If you've ever worked in a business, the likelihood of you having accessed a shared directory is pretty high. Usually, those shared folders are from someone else's desktop computer or maybe even a server.
Did you know that you can do the same thing on your home network, regardless of what operating system you use? If you have several computers on your home or business network, and you want to be able to share files and folders from your Linux operating system, the process isn't nearly as hard as you might think. And although some Linux distributions strive to make this a point-and-click affair, they tend to fall short of the mark.
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That's when you need to turn to Samba and the terminal window. But I'm going to show you how this is done in simple terms. All you'll have to do is copy and paste a few commands and a configuration. Once it's finished, anyone on your home or business LAN should be able to access those shared folders and files.
What you'll need: To make this work, you'll need a running instance of Linux and a user with sudo privileges. I'll demonstrate the process with the user-friendly Ubuntu Desktop 22.04, but the process will be the same for most distributions (the only exception being the installation of Samba).
With that said, let's get to the sharing.
The first thing we must do is install Samba. We're going to do that from the command line, so log into your Linux desktop and open your terminal window application.
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With the terminal open, install Samba with:
sudo apt-get install samba -y
If you're on a Fedora-based (or RHEL-based) desktop, that installation would be:
sudo dnf install samba -y
You might find that Samba is already installed by default. Either way, you're ready to continue.
Start and enable the Samba service with:
sudo systemctl enable --now smbd
Some Linux file managers allow you to share folders directly from within the GUI application.
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I'm going to share with you the manual process, on the off-chance your file manager doesn't include that option.
Let's say the folder you want to share is the Public folder in your home directory (so /home/USER/Public -- where USER is your username). Back at the terminal window, we're going to open the Samba configuration file, using the nano text editor, with the command:
sudo nano /etc/samba.smb.conf
At the bottom of that file, paste the following:
[Public]path = /home/USER/Publicbrowsable = yeswritable = yesread only = noforce create mode = 0666force directory mode = 0777
Where USER is your username.
Note: If you don't want other users to be able to make changes to files and folders, set writable to no.
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Save and close the file.
With the configuration file edited, it's time to restart Samba with:
sudo systemctl restart smbd
At this point, your Samba share will be visible to the network, but won't allow anyone to access it. Let's fix that.
I'm going to assume you are the only user on your Linux machine. However, you don't want to be handing out your login credentials to other users and you don't want to allow anonymous access to the shared directory (as that could be a security issue). So, what do we do? Let's create a new account on your machine that can be used by others to access the files and folders.
At the terminal window, create a user named guestshare with the command:
sudo adduser guestshare
Give that user a unique and strong password, name it Samba Guest (or something like that), and then just hit Enter on your keyboard for the remaining questions.
Next, we have to enable that user for Samba, so run the following two commands:
sudo smbpasswd -a guestsharesudo smbpasswd -e guestshare
The first command above adds the user and the second command enables the user.
After entering the first command, you'll be prompted to add a new password for Samba. You can use the same password you added when you created the guestshare account.
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Any user on your network should now be able to access that folder using the guestshare credentials.
And that's all there is to creating a shared folder on Linux from within your user home directory. Not only can users see the files and folders within, but they can also create and modify them.