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author | Andrew Tridgell <tridge@samba.org> | 2010-11-10 09:57:25 +1100 |
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committer | Andrew Tridgell <tridge@samba.org> | 2010-11-09 23:38:28 +0000 |
commit | f7e54c014e8d62356639b366e14373b33ec1ba17 (patch) | |
tree | 5e13178ac66b37718232258f1c7c8790b9356914 /howto4.txt | |
parent | 13020349e16e7692fdbd9b88e3f158edd2e42736 (diff) | |
download | samba-f7e54c014e8d62356639b366e14373b33ec1ba17.tar.gz samba-f7e54c014e8d62356639b366e14373b33ec1ba17.tar.bz2 samba-f7e54c014e8d62356639b366e14373b33ec1ba17.zip |
s4: point to the wiki howto for s4
Pair-Programmed-With: Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@samba.org>
Autobuild-User: Andrew Tridgell <tridge@samba.org>
Autobuild-Date: Tue Nov 9 23:38:28 UTC 2010 on sn-devel-104
Diffstat (limited to 'howto4.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | howto4.txt | 218 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 214 deletions
diff --git a/howto4.txt b/howto4.txt index 71b712e598..6a40d612e1 100644 --- a/howto4.txt +++ b/howto4.txt @@ -1,217 +1,7 @@ -Samba4 developer howto -====================== +Samba4 howto +============ -tridge@samba.org, December 2004 +For current versions of the Samba4 HOWTO, please see our wiki: -A more up to date version of this howto can be found in the wiki -at http://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Samba4/HOWTO. + http://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Samba4/HOWTO -This is a very basic document on how to setup a simple Samba4 -server. This is aimed at developers who are already familiar with -Samba3 and wish to participate in Samba4 development. This is not -aimed at production use of Samba4. - -.. contents:: - -Step 1: download Samba4 ------------------------ - -If you have downloaded the Samba4 code via a tarball released from the -samba.org website, Step 1 has already been completed for you. For testing -with the version released in the tarball, you may continue on to Step 2. Note -that the references below to the top-level directory named "samba4" will -instead be based on the name of the tarball downloaded (e.g. -"samba-4.0.0alpha3" for the tarball samba-4.0.0alpha3.tar.gz). - -There are 2 methods of doing this: - - method 1: "rsync -avz samba.org::ftp/unpacked/samba_4_0_test/ samba4" - - method 2: "git clone git://git.samba.org/samba.git samba4; cd samba4 && git checkout -b v4-0-test origin/v4-0-test; cd .." - -both methods will create a directory called "samba4" in the current -directory. If you don't have rsync or git then install one of them. - -Since only released versions of Samba contain a pregenerated configure script, -you will have to generate it by hand:: - - $ cd samba4/source - $ ./autogen.sh - -Note that the above rsync command will give you a checked out git -repository. So if you also have git you can update it to the latest -version at some future date using:: - - $ cd samba4 - $ git pull origin v4-0-test - -Step 2: compile Samba4 ----------------------- - -Recommended optional development libraries: -- acl and xattr development libraries -- gnutls -- readline - -Run this:: - - $ cd samba4/source - $ ./configure - $ make - - -Step 2bis: recompile Samba4 ---------------------------- - -This only applies for those who are recompiling Samba4 after updating the code -(using "rsync" or "git"). - -Due to some imperfections in our actual build system (hope that this changes -soon) it is recommended to perform this after the source upgrade: - - $ cd samba4/source - $ make clean - $ ./autogen.sh - $ ./configure - $ make idl_full - $ make - -Not all the steps are needed every time but doing so makes sure that you won't -have old compiled objects standing in the way and cause malfunctions. -It also makes sure that changes in the IDL files are correctly catched up. - -Step 3: install Samba4 ----------------------- - -Run this as a user who have permission to write to the install -directory (defaults to /usr/local/samba). Use --prefix option to -configure above to change this. - -:: - - # make install - -Step 4: provision Samba4 ------------------------- - -The "provision" step sets up a basic user database. Be warned that this -removes all preexisting database data (if any)! - -It must be run as a user with permission to write to the install directory -(typically "root"). - -:: - - # cd source - # ./setup/provision --realm=YOUR.REALM --domain=YOURDOM \ - # --adminpass=SOMEPASSWORD --server-role='domain controller' - -'YOURDOM' is the NT4 style domain name. 'YOUR.REALM' is your kerberos -realm, which is typically your DNS domain name. - -If you provisioned a more recent Samba4 system already you should be able to -use the procedures shown in "upgrading-samba4.txt" to upgrade it and keep all -data. - -When you are using Samba3 at the moment you could try the experimental script -"upgrade_from_s3" under the "setup" directory of the source -distribution (it isn't included in binary distributions yet). - -Step 5: Create a simple smb.conf --------------------------------- - -The provisioning will create a very simple smb.conf with no shares by -default. You will need to update it to add at least one share. For -example:: - - [test] - path = /data/test - read only = no - -Step 6: starting Samba4 ------------------------ - -The simplest is to just run "samba", but as a developer you may find -the following more useful:: - - # samba -i -M single - -that means "start samba without messages in stdout, and running a -single process. That mode of operation makes debugging samba with gdb -particularly easy. - -Note that now it is no longer necessary to have an instance of nmbd -from Samba 3 running. If you are running any smbd or nmbd processes -they need to be stopped before starting samba from Samba 4. - -Make sure you put the bin and sbin directories from your new install -in your $PATH. Make sure you run the right version! - -Step 7: testing Samba4 ----------------------- - -try this command:: - - $ smbclient //localhost/test -Uadministrator%SOMEPASSWORD - - -NOTE about filesystem support ------------------------------ - -To use the advanced features of Samba4 you need a filesystem that -supports both the "user" and "system" xattr namespaces. - -If you run Linux with a 2.6 kernel and ext3 this means you need to -include the option "user_xattr" in your /etc/fstab. For example:: - - /dev/hda3 /home ext3 user_xattr 1 1 - -You also need to compile your kernel with the XATTR and SECURITY -options for your filesystem. For ext3 that means you need:: - - CONFIG_EXT3_FS_XATTR=y - CONFIG_EXT3_FS_SECURITY=y - -If you are running a Linux 2.6 kernel with CONFIG_IKCONFIG_PROC -defined you can check this with the following command:: - - $ zgrep CONFIG_EXT3_FS /proc/config.gz - -If you don't have a filesystem with xattr support, then you can -simulate it by using the option:: - - posix:eadb = /usr/local/samba/eadb.tdb - -that will place all extra file attributes (NT ACLs, DOS EAs, streams -etc), in that tdb. It is not efficient, and doesn't scale well, but at -least it gives you a choice when you don't have a modern filesystem. - -Testing your filesystem ------------------------ - -To test your filesystem support, install the 'attr' package and run -the following 4 commands as root:: - - # touch test.txt - # setfattr -n user.test -v test test.txt - # setfattr -n security.test -v test2 test.txt - # getfattr -d test.txt - # getfattr -n security.test -d test.txt - -You should see output like this:: - - # file: test.txt - user.test="test" - - # file: test.txt - security.test="test2" - -If you get any "Operation not supported" errors then it means your -kernel is not configured correctly, or your filesystem is not mounted -with the right options. - -If you get any "Operation not permitted" errors then it probably means -you didn't try the test as root. - -.. - vim: ft=rest |