usefull front end to the smbprint script.

 The Samba package is simple to install.  Simply retrieve the source
 from the location mentioned above, and read the file README in the
 distribution.  There is also a file called docs/INSTALL.txt in the
 distribution that provides a simple step-by-step set of instructions.

 Following installation, place the daemons in /usr/sbin and the
 binaries in /usr/bin.  Install the man pages in /usr/local/man.

 When you made the Samba package, you would have specified in the
 Makefile the location for the configuration file, smb.conf.  This is
 generally in /etc, but you can put it anywhere you like.  For these
 directions, we will presume that you specified the location of the
 configuration file as /etc/smb.conf, the log file location as log file
 = /var/log/samba-log.%m and the lock directory as lock directory =
 /var/lock/samba.

 Install the configuration file, smb.conf.  Go to the directory where
 Samba was built.  Look in the subdirectory examples/simple and read
 the file README.  Copy the file smb.conf found in that directory to
 /etc.  BE CAREFUL!  If you have a linux distribution that already has
 Samba installed, you may already have a Samba configuration file in
 /etc.  You should probably start with that one.

 If you don't want to have your configuration file in /etc, put it
 wherever you want to, then put a symlink in /etc:

 ______________________________________________________________________
         ln -s /path/to/smb.conf /etc/smb.conf
 ______________________________________________________________________

 4.  Running The Daemons

 The two SMB daemons are /usr/sbin/smbd and /usr/sbin/nmbd.

 You can run the Samba daemons from inetd or as stand-alone processes.
 If you are configuring a permanent file server, they should be run
 from inetd so that they will be restarted if they die.  If you just
 want to use SMB services occasionally or to assist with systems
 administration, you can start them with an /etc/rc.d/init.d script or
 even by hand when you need them.

 To run the daemons from inetd, place the following lines in the inetd
 configuration file, /etc/inetd.conf:

      ______________________________________________________________________
          # SAMBA NetBIOS services (for PC file and print sharing)
          netbios-ssn stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/smbd smbd
          netbios-ns dgram udp wait root /usr/sbin/nmbd nmbd
      ______________________________________________________________________

 Then restart the inetd daemon by running the command:

 ______________________________________________________________________
     kill -HUP 1
 ______________________________________________________________________

 To run the daemons from the system startup scripts, put the following
 script in file called /etc/rc.d/init.d/smb and symbolically link it to
 the files specified in the comments:

 ______________________________________________________________________
     #!/bin/sh

     #
     # /etc/rc.d/init.d/smb - starts and stops SMB services.
     #
     # The following files should be synbolic links to this file:
     # symlinks: /etc/rc.d/rc1.d/K35smb  (Kills SMB services on shutdown)
     #           /etc/rc.d/rc3.d/S91smb  (Starts SMB services in multiuser mode)
     #           /etc/rc.d/rc6.d/K35smb  (Kills SMB services on reboot)
     #

     # Source function library.
     . /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions

     # Source networking configuration.
     . /etc/sysconfig/network

     # Check that networking is up.
     [ ${NETWORKING} = "no" ] && exit 0

     # See how we were called.
     case "$1" in
       start)
         echo -n "Starting SMB services: "
         daemon smbd -D
         daemon nmbd -D
         echo
         touch /var/lock/subsys/smb
         ;;
       stop)
         echo -n "Shutting down SMB services: "
         killproc smbd
         killproc nmbd
         rm -f /var/lock/subsys/smb
         echo ""
         ;;
       *)
         echo "Usage: smb {start|stop}"
         exit 1
     esac
 ______________________________________________________________________

 5.  General Configuration (/etc/smb.conf)

 Samba configuration on a linux (or other UNIX machine) is controlled
 by a single file, /etc/smb.conf.  This file determines which system
 resources you want to share with the outside world and what
 restrictions you wish to place on them.

 Since the following sections will address sharing linux drives and
 printers with Windows machines, the smb.conf file shown in this
 section is as simple as you can get, just for introductory purposes.

 Don't worry about the details, yet.  Later sections will introduce the
 major concepts.

 Each section of the file starts with a section header such as global,
 homes, printers, etc.

 The global section defines a few variables that Samba will use to
 define sharing for all resources.

 The homes section allows a remote users to access their (and only
 their) home directory on the local (linux) machine).  That is, if a
 Windows user trys to connect to this share from their Windows
 machines, they will be connected to their personal home directory.
 Note that to do this, they must have an account on the linux box.

 The sample smb.conf file below allows remote users to get to their
 home directories on the local machine and to write to a temporary
 directory.  For a Windows user to see these shares, the linux box has
 to be on the local network.  Then the user simply connects a network
 drive from the Windows File Manager or Windows Explorer.

 Note that in the following sections, additional entries for this file
 will be given to allow more resources to be shared.

      ______________________________________________________________________
      ; /etc/smb.conf
      ;
      ; Make sure and restart the server after making changes to this file, ex:
      ; /etc/rc.d/init.d/smb stop
      ; /etc/rc.d/init.d/smb start

      [global]
      ; Uncomment this if you want a guest account
      ; guest account = nobody
         log file = /var/log/samba-log.%m
         lock directory = /var/lock/samba
         share modes = yes

      [homes]
         comment = Home Directories
         browseable = no
         read only = no
         create mode = 0750

      [tmp]
         comment = Temporary file space
         path = /tmp
         read only = no
         public = yes
      ______________________________________________________________________

 6.  Sharing A Linux Drive With Windows Machines

 As shown in the simple smb.conf above, sharing linux drives with
 Windows users is easy.  However, like everything else with Samba, you
 can control things to a large degree.  Here are some examples:

 To share a directory with the public, create a clone of the tmp
 section above by adding something like this to smb.conf:

 ______________________________________________________________________
 [public]
    comment = Public Stuff
    path = /home/public
    public = yes
    writable = yes
    printable = yes
 ______________________________________________________________________

 To make the above directory readable by the public, but only writable
 by people in group staff, modify the entry like this:

      ______________________________________________________________________
      [public]
         comment = Public Stuff
         path = /home/public
         public = yes
         writable = yes
         printable = no
         write list = @staff
      ______________________________________________________________________

 For other tricks to play with drive shares, see the Samba
 documentation or man pages.

 7.  Sharing A Windows Drive With Linux Machines

 An SMB client program for UNIX machines is included with the Samba
 distribution.  It provides an ftp-like interface on the command line.
 You can uyse this utility to transfer files between a Windows 'server'
 and a linux client.

 To see which shares are available on a given host, run:

 ______________________________________________________________________
     /usr/sbin/smbclient -L host
 ______________________________________________________________________

 where 'host' is the name of the machine that you wish to view.  this
 will return a list of 'service' names - that is, names of drives or
 printers that it can share with you.  Unless the SMB server has no
 security configured, it will ask you for a password.  Get it the
 password for the 'guest' account or for your personal account on that
 machine.

 For example:

 ______________________________________________________________________
     smbclient -L zimmerman
 ______________________________________________________________________

 The output of this command should look something like this:

      ______________________________________________________________________
      Server time is Sat Aug 10 15:58:27 1996
      Timezone is UTC+10.0
      Password:
      Domain=[WORKGROUP] OS=[Windows NT 3.51] Server=[NT LAN Manager 3.51]

      Server=[ZIMMERMAN] User=[] Workgroup=[WORKGROUP] Domain=[]

              Sharename      Type      Comment
              ---------      ----      -------
              ADMIN$         Disk      Remote Admin
              public         Disk      Public
              C$             Disk      Default share
              IPC$           IPC       Remote IPC
              OReilly        Printer   OReilly
              print$         Disk      Printer Drivers

      This machine has a browse list:

              Server               Comment
              ---------            -------
              HOPPER               Samba 1.9.15p8
              KERNIGAN             Samba 1.9.15p8
              LOVELACE             Samba 1.9.15p8
              RITCHIE              Samba 1.9.15p8
              ZIMMERMAN
      ______________________________________________________________________

 The browse list shows other SMB servers with resources to share on the
 network.

 To use the client, run:

 ______________________________________________________________________
     /usr/sbin/smbclient service <password>
 ______________________________________________________________________

 where 'service' is a machine and share name.  For example, if you are
 trying to reach a directory that has been shared as 'public' on a
 machine called zimmerman, the service would be called
 \\zimmerman\public.  However, due to shell restrictions, you will need
 to escape the backslashes, so you end up with something like this:

 ______________________________________________________________________
     /usr/sbin/smbclient \\\\zimmerman\\public mypasswd
 ______________________________________________________________________

 where 'mypasswd' is the literal string of your password.

 You will get the smbclient prompt:

      ______________________________________________________________________
      Server time is Sat Aug 10 15:58:44 1996
      Timezone is UTC+10.0
      Domain=[WORKGROUP] OS=[Windows NT 3.51] Server=[NT LAN Manager 3.51]
      smb: \>
      ______________________________________________________________________

 Type 'h' to get help using smbclient:

      ______________________________________________________________________
      smb: \> h
      ls             dir            lcd            cd             pwd
      get            mget           put            mput           rename
      more           mask           del            rm             mkdir
      md             rmdir          rd             prompt         recurse
      translate      lowercase      print          printmode      queue
      cancel         stat           quit           q              exit
      newer          archive        tar            blocksize      tarmode
      setmode        help           ?              !
      smb: \>
      ______________________________________________________________________

 If you can use ftp, you shouldn't need the man pages for smbclient.

 8.  Sharing A Linux Printer With Windows Machines

 To share a linux printer with Windows machines, you need to make
 certain that your printer is set up to work under linux.  If you can
 print from linux, setting up an SMB share of the printer is stright
 forward.

 See the Printing HOWTO to set up local printing.

 Since the author uses a printer connected to a Windows NT machine,
 this section should not be taken as definitive, but merely a
 suggestion.  Anyone with details to share, please send them to
 [email protected] so this section can be completed.

 Add printing configuration to your smb.conf:

 ______________________________________________________________________
 [global]
    printing = bsd
    printcap name = /etc/printcap
    load printers = yes
    log file = /var/log/samba-log.%m
    lock directory = /var/lock/samba

 [printers]
    comment = All Printers
    security = server
    path = /var/spool/lpd/lp
    browseable = no
    printable = yes
    public = yes
    writable = no
    create mode = 0700

 [ljet]
    security = server
    path = /var/spool/lpd/lp
    printer name = lp
    writable = yes
    public = yes
    printable = yes
    print command = lpr -r -h -P %p %s
 ______________________________________________________________________

 Make certain that the printer path (in this case under ljet) matches
 the spool directory in /etc/printcap!

 NOTE:  There are some problems sharing printers on UNIX boxes with
 Windows NT machines using Samba.  One problem is with NT seeing the
 shared printer properly.  To fix this, see the notes in the Samba
 distribution in the file docs/WinNT.txt.  The other deals with
 password problems.  See the comments in the same file for an annoying
 gain of understanding and failure to fix the problem.

 9.  Sharing A Windows Printer With Linux Machines

 To share a printer on a Windows machine, you must do the following:

 a) You must have the proper entries in /etc/printcap and they must
 correspond to the local directory structure (for the spool directory,
 etc)

 b) You must have the script /usr/bin/smbprint.  This comes with the
 Samba source, but not with all Samba binary distributions.  A slightly
 modifed copy is discussed below.

 c) If you want to convert ASCII files to Postscript, you must have
 nenscript, or its equivalent.  nenscript is a Postscript converter and
 is generally installed in /usr/bin.

 d)  you may wish to make Samba printing easier by having an easy-to-
 use front end.  A simple perl script to handle ASCII, Postscript or
 created Postscript is given below.

 The /etc/printcap entry below is for an HP 5MP printer on a Windows NT
 host.  The entries are as follows:

 ______________________________________________________________________
         cm - comment
         lp - device name to open for output
         sd - the printer's spool directory (on the local machine)
         af - the accounting file
         mx - the maximum file size (zero is unlimited)
         if - name of the input filter (script)
 ______________________________________________________________________

 For more information, see the Printing HOWTO or the man page for
 printcap.

      ______________________________________________________________________
      # /etc/printcap
      #
      # //zimmerman/oreilly via smbprint
      #
      lp:\
              :cm=HP 5MP Postscript OReilly on zimmerman:\
              :lp=/dev/lp1:\
              :sd=/var/spool/lpd/lp:\
              :af=/var/spool/lpd/lp/acct:\
              :mx#0:\
              :if=/usr/bin/smbprint:
      ______________________________________________________________________

 Make certain that the spool and accounting directories exist and are
 writable.  Ensure that the 'if' line holds the proper path to the
 smbprint script (given below) and make sure that the proper device is
 pointed to (the /dev speical file).

 Next is the smbprint script itself.  It is usually placed in /usr/bin
 and is attributable to Andrew Tridgell, the person who created Samba
 as far as I know.  It comes with the Samba source distribution, but is
 absent from some binary distributions, so I have recreated it here.

 You may wish to look at this carefully.  There are some minor
 alterations that have shown themselves to be useful.

 ______________________________________________________________________
 #!/bin/sh -x

 # This script is an input filter for printcap printing on a unix machine. It
 # uses the smbclient program to print the file to the specified smb-based
 # server and service.
 # For example you could have a printcap entry like this
 #
 # smb:lp=/dev/null:sd=/usr/spool/smb:sh:if=/usr/local/samba/smbprint
 #
 # which would create a unix printer called "smb" that will print via this
 # script. You will need to create the spool directory /usr/spool/smb with
 # appropriate permissions and ownerships for your system.

 # Set these to the server and service you wish to print to
 # In this example I have a WfWg PC called "lapland" that has a printer
 # exported called "printer" with no password.

 #
 # Script further altered by [email protected] (Michael Hamilton)
 # so that the server, service, and password can be read from
 # a /usr/var/spool/lpd/PRINTNAME/.config file.
 #
 # In order for this to work the /etc/printcap entry must include an
 # accounting file (af=...):
 #
 #   cdcolour:\
 #       :cm=CD IBM Colorjet on 6th:\
 #       :sd=/var/spool/lpd/cdcolour:\
 #       :af=/var/spool/lpd/cdcolour/acct:\
 #       :if=/usr/local/etc/smbprint:\
 #       :mx=0:\
 #       :lp=/dev/null:
 #
 # The /usr/var/spool/lpd/PRINTNAME/.config file should contain:
 #   server=PC_SERVER
 #   service=PR_SHARENAME
 #   password="password"
 #
 # E.g.
 #   server=PAULS_PC
 #   service=CJET_371
 #   password=""

 #
 # Debugging log file, change to /dev/null if you like.
 #
 logfile=/tmp/smb-print.log
 # logfile=/dev/null

 #
 # The last parameter to the filter is the accounting file name.
 #
 spool_dir=/var/spool/lpd/lp
 config_file=$spool_dir/.config

 # Should read the following variables set in the config file:
 #   server
 #   service
 #   password
 #   user
 eval `cat $config_file`

 #
 # Some debugging help, change the >> to > if you want to same space.
 #
 echo "server $server, service $service" >> $logfile

 (
 # NOTE You may wish to add the line `echo translate' if you want automatic
 # CR/LF translation when printing.
         echo translate
         echo "print -"
         cat
 ) | /usr/bin/smbclient "\\\\$server\\$service" $password -U $user -N -P >> $logfile
 ______________________________________________________________________

 Most linux distributions come with nenscript for converting ASCII
 documents to Postscript.  The following perl script makes life easier
 be providing a simple interface to linux printing via smbprint.

