OK, I have found an answer myself.

As this is absolutely not obvious from the docs and HOWTOs and whatever, the reason this thing asks for password is because it cannot map guest user to the owner of the directory being shared.

I have NTFS partitions which I need to mount RW so I used the following setup in my /etc/fstab:

/dev/sdb1  /media/disk1  ntfs defaults,noexec,noatime,relatime,utf8,uid=1000,gid=1000 0       2
/dev/sdb2  /media/disk2  ntfs defaults,noexec,noatime,relatime,utf8,uid=1000,gid=1000 0       2

The most important pieces of config are uid and gid (maybe only uid, don't know). They are set to the UID and GID of the user jonnie set up on the server (obviously not root). So, when ntfs-3g will mount these disks, everything will be owned by him.

After that, I have added this user to the Samba registry (or maybe created new identical one, don't care):

# smbpasswd -a jonnie

It asked for password, I have entered the same as for the main system.

After that, I have added the force user and force group settings to the smb.conf:

[global]
  workgroup = WORKGROUP
  netbios name = HOMESERV
  security = user
  map to guest = Bad User

[disk1]
  comment = Disk 1 on 400GB HDD
  path = /media/disk1
  browsable = yes
  guest ok = yes
  read only = no
  create mask = 666
  directory mask = 777
  force user = jonnie
  force group = jonnie

[disk2]
  comment = Disk 2 on 400GB HDD
  path = /media/disk2
  browsable = yes
  guest ok = yes
  read only = no
  create mask = 666
  directory mask = 777
  force user = jonnie
  force group = jonnie

So, most important piece of config relevant to me was force user.

Courtesy of the Samba HOWTO

Answer from hijarian on serverfault.com
Top answer
1 of 5
36

OK, I have found an answer myself.

As this is absolutely not obvious from the docs and HOWTOs and whatever, the reason this thing asks for password is because it cannot map guest user to the owner of the directory being shared.

I have NTFS partitions which I need to mount RW so I used the following setup in my /etc/fstab:

/dev/sdb1  /media/disk1  ntfs defaults,noexec,noatime,relatime,utf8,uid=1000,gid=1000 0       2
/dev/sdb2  /media/disk2  ntfs defaults,noexec,noatime,relatime,utf8,uid=1000,gid=1000 0       2

The most important pieces of config are uid and gid (maybe only uid, don't know). They are set to the UID and GID of the user jonnie set up on the server (obviously not root). So, when ntfs-3g will mount these disks, everything will be owned by him.

After that, I have added this user to the Samba registry (or maybe created new identical one, don't care):

# smbpasswd -a jonnie

It asked for password, I have entered the same as for the main system.

After that, I have added the force user and force group settings to the smb.conf:

[global]
  workgroup = WORKGROUP
  netbios name = HOMESERV
  security = user
  map to guest = Bad User

[disk1]
  comment = Disk 1 on 400GB HDD
  path = /media/disk1
  browsable = yes
  guest ok = yes
  read only = no
  create mask = 666
  directory mask = 777
  force user = jonnie
  force group = jonnie

[disk2]
  comment = Disk 2 on 400GB HDD
  path = /media/disk2
  browsable = yes
  guest ok = yes
  read only = no
  create mask = 666
  directory mask = 777
  force user = jonnie
  force group = jonnie

So, most important piece of config relevant to me was force user.

Courtesy of the Samba HOWTO

2 of 5
6

The config can be shorter:

Create unix user jonnie

sudo useradd jonnie -s /usr/sbin/nologin

Create smbuser

sudo smbpasswd -a jonnie

Create the Linux directory to share

mkdir /mysmbshare

Change the owner of the directory to jonnie

sudo chown jonnie /mysmbshare

smb.conf

[global]
  workgroup = MyWorkGroup
  server string = Hello, use me
  security = user
  map to guest = Bad User
  guest account = jonnie
  passdb backend = tdbsam
  
[the_public_share]
   path = /mysmbshare
   writable = yes
   printable = no
   public = yes

All files are owned by jonnie and everyone has rw access to the files.

