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-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
-<HTML
-><HEAD
-><TITLE
->SAMBA Project Documentation</TITLE
-><META
-NAME="GENERATOR"
-CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.7"></HEAD
-><BODY
-CLASS="BOOK"
-BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF"
-TEXT="#000000"
-LINK="#0000FF"
-VLINK="#840084"
-ALINK="#0000FF"
-><DIV
-CLASS="BOOK"
-><A
-NAME="SAMBA-HOWTO-COLLECTION"
-></A
-><DIV
-CLASS="TITLEPAGE"
-><H1
-CLASS="TITLE"
-><A
-NAME="SAMBA-HOWTO-COLLECTION"
->SAMBA Project Documentation</A
-></H1
-><H3
-CLASS="AUTHOR"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4"
-></A
->SAMBA Team</H3
-><DIV
-CLASS="AFFILIATION"
-><DIV
-CLASS="ADDRESS"
-><P
-CLASS="ADDRESS"
-><CODE
-CLASS="EMAIL"
->&#60;<A
-HREF="mailto:samba@samba.org"
->samba@samba.org</A
->&#62;</CODE
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><H4
-CLASS="EDITEDBY"
->Edited by</H4
-><H3
-CLASS="EDITOR"
->Jelmer R. Vernooij</H3
-><H3
-CLASS="EDITOR"
->John H. Terpstra</H3
-><H3
-CLASS="EDITOR"
->Gerald (Jerry) Carter</H3
-><DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="ABSTRACT"
-><P
-></P
-><A
-NAME="AEN34"
-></A
-><P
->This book is a collection of HOWTOs added to Samba documentation over the years.
-Samba is always under development, and so is it's documentation.
-The most recent version of this document
-can be found at <A
-HREF="http://www.samba.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.samba.org/</A
->
-on the "Documentation" page. Please send updates to <A
-HREF="mailto:jerry@samba.org"
-TARGET="_top"
->jerry@samba.org</A
-> or
-<A
-HREF="mailto:jelmer@samba.org"
-TARGET="_top"
->jelmer@samba.org</A
->.</P
-><P
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="LEGALNOTICE"
-><P
-></P
-><A
-NAME="AEN39"
-></A
-><P
->This documentation is distributed under the GNU General Public License (GPL)
-version 2. A copy of the license is included with the Samba source
-distribution. A copy can be found on-line at <A
-HREF="http://www.fsf.org/licenses/gpl.txt"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.fsf.org/licenses/gpl.txt</A
-></P
-><P
-></P
-></DIV
-><HR></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="TOC"
-><DL
-><DT
-><B
->Table of Contents</B
-></DT
-><DT
->I. <A
-HREF="#INTRODUCTION"
->General installation</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->1. <A
-HREF="#INTROSMB"
->Introduction to Samba</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->1.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN61"
->Background</A
-></DT
-><DT
->1.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN67"
->Terminology</A
-></DT
-><DT
->1.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN91"
->Related Projects</A
-></DT
-><DT
->1.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN100"
->SMB Methodology</A
-></DT
-><DT
->1.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN115"
->Additional Resources</A
-></DT
-><DT
->1.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN151"
->Epilogue</A
-></DT
-><DT
->1.7. <A
-HREF="#AEN162"
->Miscellaneous</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->2. <A
-HREF="#INSTALL"
->How to Install and Test SAMBA</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->2.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN187"
->Obtaining and installing samba</A
-></DT
-><DT
->2.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN193"
->Configuring samba</A
-></DT
-><DT
->2.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN229"
->Try listing the shares available on your
- server</A
-></DT
-><DT
->2.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN238"
->Try connecting with the unix client</A
-></DT
-><DT
->2.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN259"
->Try connecting from a DOS, WfWg, Win9x, WinNT,
- Win2k, OS/2, etc... client</A
-></DT
-><DT
->2.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN272"
->What If Things Don't Work?</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->3. <A
-HREF="#BROWSING-QUICK"
->Quick Cross Subnet Browsing / Cross Workgroup Browsing guide</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->3.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN305"
->Discussion</A
-></DT
-><DT
->3.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN326"
->How browsing functions and how to deploy stable and
-dependable browsing using Samba</A
-></DT
-><DT
->3.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN340"
->Use of the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Remote Announce</B
-> parameter</A
-></DT
-><DT
->3.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN363"
->Use of the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Remote Browse Sync</B
-> parameter</A
-></DT
-><DT
->3.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN374"
->Use of WINS</A
-></DT
-><DT
->3.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN400"
->Do NOT use more than one (1) protocol on MS Windows machines</A
-></DT
-><DT
->3.7. <A
-HREF="#AEN408"
->Name Resolution Order</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->4. <A
-HREF="#PASSDB"
->User information database</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->4.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN468"
->Introduction</A
-></DT
-><DT
->4.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN475"
->Important Notes About Security</A
-></DT
-><DT
->4.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN513"
->The smbpasswd Command</A
-></DT
-><DT
->4.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN544"
->Plain text</A
-></DT
-><DT
->4.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN549"
->TDB</A
-></DT
-><DT
->4.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN552"
->LDAP</A
-></DT
-><DT
->4.7. <A
-HREF="#AEN765"
->MySQL</A
-></DT
-><DT
->4.8. <A
-HREF="#AEN807"
->XML</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->II. <A
-HREF="#TYPE"
->Type of installation</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->5. <A
-HREF="#SERVERTYPE"
->Nomenclature of Server Types</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->5.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN846"
->Stand Alone Server</A
-></DT
-><DT
->5.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN853"
->Domain Member Server</A
-></DT
-><DT
->5.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN859"
->Domain Controller</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->6. <A
-HREF="#SECURITYLEVELS"
->Samba as Stand-Alone Server</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->6.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN896"
->User and Share security level</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->7. <A
-HREF="#SAMBA-PDC"
->Samba as an NT4 or Win2k Primary Domain Controller</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->7.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN1009"
->Prerequisite Reading</A
-></DT
-><DT
->7.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN1013"
->Background</A
-></DT
-><DT
->7.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN1053"
->Configuring the Samba Domain Controller</A
-></DT
-><DT
->7.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN1095"
->Creating Machine Trust Accounts and Joining Clients to the Domain</A
-></DT
-><DT
->7.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN1211"
->Common Problems and Errors</A
-></DT
-><DT
->7.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN1240"
->Domain Control for Windows 9x/ME</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->8. <A
-HREF="#SAMBA-BDC"
->Samba Backup Domain Controller to Samba Domain Control</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->8.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN1293"
->Prerequisite Reading</A
-></DT
-><DT
->8.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN1297"
->Background</A
-></DT
-><DT
->8.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN1305"
->What qualifies a Domain Controller on the network?</A
-></DT
-><DT
->8.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN1314"
->Can Samba be a Backup Domain Controller to an NT PDC?</A
-></DT
-><DT
->8.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN1319"
->How do I set up a Samba BDC?</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->9. <A
-HREF="#ADS"
->Samba as a ADS domain member</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->9.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN1363"
->Setup your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-></A
-></DT
-><DT
->9.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN1376"
->Setup your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/krb5.conf</TT
-></A
-></DT
-><DT
->9.3. <A
-HREF="#ADS-CREATE-MACHINE-ACCOUNT"
->Create the computer account</A
-></DT
-><DT
->9.4. <A
-HREF="#ADS-TEST-SERVER"
->Test your server setup</A
-></DT
-><DT
->9.5. <A
-HREF="#ADS-TEST-SMBCLIENT"
->Testing with <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbclient</SPAN
-></A
-></DT
-><DT
->9.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN1424"
->Notes</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->10. <A
-HREF="#DOMAIN-MEMBER"
->Samba as a NT4 or Win2k domain member</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->10.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN1447"
->Joining an NT Domain with Samba 3.0</A
-></DT
-><DT
->10.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN1501"
->Why is this better than security = server?</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->III. <A
-HREF="#OPTIONAL"
->Advanced Configuration</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->11. <A
-HREF="#UNIX-PERMISSIONS"
->UNIX Permission Bits and Windows NT Access Control Lists</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->11.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN1533"
->Viewing and changing UNIX permissions using the NT
- security dialogs</A
-></DT
-><DT
->11.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN1539"
->How to view file security on a Samba share</A
-></DT
-><DT
->11.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN1550"
->Viewing file ownership</A
-></DT
-><DT
->11.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN1570"
->Viewing file or directory permissions</A
-></DT
-><DT
->11.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN1606"
->Modifying file or directory permissions</A
-></DT
-><DT
->11.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN1628"
->Interaction with the standard Samba create mask
- parameters</A
-></DT
-><DT
->11.7. <A
-HREF="#AEN1681"
->Interaction with the standard Samba file attribute
- mapping</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->12. <A
-HREF="#GROUPMAPPING"
->Configuring Group Mapping</A
-></DT
-><DT
->13. <A
-HREF="#PRINTING"
->Printing Support</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->13.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN1744"
->Introduction</A
-></DT
-><DT
->13.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN1766"
->Configuration</A
-></DT
-><DT
->13.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN1878"
->The Imprints Toolset</A
-></DT
-><DT
->13.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN1921"
->Diagnosis</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->14. <A
-HREF="#CUPS-PRINTING"
->CUPS Printing Support</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->14.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN2034"
->Introduction</A
-></DT
-><DT
->14.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN2041"
->Configuring <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> for CUPS</A
-></DT
-><DT
->14.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN2061"
->CUPS - RAW Print Through Mode</A
-></DT
-><DT
->14.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN2118"
->CUPS as a network PostScript RIP -- CUPS drivers working on server, Adobe
-PostScript driver with CUPS-PPDs downloaded to clients</A
-></DT
-><DT
->14.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN2139"
->Windows Terminal Servers (WTS) as CUPS clients</A
-></DT
-><DT
->14.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN2143"
->Setting up CUPS for driver download</A
-></DT
-><DT
->14.7. <A
-HREF="#AEN2156"
->Sources of CUPS drivers / PPDs</A
-></DT
-><DT
->14.8. <A
-HREF="#AEN2212"
->The CUPS Filter Chains</A
-></DT
-><DT
->14.9. <A
-HREF="#AEN2251"
->CUPS Print Drivers and Devices</A
-></DT
-><DT
->14.10. <A
-HREF="#AEN2328"
->Limiting the number of pages users can print</A
-></DT
-><DT
->14.11. <A
-HREF="#AEN2424"
->Advanced Postscript Printing from MS Windows</A
-></DT
-><DT
->14.12. <A
-HREF="#AEN2439"
->Auto-Deletion of CUPS spool files</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->15. <A
-HREF="#WINBIND"
->Unified Logons between Windows NT and UNIX using Winbind</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->15.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN2515"
->Abstract</A
-></DT
-><DT
->15.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN2519"
->Introduction</A
-></DT
-><DT
->15.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN2532"
->What Winbind Provides</A
-></DT
-><DT
->15.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN2543"
->How Winbind Works</A
-></DT
-><DT
->15.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN2586"
->Installation and Configuration</A
-></DT
-><DT
->15.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN2843"
->Limitations</A
-></DT
-><DT
->15.7. <A
-HREF="#AEN2853"
->Conclusion</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->16. <A
-HREF="#ADVANCEDNETWORKMANAGEMENT"
->Advanced Network Manangement</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->16.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN2869"
->Configuring Samba Share Access Controls</A
-></DT
-><DT
->16.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN2907"
->Remote Server Administration</A
-></DT
-><DT
->16.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN2924"
->Network Logon Script Magic</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->17. <A
-HREF="#POLICYMGMT"
->System and Account Policies</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->17.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN2958"
->Creating and Managing System Policies</A
-></DT
-><DT
->17.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN3030"
->Managing Account/User Policies</A
-></DT
-><DT
->17.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN3052"
->System Startup and Logon Processing Overview</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->18. <A
-HREF="#PROFILEMGMT"
->Desktop Profile Management</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->18.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN3095"
->Roaming Profiles</A
-></DT
-><DT
->18.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN3302"
->Mandatory profiles</A
-></DT
-><DT
->18.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN3309"
->Creating/Managing Group Profiles</A
-></DT
-><DT
->18.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN3315"
->Default Profile for Windows Users</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->19. <A
-HREF="#INTERDOMAINTRUSTS"
->Interdomain Trust Relationships</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->19.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN3446"
->Trust Relationship Background</A
-></DT
-><DT
->19.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN3455"
->Native MS Windows NT4 Trusts Configuration</A
-></DT
-><DT
->19.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN3464"
->Configuring Samba NT-style Domain Trusts</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->20. <A
-HREF="#PAM"
->PAM Configuration for Centrally Managed Authentication</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->20.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN3507"
->Samba and PAM</A
-></DT
-><DT
->20.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN3558"
->Distributed Authentication</A
-></DT
-><DT
->20.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN3563"
->PAM Configuration in smb.conf</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->21. <A
-HREF="#VFS"
->Stackable VFS modules</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->21.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN3600"
->Introduction and configuration</A
-></DT
-><DT
->21.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN3609"
->Included modules</A
-></DT
-><DT
->21.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN3667"
->VFS modules available elsewhere</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->22. <A
-HREF="#MSDFS"
->Hosting a Microsoft Distributed File System tree on Samba</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->22.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN3695"
->Instructions</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->23. <A
-HREF="#INTEGRATE-MS-NETWORKS"
->Integrating MS Windows networks with Samba</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->23.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN3758"
->Name Resolution in a pure Unix/Linux world</A
-></DT
-><DT
->23.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN3821"
->Name resolution as used within MS Windows networking</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->24. <A
-HREF="#IMPROVED-BROWSING"
->Improved browsing in samba</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->24.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN3874"
->Overview of browsing</A
-></DT
-><DT
->24.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN3880"
->Browsing support in samba</A
-></DT
-><DT
->24.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN3895"
->Problem resolution</A
-></DT
-><DT
->24.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN3907"
->Browsing across subnets</A
-></DT
-><DT
->24.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN3948"
->Setting up a WINS server</A
-></DT
-><DT
->24.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN3971"
->Setting up Browsing in a WORKGROUP</A
-></DT
-><DT
->24.7. <A
-HREF="#AEN3997"
->Setting up Browsing in a DOMAIN</A
-></DT
-><DT
->24.8. <A
-HREF="#BROWSE-FORCE-MASTER"
->Forcing samba to be the master</A
-></DT
-><DT
->24.9. <A
-HREF="#AEN4032"
->Making samba the domain master</A
-></DT
-><DT
->24.10. <A
-HREF="#AEN4054"
->Note about broadcast addresses</A
-></DT
-><DT
->24.11. <A
-HREF="#AEN4057"
->Multiple interfaces</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->25. <A
-HREF="#SECURING-SAMBA"
->Securing Samba</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->25.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN4073"
->Introduction</A
-></DT
-><DT
->25.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN4076"
->Using host based protection</A
-></DT
-><DT
->25.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN4086"
->Using interface protection</A
-></DT
-><DT
->25.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN4094"
->Using a firewall</A
-></DT
-><DT
->25.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN4101"
->Using a IPC$ share deny</A
-></DT
-><DT
->25.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN4110"
->Upgrading Samba</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->26. <A
-HREF="#UNICODE"
->Unicode/Charsets</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->26.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN4132"
->What are charsets and unicode?</A
-></DT
-><DT
->26.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN4141"
->Samba and charsets</A
-></DT
-><DT
->26.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN4160"
->Conversion from old names</A
-></DT
-><DT
->26.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN4168"
->Japanese charsets</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->IV. <A
-HREF="#APPENDIXES"
->Appendixes</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->27. <A
-HREF="#COMPILING"
->How to compile SAMBA</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->27.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN4204"
->Access Samba source code via CVS</A
-></DT
-><DT
->27.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN4247"
->Accessing the samba sources via rsync and ftp</A
-></DT
-><DT
->27.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN4253"
->Verifying Samba's PGP signature</A
-></DT
-><DT
->27.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN4265"
->Building the Binaries</A
-></DT
-><DT
->27.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN4322"
->Starting the smbd and nmbd</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->28. <A
-HREF="#NT4MIGRATION"
->Migration from NT4 PDC to Samba-3 PDC</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->28.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN4396"
->Planning and Getting Started</A
-></DT
-><DT
->28.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN4429"
->Managing Samba-3 Domain Control</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->29. <A
-HREF="#PORTABILITY"
->Portability</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->29.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN4444"
->HPUX</A
-></DT
-><DT
->29.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN4450"
->SCO Unix</A
-></DT
-><DT
->29.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN4454"
->DNIX</A
-></DT
-><DT
->29.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN4483"
->RedHat Linux Rembrandt-II</A
-></DT
-><DT
->29.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN4489"
->AIX</A
-></DT
-><DT
->29.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN4495"
->Solaris</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->30. <A
-HREF="#OTHER-CLIENTS"
->Samba and other CIFS clients</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->30.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN4522"
->Macintosh clients?</A
-></DT
-><DT
->30.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN4531"
->OS2 Client</A
-></DT
-><DT
->30.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN4571"
->Windows for Workgroups</A
-></DT
-><DT
->30.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN4595"
->Windows '95/'98</A
-></DT
-><DT
->30.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN4611"
->Windows 2000 Service Pack 2</A
-></DT
-><DT
->30.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN4628"
->Windows NT 3.1</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->31. <A
-HREF="#SWAT"
->SWAT - The Samba Web Admininistration Tool</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->31.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN4645"
->SWAT Features and Benefits</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->32. <A
-HREF="#SPEED"
->Samba performance issues</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->32.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN4687"
->Comparisons</A
-></DT
-><DT
->32.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN4693"
->Socket options</A
-></DT
-><DT
->32.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN4700"
->Read size</A
-></DT
-><DT
->32.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN4705"
->Max xmit</A
-></DT
-><DT
->32.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN4710"
->Log level</A
-></DT
-><DT
->32.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN4713"
->Read raw</A
-></DT
-><DT
->32.7. <A
-HREF="#AEN4718"
->Write raw</A
-></DT
-><DT
->32.8. <A
-HREF="#AEN4722"
->Slow Clients</A
-></DT
-><DT
->32.9. <A
-HREF="#AEN4726"
->Slow Logins</A
-></DT
-><DT
->32.10. <A
-HREF="#AEN4729"
->Client tuning</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->33. <A
-HREF="#DIAGNOSIS"
->The samba checklist</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->33.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN4781"
->Introduction</A
-></DT
-><DT
->33.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN4786"
->Assumptions</A
-></DT
-><DT
->33.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN4805"
->The tests</A
-></DT
-><DT
->33.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN4972"
->Still having troubles?</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->34. <A
-HREF="#PROBLEMS"
->Analysing and solving samba problems</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->34.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN5004"
->Diagnostics tools</A
-></DT
-><DT
->34.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN5019"
->Installing 'Network Monitor' on an NT Workstation or a Windows 9x box</A
-></DT
-><DT
->34.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN5048"
->Useful URL's</A
-></DT
-><DT
->34.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN5072"
->Getting help from the mailing lists</A
-></DT
-><DT
->34.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN5102"
->How to get off the mailinglists</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-><DT
->35. <A
-HREF="#BUGREPORT"
->Reporting Bugs</A
-></DT
-><DD
-><DL
-><DT
->35.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN5125"
->Introduction</A
-></DT
-><DT
->35.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN5135"
->General info</A
-></DT
-><DT
->35.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN5141"
->Debug levels</A
-></DT
-><DT
->35.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN5162"
->Internal errors</A
-></DT
-><DT
->35.5. <A
-HREF="#AEN5176"
->Attaching to a running process</A
-></DT
-><DT
->35.6. <A
-HREF="#AEN5184"
->Patches</A
-></DT
-></DL
-></DD
-></DL
-></DD
-></DL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="PART"
-><A
-NAME="INTRODUCTION"
-></A
-><DIV
-CLASS="TITLEPAGE"
-><H1
-CLASS="TITLE"
->I. General installation</H1
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="PARTINTRO"
-><A
-NAME="AEN44"
-></A
-><H1
->Introduction</H1
-><P
->This part contains general info on how to install samba
-and how to configure the parts of samba you will most likely need.
-PLEASE read this.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="INTROSMB"
-></A
->Chapter 1. Introduction to Samba</H1
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->"If you understand what you're doing, you're not learning anything."
--- Anonymous</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
->Samba is a file and print server for Windows-based clients using TCP/IP as the underlying
-transport protocol. In fact, it can support any SMB/CIFS-enabled client. One of Samba's big
-strengths is that you can use it to blend your mix of Windows and Linux machines together
-without requiring a separate Windows NT/2000/2003 Server. Samba is actively being developed
-by a global team of about 30 active programmers and was originally developed by Andrew Tridgell.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN61"
->1.1. Background</A
-></H2
-><P
->Once long ago, there was a buzzword referred to as DCE/RPC. This stood for Distributed
-Computing Environment/Remote Procedure Calls and conceptually was a good idea. It was
-originally developed by Apollo/HP as NCA 1.0 (Network Computing Architecture) and only
-ran over UDP. When there was a need to run it over TCP so that it would be compatible
-with DECnet 3.0, it was redesigned, submitted to The Open Group, and officially became
-known as DCE/RPC. Microsoft came along and decided, rather than pay $20 per seat to
-license this technology, to reimplement DCE/RPC themselves as MSRPC. From this, the
-concept continued in the form of SMB (Server Message Block, or the "what") using the
-NetBIOS (Network Basic Input/Output System, or the "how") compatibility layer. You can
-run SMB (i.e., transport) over several different protocols; many different implementations
-arose as a result, including NBIPX (NetBIOS over IPX, NwLnkNb, or NWNBLink) and NBT
-(NetBIOS over TCP/IP, or NetBT). As the years passed, NBT became the most common form
-of implementation until the advance of "Direct-Hosted TCP" -- the Microsoft marketing
-term for eliminating NetBIOS entirely and running SMB by itself across TCP port 445
-only. As of yet, direct-hosted TCP has yet to catch on.</P
-><P
->Perhaps the best summary of the origins of SMB are voiced in the 1997 article titled, CIFS:
-Common Insecurities Fail Scrutiny:</P
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Several megabytes of NT-security archives, random whitepapers, RFCs, the CIFS spec, the Samba
-stuff, a few MS knowledge-base articles, strings extracted from binaries, and packet dumps have
-been dutifully waded through during the information-gathering stages of this project, and there
-are *still* many missing pieces... While often tedious, at least the way has been generously
-littered with occurrences of clapping hand to forehead and muttering 'crikey, what are they
-thinking?</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN67"
->1.2. Terminology</A
-></H2
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> SMB: Acronym for "Server Message Block". This is Microsoft's file and printer sharing protocol.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> CIFS: Acronym for "Common Internet File System". Around 1996, Microsoft apparently
- decided that SMB needed the word "Internet" in it, so they changed it to CIFS.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Direct-Hosted: A method of providing file/printer sharing services over port 445/tcp
- only using DNS for name resolution instead of WINS.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> IPC: Acronym for "Inter-Process Communication". A method to communicate specific
- information between programs.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Marshalling: - A method of serializing (i.e., sequential ordering of) variable data
- suitable for transmission via a network connection or storing in a file. The source
- data can be re-created using a similar process called unmarshalling.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> NetBIOS: Acronym for "Network Basic Input/Output System". This is not a protocol;
- it is a method of communication across an existing protocol. This is a standard which
- was originally developed for IBM by Sytek in 1983. To exaggerate the analogy a bit,
- it can help to think of this in comparison your computer's BIOS -- it controls the
- essential functions of your input/output hardware -- whereas NetBIOS controls the
- essential functions of your input/output traffic via the network. Again, this is a bit
- of an exaggeration but it should help that paradigm shift. What is important to realize
- is that NetBIOS is a transport standard, not a protocol. Unfortunately, even technically
- brilliant people tend to interchange NetBIOS with terms like NetBEUI without a second
- thought; this will cause no end (and no doubt) of confusion.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> NetBEUI: Acronym for the "NetBIOS Extended User Interface". Unlike NetBIOS, NetBEUI
- is a protocol, not a standard. It is also not routable, so traffic on one side of a
- router will be unable to communicate with the other side. Understanding NetBEUI is
- not essential to deciphering SMB; however it helps to point out that it is not the
- same as NetBIOS and to improve your score in trivia at parties. NetBEUI was originally
- referred to by Microsoft as "NBF", or "The Windows NT NetBEUI Frame protocol driver".