 ______________________________________________________________________
 Usage: print [-a|c|p] <filename>
        -a prints <filename> as ASCII
        -c prints <filename> formatted as source code
        -p prints <filename> as Postscript
         If no switch is given, print attempts to
         guess the file type and print appropriately.
 ______________________________________________________________________

 Using smbprint to print ASCII files tends to truncate long lines.
 This script breaks long lines on whitespace (instead of in the middle
 of a word), if possible.

 The source code formatting is done with nenscript.  It takes an ASCII
 file and foramts it in 2 columns with a fancy header (date, filename,
 etc).  It also numbers the lines.  Using this as an example, other
 types of formatting can be accomplished.

 Postscript documents are already properly formatted, so they pass
 through directly.

 ______________________________________________________________________
 #!/usr/bin/perl

 # Script:   print
 # Authors:  Brad Marshall, David Wood
 #           Plugged In Communications
 # Date:     960808
 #
 # Script to print to oreilly which is currently on zimmerman
 # Purpose:  Takes files of various types as arguments and
 # processes them appropriately for piping to a Samba print script.
 #
 # Currently supported file types:
 #
 # ASCII      - ensures that lines longer than $line_length characters wrap on
 #              whitespace.
 # Postscript - Takes no action.
 # Code       - Formats in Postscript (using nenscript) to display
 #              properly (landscape, font, etc).
 #

 # Set the maximum allowable length for each line of ASCII text.
 $line_length = 76;

 # Set the path and name of the Samba print script
 $print_prog = "/usr/bin/smbprint";

 # Set the path and name to nenscript (the ASCII-->Postscript converter)
 $nenscript = "/usr/bin/nenscript";

 unless ( -f $print_prog ) {
         die "Can't find $print_prog!";
 }
 unless ( -f $nenscript ) {
         die "Can't find $nenscript!";
 }

 &ParseCmdLine(@ARGV);

 # DBG
 print "filetype is $filetype\n";

 if ($filetype eq "ASCII") {
         &wrap($line_length);
 } elsif ($filetype eq "code") {
         &codeformat;
 } elsif ($filetype eq "ps") {
         &createarray;
 } else {
         print "Sorry..no known file type.\n";
         exit 0;
 }
 # Pipe the array to smbprint
 open(PRINTER, "|$print_prog") || die "Can't open $print_prog: $!\n";
 foreach $line (@newlines) {
         print PRINTER $line;
 }
 # Send an extra linefeed in case a file has an incomplete last line.
 print PRINTER "\n";
 close(PRINTER);
 print "Completed\n";
 exit 0;

 # --------------------------------------------------- #
 #        Everything below here is a subroutine        #
 # --------------------------------------------------- #
 sub ParseCmdLine {
         # Parses the command line, finding out what file type the file is

         # Gets $arg and $file to be the arguments (if the exists)
         # and the filename
         if ($#_ < 0) {
                 &usage;
         }
         # DBG
 #       foreach $element (@_) {
 #               print "*$element* \n";
 #       }

         $arg = shift(@_);
         if ($arg =~ /\-./) {
                 $cmd = $arg;
         # DBG
 #       print "\$cmd found.\n";

                 $file = shift(@_);
         } else {
                 $file = $arg;
         }

         # Defining the file type
         unless ($cmd) {
                 # We have no arguments

                 if ($file =~ /\.ps$/) {
                         $filetype = "ps";
                 } elsif ($file =~ /\.java$|\.c$|\.h$|\.pl$|\.sh$|\.csh$|\.m4$|\.inc$|\.html$|\.htm$/) {
                         $filetype = "code";
                 } else {
                         $filetype = "ASCII";
                 }

                 # Process $file for what type is it and return $filetype
         } else {
                 # We have what type it is in $arg
                 if ($cmd =~ /^-p$/) {
                         $filetype = "ps";
                 } elsif ($cmd =~ /^-c$/) {
                         $filetype = "code";
                 } elsif ($cmd =~ /^-a$/) {
                         $filetype = "ASCII"
                 }
         }
 }

 sub usage {
         print "
 Usage: print [-a|c|p] <filename>
        -a prints <filename> as ASCII
        -c prints <filename> formatted as source code
        -p prints <filename> as Postscript
         If no switch is given, print attempts to
         guess the file type and print appropriately.\n
 ";
         exit(0);
 }

 sub wrap {
         # Create an array of file lines, where each line is < the
         # number of characters specified, and wrapped only on whitespace

         # Get the number of characters to limit the line to.
         $limit = pop(@_);

         # DBG
         #print "Entering subroutine wrap\n";
         #print "The line length limit is $limit\n";

         # Read in the file, parse and put into an array.
         open(FILE, "<$file") || die "Can't open $file: $!\n";
         while(<FILE>) {
                 $line = $_;

                 # DBG
                 #print "The line is:\n$line\n";

                 # Wrap the line if it is over the limit.
                 while ( length($line) > $limit ) {

                         # DBG
                         #print "Wrapping...";

                         # Get the first $limit +1 characters.
                         $part = substr($line,0,$limit +1);

                         # DBG
                         #print "The partial line is:\n$part\n";

                         # Check to see if the last character is a space.
                         $last_char = substr($part,-1, 1);
                         if ( " " eq $last_char ) {
                             # If it is, print the rest.

                             # DBG
                             #print "The last character was a space\n";

                             substr($line,0,$limit + 1) = "";
                             substr($part,-1,1) = "";
                             push(@newlines,"$part\n");
                         } else {
                              # If it is not, find the last space in the
                              # sub-line and print up to there.

                             # DBG
                             #print "The last character was not a space\n";

                              # Remove the character past $limit
                              substr($part,-1,1) = "";
                              # Reverse the line to make it easy to find
                              # the last space.
                              $revpart = reverse($part);
                              $index = index($revpart," ");
                              if ( $index > 0 ) {
                                substr($line,0,$limit-$index) = "";
                                push(@newlines,substr($part,0,$limit-$index)
                                    . "\n");
                              } else {
                                # There was no space in the line, so
                                # print it up to $limit.
                                substr($line,0,$limit) = "";
                                push(@newlines,substr($part,0,$limit)
                                    . "\n");
                              }
                         }
                 }
                 push(@newlines,$line);
         }
         close(FILE);
 }

 sub codeformat {
         # Call subroutine wrap then filter through nenscript
         &wrap($line_length);

         # Pipe the results through nenscript to create a Postscript
         # file that adheres to some decent format for printing
         # source code (landscape, Courier font, line numbers).
         # Print this to a temporary file first.
         $tmpfile = "/tmp/nenscript$$";
         open(FILE, "|$nenscript -2G -i$file -N -p$tmpfile -r") ||
                 die "Can't open nenscript: $!\n";
         foreach $line (@newlines) {
                 print FILE $line;
         }
         close(FILE);

         # Read the temporary file back into an array so it can be
         # passed to the Samba print script.
         @newlines = ("");
         open(FILE, "<$tmpfile") || die "Can't open $file: $!\n";
         while(<FILE>) {
                 push(@newlines,$_);
         }
         close(FILE);
         system("rm $tmpfile");
 }

 sub createarray {
         # Create the array for postscript
         open(FILE, "<$file") || die "Can't open $file: $!\n";
         while(<FILE>) {
                 push(@newlines,$_);
         }
         close(FILE);
 }
 ______________________________________________________________________

 10.  Copyright

 This HOWTO is copyright 1996 by David Wood.  It may be reproduced in
 any form and freely distributed as long as the file stays intact,
 including this statement.

 11.  Acknowledgements

 As soon as you mail me with suggestions, I'll acknowledge you here in
 the next release.