Discussions

How to make this Samba share accessible without any user/password login? - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange
I have modified /etc/samba/smb.conf to create a [public] share: [global] workgroup = WORKGROUP log file = /var/log/samba/log.%m max log size = 1000 logging = file panic action = /usr/share/samba/pa... More on unix.stackexchange.com
🌐 unix.stackexchange.com
November 11, 2020
How to Make Samba List All Shares Without Authentication
Samba 4.19.5 on Opensuse Tumbleweed, server name HOGSTORE. A large number of Windows 10 Pro (22H2) desktops as clients on workgroup 802MAGIC. I want all browseable shares on this server to be visible (not necessarily accessible) without a username/password prompt in Windows Explorer. More on forums.opensuse.org
🌐 forums.opensuse.org
0
0
March 3, 2024
Connect to RHEL SAMBA share without username/password on Windows - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange
Also public is a synonym for guest ok and only guest is a synonym for guest only. ... To recheck your configuration log out and in on your windows client, that the connection is closed. Also your should know, that your have to add the authenticated user to your guest share (when you have them), ... More on unix.stackexchange.com
🌐 unix.stackexchange.com
July 3, 2018
View Samba shares without authentication
make sure the WORKGROUP= is the same on both truenas and client. On truenas I have guest access clicked and am able to see the shares on truenas. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/linuxmint
6
11
October 24, 2022
Top answer
1 of 3
39

Yes, Samba can be a pain. I use it for my home as well as work.

The first thing you should do is start over from scratch to make troubleshooting easier. You can do this by running the command below in the terminal.

dpkg-reconfigure samba-common

Then go to the folder on the samba server that you want to share, and make sure that the user nobody can read and write to the share. This is because the user nobody is the username windows clients use. I usually just make a folder in the / directory just to keep things simple, but the "correct" way would be to make a subfolder of /srv. If you have not modified the permissions already, use the commands below.

sudo chown -R nobody.nogroup the_folder
sudo chmod -R 777 the_folder

You can also test to see if nobody can write to the directory by running the following command as root.

sudo -u nobody touch test_file

Edit your /etc/samba/smb.conf and add the lines below the [printers] share definition.

[share_name]              ;the share name can be what ever you want
browseable = yes
path = the_complete_path_to_the_shared_folder
guest ok = yes
read only = no
create mask = 777

Then when you are done save it and run the following.

testparm

This will will warn you if you made any typos. Next, you just need to restart the samba services.

sudo systemctl restart smbd
sudo systemctl restart nmbd
2 of 3
1

I realise this is an old thread but it helped me to solve the issue of creating and sharing a folder with no login required. Plenty of other threads out there but they are misleading. I've given a semi biginners guide below as there are just so many small differences with other posts out there that I thought it might help someone else who's almost given up and pulled half their hair out :-)

For me, on a default AWS Linux image (Amazon Linux AMI 2017.03.0 (HVM)) I had to create the folder in the root dir / as I could not assign the permissions if created under the default ec2-user. When assigning the permissions I had to use nobody.nobody as nogroup didn't work. lastly I had to include map to guest = Bad User under the gloabl standalone server section where by default it says security = user

So the complete steps would be on deployment of a new server:

install samba if required

create the folder and assign permissions

sudo su
cd /
mkdir the_folder
chown -R nobody.nobody the_folder
chmod -R 777 the_folder

edit the samba file

nano /etc/samba/smb.conf

find the line # ---- Standalone Server Options ---- append "map to guest"

security = user
passdb backend = tdbsam
map to guest = Bad User

Under the section #==== Share Definitions ==== add your share

[SHARENAME]
path = the_folder
read only = no
create mask = 777
guest ok = yes

Save the file and restart samaba

/etc/init.d/smb restart
Top answer
1 of 2
4

I finally found the solution:

[global]
workgroup = WORKGROUP
netbios name = NAS
log file = /var/log/samba/log.%m
max log size = 1000
logging = file
panic action = /usr/share/samba/panic-action %d
server role = standalone server
obey pam restrictions = yes
unix password sync = yes
passwd program = /usr/bin/passwd %u
passwd chat = *Enter\snew\s*\spassword:* %n\n *Retype\snew\s*\spassword:* %n\n *password\supdated\ssuccessfully* .
pam password change = yes
map to guest = bad user
usershare allow guests = yes
[public]
path = /home/share
public = yes
guest only = yes
writable = yes
force create mode = 0666
force directory mode = 0777
browseable = yes

creates a share without any user/password login.

You can access it in Windows with \\NAS\public.

2 of 2
0

I use this. The script uses ACLs to gives all files in the directory to the Debian group "sambashare". This simplifies the exchange of files between local and remote users, because local and remote users can read and write all files in the directory.

mkdir /home/sambashare
chown nobody:sambashare /home/sambashare
chmod 2775 /home/sambashare

setfacl -R -dm u::rwx,g::rwx,o::r-x /home/sambashare
setfacl -R -m u::rwx,g::rwx,o::r-x /home/sambashare

cat >> /etc/samba/smb.conf <<EOF

[public]
   comment = Public Share
   path = /home/sambashare
   browsable = yes
   guest ok = yes
   read only = no
   create mask = 0664
   directory mask = 2775
   force create mode = 0660
   force directory mode = 2770
   force group = sambashare
   inherit acls = yes
   map acl inherit = yes
EOF

systemctl enable smbd
systemctl enable nmbd

usermod -aG sambashare localuser
🌐
SambaWiki
wiki.samba.org › index.php › Setting_up_a_Share_Without_Authentication
Setting up a Share Without Authentication - SambaWiki
For details about setting up a share that users can access without authenticating, see Setting up Samba as a Standalone Server.
🌐
openSUSE Forums
forums.opensuse.org › english › network/internet
How to Make Samba List All Shares Without Authentication - Network/Internet - openSUSE Forums
March 3, 2024 - Samba 4.19.5 on Opensuse Tumbleweed, server name HOGSTORE. A large number of Windows 10 Pro (22H2) desktops as clients on workgroup 802MAGIC. I want all browseable shares on this server to be visible (not necessarily a…
🌐
TechRepublic
techrepublic.com › home › software
How to create a passwordless guest share in Samba - TechRepublic
March 14, 2022 - To make sure Samba is only listening to that interface locate the below line: ... [public] path = /home/share public = yes guest only = yes writable = yes force create mode = 0666 force directory mode = 0777 browseable = yes
Find elsewhere
Top answer
1 of 1
2

Basically, what I think I want but don't know how to do is to have Samba map any user that connects to a specific user on the server (I think it can be done with a user map file), and then additionally, which I haven't found out how to do, have it accept any password as valid (we have PCs with the same user account names and different passwords).

Both can be done using the same map to guest = bad user option in Samba, but unfortunately, "emulating" Guest access in this way is exactly what "Guest" access is in SMB.

One problem is that SMB servers do not receive passwords at all; they use NTLM when outside an AD domain and Kerberos within a domain. NTLM is a challenge/response protocol that additionally produces a session key to both peers, which SMB then uses to authenticate each packet (as well as the entire handshake in SMBv3 – this provides a form of MITM protection when negotiating the encryption key for SMBv3).

However, for challenge/response protocols like NTLM or CHAP to work properly, the server must already know the user's password (shared secret) – without it, the server cannot derive the NTLM session key from just the client's response alone (being able to do so would defeat the point of the protocol), and therefore cannot correctly 'sign' the SMB messages.

So the way "Guest" access in SMB works is that the server must indicate to the client, "Your credentials didn't work but I accepted you as guest anyway", so that the client would know to not require SMB message signing. If the server accepted arbitrary NTLM responses but didn't send the "Guest access" indication (if I'm reading the protocol docs right), this would result in the client failing to connect anyway.

In short, you cannot really emulate guest access without implementing actual guest access. Selecting map to guest = bad user means Samba has to indicate that this is a guest session.

(Although according to docs, only the Enterprise or Education editions of Windows 10 disables this by default, while Home/Pro does not – and if you do not have an AD domain, I think it's unlikely that you'll be using Enterprise...)