- It is not often heard from these days.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> NBT: Acronym for "NetBIOS over TCP"; also known as "NetBT". Allows the continued use
- of NetBIOS traffic proxied over TCP/IP. As a result, NetBIOS names are made
- to IP addresses and NetBIOS name types are conceptually equivalent to TCP/IP ports.
- This is how file and printer sharing are accomplished in Windows 95/98/ME. They
- traditionally rely on three ports: NetBIOS Name Service (nbname) via UDP port 137,
- NetBIOS Datagram Service (nbdatagram) via UDP port 138, and NetBIOS Session Service
- (nbsession) via TCP port 139. All name resolution is done via WINS, NetBIOS broadcasts,
- and DNS. NetBIOS over TCP is documented in RFC 1001 (Concepts and methods) and RFC 1002
- (Detailed specifications).
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> W2K: Acronym for Windows 2000 Professional or Server
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> W3K: Acronym for Windows 2003 Server
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->If you plan on getting help, make sure to subscribe to the Samba Mailing List (available at
-http://www.samba.org). Optionally, you could just search mailing.unix.samba at http://groups.google.com</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN91"
->1.3. Related Projects</A
-></H2
-><P
->Currently, there are two projects that are directly related to Samba: SMBFS and CIFS network
-client file systems for Linux, both available in the Linux kernel itself.</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> SMBFS (Server Message Block File System) allows you to mount SMB shares (the protocol
- that Microsoft Windows and OS/2 Lan Manager use to share files and printers
- over local networks) and access them just like any other Unix directory. This is useful
- if you just want to mount such filesystems without being a SMBFS server.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> CIFS (Common Internet File System) is the successor to SMB, and is actively being worked
- on in the upcoming version of the Linux kernel. The intent of this module is to
- provide advanced network file system functionality including support for dfs (heirarchical
- name space), secure per-user session establishment, safe distributed caching (oplock),
- optional packet signing, Unicode and other internationalization improvements, and optional
- Winbind (nsswitch) integration.
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Again, it's important to note that these are implementations for client filesystems, and have
-nothing to do with acting as a file and print server for SMB/CIFS clients.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN100"
->1.4. SMB Methodology</A
-></H2
-><P
->Traditionally, SMB uses UDP port 137 (NetBIOS name service, or netbios-ns),
-UDP port 138 (NetBIOS datagram service, or netbios-dgm), and TCP port 139 (NetBIOS
-session service, or netbios-ssn). Anyone looking at their network with a good
-packet sniffer will be amazed at the amount of traffic generated by just opening
-up a single file. In general, SMB sessions are established in the following order:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> "TCP Connection" - establish 3-way handshake (connection) to port 139/tcp
- or 445/tcp.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> "NetBIOS Session Request" - using the following "Calling Names": The local
- machine's NetBIOS name plus the 16th character 0x00; The server's NetBIOS
- name plus the 16th character 0x20
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> "SMB Negotiate Protocol" - determine the protocol dialect to use, which will
- be one of the following: PC Network Program 1.0 (Core) - share level security
- mode only; Microsoft Networks 1.03 (Core Plus) - share level security
- mode only; Lanman1.0 (LAN Manager 1.0) - uses Challenge/Response
- Authentication; Lanman2.1 (LAN Manager 2.1) - uses Challenge/Response
- Authentication; NT LM 0.12 (NT LM 0.12) - uses Challenge/Response
- Authentication
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> SMB Session Startup. Passwords are encrypted (or not) according to one of
- the following methods: Null (no encryption); Cleartext (no encryption); LM
- and NTLM; NTLM; NTLMv2
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> SMB Tree Connect: Connect to a share name (e.g., \\servername\share); Connect
- to a service type (e.g., IPC$ named pipe)
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->A good way to examine this process in depth is to try out SecurityFriday's SWB program
-at http://www.securityfriday.com/ToolDownload/SWB/swb_doc.html. It allows you to
-walk through the establishment of a SMB/CIFS session step by step.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN115"
->1.5. Additional Resources</A
-></H2
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->CIFS: Common Insecurities Fail Scrutiny</I
-></SPAN
-> by "Hobbit",
- http://hr.uoregon.edu/davidrl/cifs.txt
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Doing the Samba on Windows</I
-></SPAN
-> by Financial Review,
- http://afr.com/it/2002/10/01/FFXDF43AP6D.html
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Implementing CIFS</I
-></SPAN
-> by Christopher R. Hertel,
- http://ubiqx.org/cifs/
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Just What Is SMB?</I
-></SPAN
-> by Richard Sharpe,
- http://samba.anu.edu.au/cifs/docs/what-is-smb.html
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Opening Windows Everywhere</I
-></SPAN
-> by Mike Warfield,
- http://www.linux-mag.com/1999-05/samba_01.html
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->SMB HOWTO</I
-></SPAN
-> by David Wood,
- http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/SMB-HOWTO.html
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->SMB/CIFS by The Root</I
-></SPAN
-> by "ledin",
- http://www.phrack.org/phrack/60/p60-0x0b.txt
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->The Story of Samba</I
-></SPAN
-> by Christopher R. Hertel,
- http://www.linux-mag.com/1999-09/samba_01.html
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->The Unofficial Samba HOWTO</I
-></SPAN
-> by David Lechnyr,
- http://hr.uoregon.edu/davidrl/samba/
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Understanding the Network Neighborhood</I
-></SPAN
-> by Christopher R. Hertel,
- http://www.linux-mag.com/2001-05/smb_01.html
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Using Samba as a PDC</I
-></SPAN
-> by Andrew Bartlett,
- http://www.linux-mag.com/2002-02/samba_01.html
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN151"
->1.6. Epilogue</A
-></H2
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->"What's fundamentally wrong is that nobody ever had any taste when they
-did it. Microsoft has been very much into making the user interface look good,
-but internally it's just a complete mess. And even people who program for Microsoft
-and who have had years of experience, just don't know how it works internally.
-Worse, nobody dares change it. Nobody dares to fix bugs because it's such a
-mess that fixing one bug might just break a hundred programs that depend on
-that bug. And Microsoft isn't interested in anyone fixing bugs -- they're interested
-in making money. They don't have anybody who takes pride in Windows 95 as an
-operating system.</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->People inside Microsoft know it's a bad operating system and they still
-continue obviously working on it because they want to get the next version out
-because they want to have all these new features to sell more copies of the
-system.</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->The problem with that is that over time, when you have this kind of approach,
-and because nobody understands it, because nobody REALLY fixes bugs (other than
-when they're really obvious), the end result is really messy. You can't trust
-it because under certain circumstances it just spontaneously reboots or just
-halts in the middle of something that shouldn't be strange. Normally it works
-fine and then once in a blue moon for some completely unknown reason, it's dead,
-and nobody knows why. Not Microsoft, not the experienced user and certainly
-not the completely clueless user who probably sits there shivering thinking
-"What did I do wrong?" when they didn't do anything wrong at all.</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->That's what's really irritating to me."</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
->-- Linus Torvalds, from an interview with BOOT Magazine, Sept 1998
-(http://hr.uoregon.edu/davidrl/boot.txt)</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN162"
->1.7. Miscellaneous</A
-></H2
-><P
->This chapter was lovingly handcrafted on a Dell Latitude C400 laptop running Slackware Linux 9.0,
-in case anyone asks.</P
-><P
->This chapter is Copyright © 2003 David Lechnyr (david at lechnyr dot com).
-Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms
-of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free
-Software Foundation. A copy of the license is available at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.txt.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="INSTALL"
-></A
->Chapter 2. How to Install and Test SAMBA</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN187"
->2.1. Obtaining and installing samba</A
-></H2
-><P
->Binary packages of samba are included in almost any Linux or
- Unix distribution. There are also some packages available at
- <A
-HREF="http://samba.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->the samba homepage</A
->.
- </P
-><P
->If you need to compile samba from source, check the
- <A
-HREF="#COMPILING"
->appropriate appendix chapter</A
->.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN193"
->2.2. Configuring samba</A
-></H2
-><P
->Samba's configuration is stored in the smb.conf file,
- that usually resides in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/samba/smb.conf</TT
->
- or <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/local/samba/lib/smb.conf</TT
->. You can either
- edit this file yourself or do it using one of the many graphical
- tools that are available, such as the web-based interface swat, that
- is included with samba.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN198"
->2.2.1. Editing the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file</A
-></H3
-><P
->There are sample configuration files in the examples
- subdirectory in the distribution. I suggest you read them
- carefully so you can see how the options go together in
- practice. See the man page for all the options.</P
-><P
->The simplest useful configuration file would be
- something like this:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->[global]
- workgroup = MYGROUP
-
-[homes]
- guest ok = no
- read only = no
- </PRE
-></P
-><P
->which would allow connections by anyone with an
- account on the server, using either their login name or
- "<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->homes</B
->" as the service name. (Note that I also set the
- workgroup that Samba is part of. See BROWSING.txt for details)</P
-><P
->Make sure you put the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file in the same place
- you specified in the<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->Makefile</TT
-> (the default is to
- look for it in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/local/samba/lib/</TT
->).</P
-><P
->For more information about security settings for the
- <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->[homes]</B
-> share please refer to the chapter
- <A
-HREF="#SECURING-SAMBA"
->Securing Samba</A
->.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN214"
->2.2.1.1. Test your config file with
- <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->testparm</B
-></A
-></H4
-><P
->It's important that you test the validity of your
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file using the <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->testparm</SPAN
-> program.
- If testparm runs OK then it will list the loaded services. If
- not it will give an error message.</P
-><P
->Make sure it runs OK and that the services look
- reasonable before proceeding. </P
-><P
->Always run testparm again when you change
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->!</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN223"
->2.2.2. SWAT</A
-></H3
-><P
-> SWAT is a web-based interface that helps you configure samba.
- SWAT might not be available in the samba package on your platform,
- but in a seperate package. Please read the swat manpage
- on compiling, installing and configuring swat from source.
- </P
-><P
->To launch SWAT just run your favorite web browser and
- point it at "http://localhost:901/". Replace <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->localhost</VAR
-> with the name of the computer you are running samba on if you
- are running samba on a different computer then your browser.</P
-><P
->Note that you can attach to SWAT from any IP connected
- machine but connecting from a remote machine leaves your
- connection open to password sniffing as passwords will be sent
- in the clear over the wire. </P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN229"
->2.3. Try listing the shares available on your
- server</A
-></H2
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->$ </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbclient -L
- <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->yourhostname</VAR
-></KBD
-></P
-><P
->You should get back a list of shares available on
- your server. If you don't then something is incorrectly setup.
- Note that this method can also be used to see what shares
- are available on other LanManager clients (such as WfWg).</P
-><P
->If you choose user level security then you may find
- that Samba requests a password before it will list the shares.
- See the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbclient</B
-> man page for details. (you
- can force it to list the shares without a password by
- adding the option -U% to the command line. This will not work
- with non-Samba servers)</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN238"
->2.4. Try connecting with the unix client</A
-></H2
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->$ </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbclient <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
-> //yourhostname/aservice</VAR
-></KBD
-></P
-><P
->Typically the <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->yourhostname</VAR
->
- would be the name of the host where you installed <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbd</SPAN
->.
- The <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->aservice</VAR
-> is
- any service you have defined in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->
- file. Try your user name if you just have a <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->[homes]</B
->
- section
- in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->.</P
-><P
->For example if your unix host is <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->bambi</VAR
->
- and your login name is <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->fred</VAR
-> you would type:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->$ </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbclient //<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->bambi</VAR
->/<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->fred</VAR
->
- </KBD
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN259"
->2.5. Try connecting from a DOS, WfWg, Win9x, WinNT,
- Win2k, OS/2, etc... client</A
-></H2
-><P
->Try mounting disks. eg:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->C:\WINDOWS\&#62; </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->net use d: \\servername\service
- </KBD
-></P
-><P
->Try printing. eg:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->C:\WINDOWS\&#62; </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->net use lpt1:
- \\servername\spoolservice</KBD
-></P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->C:\WINDOWS\&#62; </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->print filename
- </KBD
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN272"
->2.6. What If Things Don't Work?</A
-></H2
-><P
->Then you might read the file chapter
- <A
-HREF="#DIAGNOSIS"
->Diagnosis</A
-> and the
- FAQ. If you are still stuck then try to follow
- the <A
-HREF="#PROBLEMS"
->Analysing and Solving Problems chapter</A
->
- Samba has been successfully installed at thousands of sites worldwide,
- so maybe someone else has hit your problem and has overcome it. </P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN277"
->2.6.1. Scope IDs</A
-></H3
-><P
->By default Samba uses a blank scope ID. This means
- all your windows boxes must also have a blank scope ID.
- If you really want to use a non-blank scope ID then you will
- need to use the 'netbios scope' smb.conf option.
- All your PCs will need to have the same setting for
- this to work. I do not recommend scope IDs.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN280"
->2.6.2. Locking</A
-></H3
-><P
->One area which sometimes causes trouble is locking.</P
-><P
->There are two types of locking which need to be
- performed by a SMB server. The first is "record locking"
- which allows a client to lock a range of bytes in a open file.
- The second is the "deny modes" that are specified when a file
- is open.</P
-><P
->Record locking semantics under Unix is very
- different from record locking under Windows. Versions
- of Samba before 2.2 have tried to use the native
- fcntl() unix system call to implement proper record
- locking between different Samba clients. This can not
- be fully correct due to several reasons. The simplest
- is the fact that a Windows client is allowed to lock a
- byte range up to 2^32 or 2^64, depending on the client
- OS. The unix locking only supports byte ranges up to
- 2^31. So it is not possible to correctly satisfy a
- lock request above 2^31. There are many more
- differences, too many to be listed here.</P
-><P
->Samba 2.2 and above implements record locking
- completely independent of the underlying unix
- system. If a byte range lock that the client requests
- happens to fall into the range 0-2^31, Samba hands
- this request down to the Unix system. All other locks
- can not be seen by unix anyway.</P
-><P
->Strictly a SMB server should check for locks before
- every read and write call on a file. Unfortunately with the
- way fcntl() works this can be slow and may overstress the
- rpc.lockd. It is also almost always unnecessary as clients
- are supposed to independently make locking calls before reads
- and writes anyway if locking is important to them. By default
- Samba only makes locking calls when explicitly asked
- to by a client, but if you set "strict locking = yes" then it will
- make lock checking calls on every read and write. </P
-><P
->You can also disable by range locking completely
- using "locking = no". This is useful for those shares that
- don't support locking or don't need it (such as cdroms). In
- this case Samba fakes the return codes of locking calls to
- tell clients that everything is OK.</P
-><P
->The second class of locking is the "deny modes". These
- are set by an application when it opens a file to determine
- what types of access should be allowed simultaneously with
- its open. A client may ask for DENY_NONE, DENY_READ, DENY_WRITE
- or DENY_ALL. There are also special compatibility modes called
- DENY_FCB and DENY_DOS.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="BROWSING-QUICK"
-></A
->Chapter 3. Quick Cross Subnet Browsing / Cross Workgroup Browsing guide</H1
-><P
->This document should be read in conjunction with Browsing and may
-be taken as the fast track guide to implementing browsing across subnets
-and / or across workgroups (or domains). WINS is the best tool for resolution
-of NetBIOS names to IP addesses. WINS is NOT involved in browse list handling
-except by way of name to address mapping.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->MS Windows 2000 and later can be configured to operate with NO NetBIOS
-over TCP/IP. Samba-3 and later also supports this mode of operation.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN305"
->3.1. Discussion</A
-></H2
-><P
->Firstly, all MS Windows networking is based on SMB (Server Message
-Block) based messaging. SMB messaging may be implemented using NetBIOS or
-without NetBIOS. Samba implements NetBIOS by encapsulating it over TCP/IP.
-MS Windows products can do likewise. NetBIOS based networking uses broadcast
-messaging to affect browse list management. When running NetBIOS over
-TCP/IP this uses UDP based messaging. UDP messages can be broadcast or unicast.</P
-><P
->Normally, only unicast UDP messaging can be forwarded by routers. The
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote announce</B
->
-parameter to smb.conf helps to project browse announcements
-to remote network segments via unicast UDP. Similarly, the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote browse sync</B
-> parameter of <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->
-implements browse list collation using unicast UDP.</P
-><P
->Secondly, in those networks where Samba is the only SMB server technology
-wherever possible <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->nmbd</SPAN
-> should be configured on one (1) machine as the WINS
-server. This makes it easy to manage the browsing environment. If each network
-segment is configured with it's own Samba WINS server, then the only way to
-get cross segment browsing to work is by using the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote announce</B
-> and the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote browse sync</B
->
-parameters to your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file.</P
-><P
->If only one WINS server is used for an entire multi-segment network then
-the use of the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote announce</B
-> and the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote browse sync</B
-> parameters should NOT be necessary.</P
-><P
->As of Samba 3 WINS replication is being worked on. The bulk of the code has
-been committed, but it still needs maturation.</P
-><P
->Right now samba WINS does not support MS-WINS replication. This means that
-when setting up Samba as a WINS server there must only be one <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->nmbd</SPAN
-> configured
-as a WINS server on the network. Some sites have used multiple Samba WINS
-servers for redundancy (one server per subnet) and then used
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote browse sync</B
-> and <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote announce</B
->
-to affect browse list collation across all
-segments. Note that this means clients will only resolve local names,
-and must be configured to use DNS to resolve names on other subnets in
-order to resolve the IP addresses of the servers they can see on other
-subnets. This setup is not recommended, but is mentioned as a practical
-consideration (ie: an 'if all else fails' scenario).</P
-><P
->Lastly, take note that browse lists are a collection of unreliable broadcast
-messages that are repeated at intervals of not more than 15 minutes. This means
-that it will take time to establish a browse list and it can take up to 45
-minutes to stabilise, particularly across network segments.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN326"
->3.2. How browsing functions and how to deploy stable and
-dependable browsing using Samba</A
-></H2
-><P
->As stated above, MS Windows machines register their NetBIOS names
-(i.e.: the machine name for each service type in operation) on start
-up. Also, as stated above, the exact method by which this name registration
-takes place is determined by whether or not the MS Windows client/server
-has been given a WINS server address, whether or not LMHOSTS lookup
-is enabled, or if DNS for NetBIOS name resolution is enabled, etc.</P
-><P
->In the case where there is no WINS server all name registrations as
-well as name lookups are done by UDP broadcast. This isolates name
-resolution to the local subnet, unless LMHOSTS is used to list all
-names and IP addresses. In such situations Samba provides a means by
-which the samba server name may be forcibly injected into the browse
-list of a remote MS Windows network (using the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote announce</B
-> parameter).</P
-><P
->Where a WINS server is used, the MS Windows client will use UDP
-unicast to register with the WINS server. Such packets can be routed
-and thus WINS allows name resolution to function across routed networks.</P
-><P
->During the startup process an election will take place to create a
-local master browser if one does not already exist. On each NetBIOS network
-one machine will be elected to function as the domain master browser. This
-domain browsing has nothing to do with MS security domain control.
-Instead, the domain master browser serves the role of contacting each local
-master browser (found by asking WINS or from LMHOSTS) and exchanging browse
-list contents. This way every master browser will eventually obtain a complete
-list of all machines that are on the network. Every 11-15 minutes an election
-is held to determine which machine will be the master browser. By the nature of
-the election criteria used, the machine with the highest uptime, or the
-most senior protocol version, or other criteria, will win the election
-as domain master browser.</P
-><P
->Clients wishing to browse the network make use of this list, but also depend
-on the availability of correct name resolution to the respective IP
-address/addresses. </P
-><P
->Any configuration that breaks name resolution and/or browsing intrinsics
-will annoy users because they will have to put up with protracted
-inability to use the network services.</P
-><P
->Samba supports a feature that allows forced synchonisation
-of browse lists across routed networks using the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote
-browse sync</B
-> parameter in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file.
-This causes Samba to contact the local master browser on a remote network and
-to request browse list synchronisation. This effectively bridges
-two networks that are separated by routers. The two remote
-networks may use either broadcast based name resolution or WINS
-based name resolution, but it should be noted that the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote
-browse sync</B
-> parameter provides browse list synchronisation - and
-that is distinct from name to address resolution, in other
-words, for cross subnet browsing to function correctly it is
-essential that a name to address resolution mechanism be provided.
-This mechanism could be via DNS, <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/hosts</TT
->,
-and so on.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN340"
->3.3. Use of the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Remote Announce</B
-> parameter</A
-></H2
-><P
->The <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote announce</B
-> parameter of
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> can be used to forcibly ensure
-that all the NetBIOS names on a network get announced to a remote network.
-The syntax of the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote announce</B
-> parameter is:
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> remote announce = <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->a.b.c.d [e.f.g.h]</VAR
-> ...</PRE
->
-_or_
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> remote announce = <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->a.b.c.d/WORKGROUP [e.f.g.h/WORKGROUP]</VAR
-> ...</PRE
->
-
-where:
-<P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
-><VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->a.b.c.d</VAR
-> and
-<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->e.f.g.h</VAR
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->is either the LMB (Local Master Browser) IP address
-or the broadcst address of the remote network.
-ie: the LMB is at 192.168.1.10, or the address
-could be given as 192.168.1.255 where the netmask
-is assumed to be 24 bits (255.255.255.0).
-When the remote announcement is made to the broadcast
-address of the remote network every host will receive
-our announcements. This is noisy and therefore
-undesirable but may be necessary if we do NOT know
-the IP address of the remote LMB.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->WORKGROUP</VAR
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->is optional and can be either our own workgroup
-or that of the remote network. If you use the
-workgroup name of the remote network then our
-NetBIOS machine names will end up looking like
-they belong to that workgroup, this may cause
-name resolution problems and should be avoided.</P
-></DD
-></DL
-></DIV
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN363"
->3.4. Use of the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Remote Browse Sync</B
-> parameter</A
-></H2
-><P
->The <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote browse sync</B
-> parameter of
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> is used to announce to
-another LMB that it must synchronise it's NetBIOS name list with our
-Samba LMB. It works ONLY if the Samba server that has this option is
-simultaneously the LMB on it's network segment.</P
-><P
->The syntax of the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote browse sync</B
-> parameter is:
-
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->remote browse sync = <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->a.b.c.d</VAR
-></PRE
->
-
-where <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->a.b.c.d</VAR
-> is either the IP address of the remote LMB or else is the network broadcast address of the remote segment.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN374"
->3.5. Use of WINS</A
-></H2
-><P
->Use of WINS (either Samba WINS _or_ MS Windows NT Server WINS) is highly
-recommended. Every NetBIOS machine registers it's name together with a
-name_type value for each of of several types of service it has available.
-eg: It registers it's name directly as a unique (the type 0x03) name.
-It also registers it's name if it is running the lanmanager compatible
-server service (used to make shares and printers available to other users)
-by registering the server (the type 0x20) name.</P
-><P
->All NetBIOS names are up to 15 characters in length. The name_type variable
-is added to the end of the name - thus creating a 16 character name. Any
-name that is shorter than 15 characters is padded with spaces to the 15th
-character. ie: All NetBIOS names are 16 characters long (including the
-name_type information).</P
-><P
->WINS can store these 16 character names as they get registered. A client
-that wants to log onto the network can ask the WINS server for a list
-of all names that have registered the NetLogon service name_type. This saves
-broadcast traffic and greatly expedites logon processing. Since broadcast
-name resolution can not be used across network segments this type of
-information can only be provided via WINS _or_ via statically configured
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->lmhosts</TT
-> files that must reside on all clients in the
-absence of WINS.</P
-><P
->WINS also serves the purpose of forcing browse list synchronisation by all
-LMB's. LMB's must synchronise their browse list with the DMB (domain master
-browser) and WINS helps the LMB to identify it's DMB. By definition this
-will work only within a single workgroup. Note that the domain master browser
-has NOTHING to do with what is referred to as an MS Windows NT Domain. The
-later is a reference to a security environment while the DMB refers to the
-master controller for browse list information only.</P
-><P
->Use of WINS will work correctly only if EVERY client TCP/IP protocol stack
-has been configured to use the WINS server/s. Any client that has not been
-configured to use the WINS server will continue to use only broadcast based
-name registration so that WINS may NEVER get to know about it. In any case,
-machines that have not registered with a WINS server will fail name to address
-lookup attempts by other clients and will therefore cause workstation access
-errors.</P
-><P
->To configure Samba as a WINS server just add
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->wins support = yes</B
-> to the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->
-file [globals] section.</P
-><P
->To configure Samba to register with a WINS server just add
-"wins server = a.b.c.d" to your smb.conf file [globals] section.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="IMPORTANT"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="IMPORTANT"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/important.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Important"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Never use both <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->wins support = yes</B
-> together
-with <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->wins server = a.b.c.d</B
->
-particularly not using it's own IP address.
-Specifying both will cause <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->nmbd</SPAN
-> to refuse to start!</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN391"
->3.5.1. WINS Replication</A
-></H3
-><P
->Samba-3 permits WINS replication through the use of the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->wrepld</TT
-> utility.
-This tool is not currently capable of being used as it is still in active development.
-As soon as this tool becomes moderately functional we will prepare man pages and enhance this
-section of the documentation to provide usage and technical details.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN395"
->3.5.2. Static WINS Entries</A
-></H3
-><P
->New to Samba-3 is a tool called <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->winsedit</TT
-> that may be used to add
-static WINS entries to the WINS database. This tool can be used also to modify entries
-existing in the WINS database.</P
-><P
->The development of the winsedit tool was made necessary due to the migration
-of the older style wins.dat file into a new tdb binary backend data store.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN400"
->3.6. Do NOT use more than one (1) protocol on MS Windows machines</A
-></H2
-><P
->A very common cause of browsing problems results from installing more than
-one protocol on an MS Windows machine.</P
-><P
->Every NetBIOS machine takes part in a process of electing the LMB (and DMB)
-every 15 minutes. A set of election criteria is used to determine the order
-of precidence for winning this election process. A machine running Samba or
-Windows NT will be biased so that the most suitable machine will predictably
-win and thus retain it's role.</P
-><P
->The election process is "fought out" so to speak over every NetBIOS network
-interface. In the case of a Windows 9x machine that has both TCP/IP and IPX
-installed and has NetBIOS enabled over both protocols the election will be
-decided over both protocols. As often happens, if the Windows 9x machine is
-the only one with both protocols then the LMB may be won on the NetBIOS
-interface over the IPX protocol. Samba will then lose the LMB role as Windows
-9x will insist it knows who the LMB is. Samba will then cease to function
-as an LMB and thus browse list operation on all TCP/IP only machines will
-fail.</P
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Windows 95, 98, 98se, Me are referred to generically as Windows 9x.
-The Windows NT4, 2000, XP and 2003 use common protocols. These are roughly
-referred to as the WinNT family, but it should be recognised that 2000 and
-XP/2003 introduce new protocol extensions that cause them to behave
-differently from MS Windows NT4. Generally, where a server does NOT support
-the newer or extended protocol, these will fall back to the NT4 protocols.</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
->The safest rule of all to follow it this - USE ONLY ONE PROTOCOL!</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN408"
->3.7. Name Resolution Order</A
-></H2
-><P
->Resolution of NetBIOS names to IP addresses can take place using a number
-of methods. The only ones that can provide NetBIOS name_type information
-are:</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->WINS: the best tool!</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->LMHOSTS: is static and hard to maintain.</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Broadcast: uses UDP and can not resolve names across remote segments.</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
->Alternative means of name resolution includes:</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->/etc/hosts: is static, hard to maintain, and lacks name_type info</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->DNS: is a good choice but lacks essential name_type info.</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
->Many sites want to restrict DNS lookups and want to avoid broadcast name
-resolution traffic. The "name resolve order" parameter is of great help here.
-The syntax of the "name resolve order" parameter is:
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->name resolve order = wins lmhosts bcast host</PRE
->
-_or_
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->name resolve order = wins lmhosts (eliminates bcast and host)</PRE
->
-The default is:
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->name resolve order = host lmhost wins bcast</PRE
->.
-where "host" refers the the native methods used by the Unix system
-to implement the gethostbyname() function call. This is normally
-controlled by <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/host.conf</TT
->, <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/nsswitch.conf</TT
-> and <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/resolv.conf</TT
->.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="PASSDB"
-></A
->Chapter 4. User information database</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN468"
->4.1. Introduction</A
-></H2
-><P
->Old windows clients send plain text passwords over the wire.
- Samba can check these passwords by crypting them and comparing them
- to the hash stored in the unix user database.
- </P
-><P
-> Newer windows clients send encrypted passwords (so-called
- Lanman and NT hashes) over
- the wire, instead of plain text passwords. The newest clients
- will only send encrypted passwords and refuse to send plain text
- passwords, unless their registry is tweaked.
- </P
-><P
->These passwords can't be converted to unix style encrypted
- passwords. Because of that you can't use the standard unix
- user database, and you have to store the Lanman and NT hashes
- somewhere else. </P
-><P
->Next to a differently encrypted passwords,
- windows also stores certain data for each user
- that is not stored in a unix user database, e.g.
- workstations the user may logon from, the location where his/her
- profile is stored, etc.
- Samba retrieves and stores this information using a "passdb backend".
- Commonly
- available backends are LDAP, plain text file, MySQL and nisplus.
- For more information, see the documentation about the
- <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->passdb backend = </B
-> parameter.
- </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN475"
->4.2. Important Notes About Security</A
-></H2
-><P
->The unix and SMB password encryption techniques seem similar
- on the surface. This similarity is, however, only skin deep. The unix
- scheme typically sends clear text passwords over the network when
- logging in. This is bad. The SMB encryption scheme never sends the
- cleartext password over the network but it does store the 16 byte
- hashed values on disk. This is also bad. Why? Because the 16 byte hashed
- values are a "password equivalent". You cannot derive the user's
- password from them, but they could potentially be used in a modified
- client to gain access to a server. This would require considerable
- technical knowledge on behalf of the attacker but is perfectly possible.
- You should thus treat the data stored in whatever
- passdb backend you use (smbpasswd file, ldap, mysql) as though it contained the
- cleartext passwords of all your users. Its contents must be kept
- secret, and the file should be protected accordingly.</P
-><P
->Ideally we would like a password scheme which neither requires
- plain text passwords on the net or on disk. Unfortunately this
- is not available as Samba is stuck with being compatible with
- other SMB systems (WinNT, WfWg, Win95 etc). </P
-><DIV
-CLASS="WARNING"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="WARNING"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/warning.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Warning"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Note that Windows NT 4.0 Service pack 3 changed the
- default for permissible authentication so that plaintext
- passwords are <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->never</I
-></SPAN
-> sent over the wire.
- The solution to this is either to switch to encrypted passwords
- with Samba or edit the Windows NT registry to re-enable plaintext
- passwords. See the document WinNT.txt for details on how to do
- this.</P
-><P
->Other Microsoft operating systems which also exhibit
- this behavior includes</P
-><P
-> These versions of MS Windows do not support full domain
- security protocols, although they may log onto a domain environment.
