This is what worked for me. I went through trial and error completely reformatting the drive each time until I got a clean install and it worked great. Fedora 31 will not show a mouse cursor on a Supermicro server but Fedora 32 (beta) does so I used it there as well. Setting up linux cinnamon 32 on a laptop/workstation (Mine was an Acer 5745g with nvidia GTforce 330m) I used btrfs file system – swap double the RAM size and 2GB boot partition – it works great I used a 256gb SSD Hostnamectl set-hostname mynewcomputername (where mynewcomputername is the new hostname) Disable selinux (it’s a pain in the ass) edit /etc/selinux config file set selinux to disabled and reboot SAMBA – what a problem (you can just copy these commands into a terminal and run ******) dnf –y install samba systemctl enable smb systemctl start smb systemctl enable nmb systemctl start nmb Open port with using service file of firewall-cmd. (script again *****) $ sudo firewall-cmd --add-service=samba –permanent $ sudo firewall-cmd --reload firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=137/tcp --permanent firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=137/udp –permanent firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=138/tcp --permanent firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=138/udp –permanent firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=139/tcp --permanent firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=139/udp –permanent firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=445/tcp --permanent firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=445/udp --permanent firewall-cmd --add-source-port=137/tcp --permanent firewall-cmd --add-source-port=138/tcp --permanent firewall-cmd --add-source-port=139/tcp --permanent firewall-cmd --add-source-port=445/tcp --permanent Samba users and shares allowing access to Samba user above # smbpasswd -a testuser (where testuser is your username) New SMB password: Enter a password Retype new SMB password: Enter the same password again Added user testuser.
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Open port with using service file of firewall-cmd. (script ...
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This is what worked for me. I went through trial and error completely reformatting the drive each time
until I got a clean install and it worked great. Fedora 31 will not show a mouse cursor on a Supermicro
server but Fedora 32 (beta) does so I used it there as well.
Setting up linux cinnamon 32 on a laptop/workstation (Mine was an Acer 5745g with nvidia GTforce
330m)
I used btrfs file system – swap double the RAM size and 2GB boot partition – it works great
I used a 256gb SSD
Hostnamectl set-hostname mynewcomputername (where mynewcomputername is the new hostname)
Disable selinux (it’s a pain in the ass)
edit /etc/selinux config file set selinux to disabled and reboot
SAMBA – what a problem (you can just copy these commands into a terminal and run ******)
dnf –y install samba
systemctl enable smb
systemctl start smb
systemctl enable nmb
systemctl start nmb
Open port with using service file of firewall-cmd. (script again *****)
copy wsdd.service with WORKGROUP name in it to /etc/systemd/system
systemctl enable wsdd
systemctl start wsdd
REBOOT at this point
To Access older Linux devices from Windows 10
Control Panel, Programs, Windows Features, turn on SMB1 CIFS client
Reboot – ironically these were required for the full release of Fedora 32. For older client access add this to the /etc/samba/smb.conf in global section
client min protocol = CORE
server min protocol = CORE
max protocol = SMB2
Systemctl reenable smb nmb
systemctl restart smb nmb
3 If SELinux kept on
enable access to home directory without samba_share_t label.
$ setsebool -P samba_enable_home_dirs on
setsebool –P samba_export_all_rw=1
service smb status
service nmb status
Therefore smbclient could be convinced to connect by:
$ smbclient --user=testuser --ip-address=127.0.0.1 --option='client min
protocol = CORE' //testhost/C testtest
Or setting 'client min protocol = CORE' globally
in /etc/samba/smb.conf.
**************** To allow Remote Desktop Access to this machine: ***********************
Installing HandBrake/MakeMKV (Must do this BEFORE rpmfusion repo is
added)
To install the repository on a supported Fedora distribution, run as root the following command: dnf config-manager --add-repo=https://negativo17.org/repos/fedora-
multimedia.repo
To install the repository on CentOS/RHEL: yum-config-manager --add-repo=https://negativo17.org/repos/epel-
multimedia.repo 5
yum/dnf -y install HandBrake-gui HandBrake-cli
yum/dnf -y install makemkv
Registering MakeMKV to avoid expiration
Please use the provided beta registration key published by the developers: