I have already set the "max smbd processes" to 10, and "deadtime" to 15. But that does not seem to help.
Here are some additional details that have come up:
My computer has been online this morning for about 2 hours, and already there are 85 smbd processes. If I use the xSMB application (from
http://www.xeir.com/) to view active SMB connections, I get a list of about 80 processes, in this form:
*
init_iconv: Conversion from UTF-16LE to CP0 not supported
init_iconv: Attempting to replace with conversion from UTF-16LE to ASCII
init_iconv: Conversion from UTF-8 to CP0 not supported
init_iconv: Attempting to replace with conversion from ASCII to ASCII
init_iconv: Conversion from US-ASCII to CP0 not supported
init_iconv: Attempting to replace with conversion from ASCII to ASCII
init_iconv: Conversion from CP0 to UTF-16LE not supported
init_iconv: Attempting to replace with conversion from ASCII to UTF-16LE
init_iconv: Conversion from CP0 to UTF-8 not supported
init_iconv: Attempting to replace with conversion from ASCII to ASCII
init_iconv: Conversion from CP0 to US-ASCII not supported
init_iconv: Attempting to replace with conversion from ASCII to ASCII
*
...and so forth.
It appears that these are spawned whenever Windows users attempt (unsuccessfully) to connect to my server. I have no idea why this started happening all of a sudden in the past week or so.
Until recently I was successfully sharing folders with Windows users on the network. Now no one is able to connect to my computer, even though its NetBIOS name shows up in the Windows network browser. OS X users are still able to connect through afp, but not through smb.