What you could do instead is the opposite: Windows does not require the logged-in user to be used for SMB – on failure it will prompt you for credentials (and will even let you save them), so you could use normal SMB authentication but create a single account with a password that everyone knows (write it next to your office Wi-Fi password). You can have a batch script to pre-save the password using cmdkey.

(This also works when accessing a domain-joined file server via Kerberos.)

🌐
OneUptime
oneuptime.com › home › blog › how to set up samba with guest access on ubuntu
How to Set Up Samba with Guest Access on Ubuntu
March 2, 2026 - [public] comment = Public Guest Share path = /srv/samba/public # Allow guest access without authentication guest ok = yes # Only guest connections (no authenticated users) guest only = yes # Allow browsing the share browseable = yes # Read-only - change to no for writable read only = yes # Force all files to be created with these permissions force create mode = 0664 force directory mode = 0775
🌐
SambaWiki
wiki.samba.org › index.php › Setting_up_Samba_as_a_Standalone_Server
Setting up Samba as a Standalone Server - SambaWiki
a share that requires authentication against a local user database on the Samba host. The following is a minimal configuration for a Samba standalone server that only allows guest access: [global] map to guest = Bad User log file = /var/log/samba/%m log level = 1 server role = standalone server ...
🌐
Google Groups
groups.google.com › g › linux.samba › c › ZzrOwdYwYzA
[Samba] Access to a share resource without password
On Mon, Feb 28, 2011 at 12:05:32AM -0300, J. L. Cabral wrote: > Marco, I followed your instructions and I couldn't connect, my config is: > > [global] > workgroup = CASA > netbios name = bangkok > security = user > passdb backend = tdbsam > map to guest = bad password > username map = /etc/samba/smbusers > > [grabar] > comment = file sharing > path = /var/share ... > browseable = yes > public = yes > writeable = yes > create mode = 0644 > force user = pepe > force group = pepe > > I have: > > drwxrwxrwx root nobody /var/share > > and I add user pepe: > > # useradd -s /sbin/nologin pepe > > After that I restart samba: > > # /etc/init.d/smb restart > > and fro Windows XP machine I do: > > net use X: \\10.4.133.109\grabar > > and after that I see the resource in my Explorer
🌐
LinuxQuestions.org
linuxquestions.org › questions › linux-newbie-8 › share-the-folder-in-samba-server-without-authentication-4175597200
Share the folder in samba server without authentication
January 11, 2017 - I have a linux server running samba server and want to make a share and I don't want that the login dialog box appear in the windows box when try to
🌐
Raspberry Pi Forums
forums.raspberrypi.com › board index › projects › networking and servers
anonymous passwordless samba share - Raspberry Pi Forums
Yes, don't share a directory in a users home directory, only the user will be able to traverse to it, I would create a directory under /srv and share that. Also check that '[global]' in the smb.conf file contains this line: ... [V] path = /srv/V guest ok = yes guest only = yes read only = no With that, any unknown Samba users should be able to connect to the share, provided they are not Windows pro users (they have guest access turned off by default).
🌐
STD Rocks
std.rocks › gnulinux_samba_no_password.html
Configure a Samba Share Without Password on Debian
April 12, 2025 - This guide explains how to set up a Samba server on Debian without authentication, allowing public access to shared folders.
🌐
PuckieStyle
puckiestyle.nl › create-a-public-samba-share
Create A Public Samba Share – PuckieStyle
January 23, 2020 - This brief tutorial shows students and new users how to create a public Samba shares on Ubuntu server so everyone can access without authenticating.
Top answer
1 of 5
10

Happened to stumble across this thread on the Ubuntu forums, and thought it might help. It explains the steps that happen behind the scenes:

In Windows the client's username and password is automatically sent when it browses for shares - this is done without the user's knowledge. That forces Samba to deal with the sent credentials even though it's a guest share that requires no authentication.

When that username is passed Samba will search through it's password database for that user:

  • If there is no match to the username the client user is tagged a "Bad User" and converted ( mapped ) to the guest account which by default is "nobody".

  • If it finds a match to the username and there is a samba password that matches the one sent by the Windows client then the Windows user automatically gains access although not as an anonymous user which is why you needed to add "force user = nobody" to your share definition.

  • If it finds a match to the username but the samba password does not match exactly the password that's automatically sent by the Windows client then you will be prompted for a password - even for a guest share.

Try adding force user = nobody to your share definition, and see if that does it.

Edit 02/20/2013:

Is testparm returning an exit code of something other than zero? All the same, I would go ahead and give that area of the config a good, hard look. Also, I'm not sure how case-sensitive smb.conf is, but every example I see (for example) of map to guest = Bad User has the B and U capitalized. Check-out the Samba man pages for the options you are using, and double-check everything.

2 of 5
10

This is how OpenElec is configured. Should do what you are asking for. (even if it is a year later...maybe it will help the next one) Just tweak the share settings as needed.

[global]
  server string = YOURSERVERNAME
  workgroup = WORKGROUP
  netbios name = %h
  security = share
  guest account = root
  socket options = TCP_NODELAY IPTOS_LOWDELAY SO_RCVBUF=65536 SO_SNDBUF=65536
  smb ports = 445
  max protocol = SMB2
  min receivefile size = 16384
  deadtime = 30
  os level = 20
  mangled names = no
  syslog only = yes
  syslog = 2
  name resolve order = lmhosts wins bcast host
  preferred master = auto
  domain master = auto
  local master = yes
  printcap name = /dev/null
  load printers = no
  browseable = yes
  writeable = yes
  printable = no
  encrypt passwords = true
  enable core files = no
  passdb backend = smbpasswd
  smb encrypt = disabled
  use sendfile = yes

[share]
comment = Share
path = /share
available = yes
browsable = yes
writable = yes
public = yes
🌐
Reddit
reddit.com › r/linuxmint › view samba shares without authentication
r/linuxmint on Reddit: View Samba shares without authentication
October 24, 2022 -

tl;dr: I did some tinkering and Nemo started asking for authentication even when simply trying to view available shares on the server.

Setup: NAS with several Samba shares, one of which allows guest access; desktop with Mint 21 Cinnamon.

Previously, it was possible to view network shares in Nemo when accessing the server via Network window ("network:///") or via its samba address (e.g. "smb://nas"). What I would immediately get is a list of shared folders, e.g. "share1" etc. - pretty normal behavior.

Then, I was trying to change thumbnailers and build ffmpeg with libsmbclient support, installing various stuff and so on, it might be possible to trace some of the steps via bash_history but I doubt it will help.

Now, "authentication required" window pops up when trying to view shares (e.g. by accessing "smb://nas") with no option for anonymous access. I can't even see what shares are available without login info.

I tried rolling back to an earlier system snapshot and it didn't help. Also, there's another local user and the behavior is as expected for that user - no login popup when accessing the server. So it must be something within home directory of my user that's making Nemo ask for login. What could it be, what settings are responsible for this and is there a way to change or reset them?

EDIT:

Solved with

$ sudo killall gvfsd

Got the idea from

https://forums.debian.net/viewtopic.php?t=150964

Still don't know what was the root cause, my best guess is some PID file got stuck somewhere or something like that.

🌐
Rockstor
forum.rockstor.com › support
Configure Samba to List Available Shares Without Asking For Password - Support - Rockstor Community Forum
February 28, 2024 - I can’t figure out how to get my Rockstor Samba shares to display in Windows without it asking me for a username and password. I’m not referring to authentication for each individual share, I just want to SEE what shares…
🌐
The Penguin Trail
amazingrando.wordpress.com › 2007 › 06 › 03 › share-folders-via-samba-without-a-password-easy
Share folders via Samba without a password – easy! | The Penguin Trail
July 8, 2007 - Here’s how share a folder without a password or login: In a terminal type sudo gedit /etc/samba/smb.conf (kubuntu users type kdesu kate /etc/samba/smb.conf) Find the ### Authentication ### section (might be called Administration in older versions of Samba), where it says security = user