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Free, Open Source, User-Mode SMB 1.0/CIFS, SMB 2.0 and SMB 2.1 Client Library

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SMBLibrary

This is a fork of Tal Aloni's SMBLibrary that has been stripped down to just the client library, utilities, and tests and converted to .NET Standard 2.1

Changes From the Original Library

  • SMBServer project removed
  • SMBLibrary.Win32 removed
  • SMBLibrary converted to .NET Standard 2.1
  • Utilities converted to .NET Standard 2.1
  • SMBLibrary.Tests converted to .NET Core 3.0
  • SMBLibrary.Tests converted to use xunit instead of MSTest
  • ClientMaxTransactSize, ClientMaxReadSize, and ClientMaxWriteSize changed to public so they can be set by anything that uses the library. Currently, this has to stay set to 65536 since the SMB server doesn't seem to be honoring the value agreed upon duing negotionation. Hopefully this can be fixed at some point.

The original readme:

About SMBLibrary:

SMBLibrary is an open-source C# SMB 1.0/CIFS, SMB 2.0 and SMB 2.1 server and client implementation.
SMBLibrary gives .NET developers an easy way to share a directory / file system / virtual file system, with any operating system that supports the SMB protocol.
SMBLibrary is modular, you can take advantage of Integrated Windows Authentication and the Windows storage subsystem on a Windows host or use independent implementations that allow for cross-platform compatibility.
SMBLibrary shares can be accessed from any Windows version since Windows NT 4.0.

Supported SMB / CIFS transport methods:

• NetBIOS over TCP (port 139)
• Direct TCP hosting (port 445)

'NetBIOS over TCP' and 'Direct TCP hosting' are almost identical, the only differences:
  • A 'session request' packet is initiating the NBT connection.
  • A 'keep alive' packet is sent from time to time over NBT connections.
  • SMB2: Direct TCP hosting supports large MTUs.

Notes:

By default, Windows already use ports 139 and 445. there are several techniques to free / utilize those ports:

Method 1: Disable Windows File and Printer Sharing server completely:
Windows XP/2003:
  1. For every network adapter: Uncheck 'File and Printer Sharing for Microsoft Networks".
  2. Navigate to 'HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\NetBT\Parameters' and set 'SMBDeviceEnabled' to '0' (this will free port 445).
  3. Reboot.
Windows 7/8/2008/2012:

Disable the "Server" service (p.s. "TCP\IP NETBIOS Helper" should be enabled).

Method 2: Use Windows File Sharing AND SMBLibrary:

Windows bind port 139 to the first IP addres of every adapter, while port 445 is bound globally. This means that if you'll disable port 445 (or block it using a firewall), you'll be able to use a different service on port 139 for every IP address.

Additional Notes:
  • To free port 139 for a given adapter, go to 'Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Properties' > Advanced > WINS, and select 'Disable NetBIOS over TCP/IP'. Uncheck 'File and Printer Sharing for Microsoft Networks' to ensure Windows will not answer to SMB traffic on port 445 for this adapter.

  • It's important to note that disabling NetBIOS over TCP/IP will also disable NetBIOS name service for that adapter (a.k.a. WINS), This service uses UDP port 137. SMBLibrary offers a name service of its own.

  • You can install a virtual network adapter driver for Windows to be used solely with SMBLibrary:

    • You can install the 'Microsoft Loopback adapter' and use it for server-only communication with SMBLibrary.
Windows 7/8/2008/2012:
  • It's possible to prevent Windows from using port 445 by removing all of the '\Device\Tcpip_{..}' and '\Device\Tcpip6_{..}' entries from the `Bind' registry key under 'HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\LanmanServer\Linkage'.

  • if you want localhost access from Windows explorer to work as expected, you must specify the IP address that you selected (\\127.0.0.1 or \\localhost will not work as expected), in addition, I have observed that when connecting to the first IP address of a given adapter, Windows will only attempt to connect to port 445.

Method 3: Use an IP address that is invisible to Windows File Sharing:

Using PCap.Net you can programmatically setup a virtual Network adapter and intercept SMB traffic (similar to how a virtual machine operates), You should use the ARP protocol to notify the network about the new IP address, and then process the incoming SMB traffic using SMBLibrary, good luck!

Using SMBLibrary:

Any directory / filesystem / object you wish to share must implement the IFileSystem interface (or the lower-level INTFileStore interface).
You can share anything from actual directories to custom objects, as long as they expose a directory structure.

Contact:

If you have any question, feel free to contact me.
Tal Aloni [email protected]

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Free, Open Source, User-Mode SMB 1.0/CIFS, SMB 2.0 and SMB 2.1 Client Library

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