- Of these Only MS Windows XP Home does NOT support domain logons.</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->MS DOS Network client 3.0 with
- the basic network redirector installed</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Windows 95 with the network redirector
- update installed</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Windows 98 [se]</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Windows Me</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Windows XP Home</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
-> The following versions of MS Windows fully support domain
- security protocols.</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->Windows NT 3.5x</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Windows NT 4.0</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Windows 2000 Professional</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Windows 200x Server/Advanced Server</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Windows XP Professional</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->All current release of
- Microsoft SMB/CIFS clients support authentication via the
- SMB Challenge/Response mechanism described here. Enabling
- clear text authentication does not disable the ability
- of the client to participate in encrypted authentication.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->MS Windows clients will cache the encrypted password alone.
- Even when plain text passwords are re-enabled, through the appropriate
- registry change, the plain text password is NEVER cached. This means that
- in the event that a network connections should become disconnected (broken)
- only the cached (encrypted) password will be sent to the resource server
- to affect a auto-reconnect. If the resource server does not support encrypted
- passwords the auto-reconnect will fail. <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->USE OF ENCRYPTED PASSWORDS
- IS STRONGLY ADVISED.</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN501"
->4.2.1. Advantages of SMB Encryption</A
-></H3
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->Plain text passwords are not passed across
- the network. Someone using a network sniffer cannot just
- record passwords going to the SMB server.</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->WinNT doesn't like talking to a server
- that SM not support encrypted passwords. It will refuse
- to browse the server if the server is also in user level
- security mode. It will insist on prompting the user for the
- password on each connection, which is very annoying. The
- only things you can do to stop this is to use SMB encryption.
- </TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Encrypted password support allows automatic share
- (resource) reconnects.</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN507"
->4.2.2. Advantages of non-encrypted passwords</A
-></H3
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->Plain text passwords are not kept
- on disk, and are NOT cached in memory. </TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Uses same password file as other unix
- services such as login and ftp</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Use of other services (such as telnet and ftp) which
- send plain text passwords over the net, so sending them for SMB
- isn't such a big deal.</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN513"
->4.3. The smbpasswd Command</A
-></H2
-><P
->The smbpasswd utility is a utility similar to the
- <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->passwd</B
-> or <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->yppasswd</B
-> programs.
- It maintains the two 32 byte password fields in the passdb backend. </P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbpasswd</B
-> works in a client-server mode
- where it contacts the local smbd to change the user's password on its
- behalf. This has enormous benefits - as follows.</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbpasswd</B
-> has the capability
- to change passwords on Windows NT servers (this only works when
- the request is sent to the NT Primary Domain Controller if you
- are changing an NT Domain user's password).</P
-><P
->To run smbpasswd as a normal user just type :</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->$ </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbpasswd</KBD
-></P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->Old SMB password: </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->&#60;type old value here -
- or hit return if there was no old password&#62;</KBD
-></P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->New SMB Password: </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->&#60;type new value&#62;
- </KBD
-></P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->Repeat New SMB Password: </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->&#60;re-type new value
- </KBD
-></P
-><P
->If the old value does not match the current value stored for
- that user, or the two new values do not match each other, then the
- password will not be changed.</P
-><P
->If invoked by an ordinary user it will only allow the user
- to change his or her own Samba password.</P
-><P
->If run by the root user smbpasswd may take an optional
- argument, specifying the user name whose SMB password you wish to
- change. Note that when run as root smbpasswd does not prompt for
- or check the old password value, thus allowing root to set passwords
- for users who have forgotten their passwords.</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbpasswd</B
-> is designed to work in the same way
- and be familiar to UNIX users who use the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->passwd</B
-> or
- <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->yppasswd</B
-> commands.</P
-><P
->For more details on using <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbpasswd</B
-> refer
- to the man page which will always be the definitive reference.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN544"
->4.4. Plain text</A
-></H2
-><P
->Older versions of samba retrieved user information from the unix user database
-and eventually some other fields from the file <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/samba/smbpasswd</TT
->
-or <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/smbpasswd</TT
->. When password encryption is disabled, no
-data is stored at all.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN549"
->4.5. TDB</A
-></H2
-><P
->Samba can also store the user data in a "TDB" (Trivial Database). Using this backend
-doesn't require any additional configuration. This backend is recommended for new installations who
-don't require LDAP.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN552"
->4.6. LDAP</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN554"
->4.6.1. Introduction</A
-></H3
-><P
->This document describes how to use an LDAP directory for storing Samba user
-account information traditionally stored in the smbpasswd(5) file. It is
-assumed that the reader already has a basic understanding of LDAP concepts
-and has a working directory server already installed. For more information
-on LDAP architectures and Directories, please refer to the following sites.</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->OpenLDAP - <A
-HREF="http://www.openldap.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.openldap.org/</A
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->iPlanet Directory Server - <A
-HREF="http://iplanet.netscape.com/directory"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://iplanet.netscape.com/directory</A
-></P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Note that <A
-HREF="http://www.ora.com/"
-TARGET="_top"
->O'Reilly Publishing</A
-> is working on
-a guide to LDAP for System Administrators which has a planned release date of
-early summer, 2002.</P
-><P
->Two additional Samba resources which may prove to be helpful are</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->The <A
-HREF="http://www.unav.es/cti/ldap-smb/ldap-smb-3-howto.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->Samba-PDC-LDAP-HOWTO</A
->
- maintained by Ignacio Coupeau.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->The NT migration scripts from <A
-HREF="http://samba.idealx.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->IDEALX</A
-> that are
- geared to manage users and group in such a Samba-LDAP Domain Controller configuration.
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN574"
->4.6.2. Introduction</A
-></H3
-><P
->Traditionally, when configuring <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#ENCRYPTPASSWORDS"
-TARGET="_top"
->"encrypt
-passwords = yes"</A
-> in Samba's <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file, user account
-information such as username, LM/NT password hashes, password change times, and account
-flags have been stored in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smbpasswd(5)</TT
-> file. There are several
-disadvantages to this approach for sites with very large numbers of users (counted
-in the thousands).</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->The first is that all lookups must be performed sequentially. Given that
-there are approximately two lookups per domain logon (one for a normal
-session connection such as when mapping a network drive or printer), this
-is a performance bottleneck for lareg sites. What is needed is an indexed approach
-such as is used in databases.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->The second problem is that administrators who desired to replicate a
-smbpasswd file to more than one Samba server were left to use external
-tools such as <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->rsync(1)</B
-> and <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->ssh(1)</B
->
-and wrote custom, in-house scripts.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->And finally, the amount of information which is stored in an
-smbpasswd entry leaves no room for additional attributes such as
-a home directory, password expiration time, or even a Relative
-Identified (RID).</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->As a result of these defeciencies, a more robust means of storing user attributes
-used by smbd was developed. The API which defines access to user accounts
-is commonly referred to as the samdb interface (previously this was called the passdb
-API, and is still so named in the CVS trees). </P
-><P
->There are a few points to stress about what the ldapsam
-does not provide. The LDAP support referred to in the this documentation does not
-include:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->A means of retrieving user account information from
- an Windows 2000 Active Directory server.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->A means of replacing /etc/passwd.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->The second item can be accomplished by using LDAP NSS and PAM modules. LGPL
-versions of these libraries can be obtained from PADL Software
-(<A
-HREF="http://www.padl.com/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.padl.com/</A
->). However,
-the details of configuring these packages are beyond the scope of this document.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN598"
->4.6.3. Supported LDAP Servers</A
-></H3
-><P
->The LDAP samdb code in 2.2.3 (and later) has been developed and tested
-using the OpenLDAP 2.0 server and client libraries.
-The same code should be able to work with Netscape's Directory Server
-and client SDK. However, due to lack of testing so far, there are bound
-to be compile errors and bugs. These should not be hard to fix.
-If you are so inclined, please be sure to forward all patches to
-<A
-HREF="mailto:samba-patches@samba.org"
-TARGET="_top"
->samba-patches@samba.org</A
-> and
-<A
-HREF="mailto:jerry@samba.org"
-TARGET="_top"
->jerry@samba.org</A
->.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN603"
->4.6.4. Schema and Relationship to the RFC 2307 posixAccount</A
-></H3
-><P
->Samba 3.0 includes the necessary schema file for OpenLDAP 2.0 in
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->examples/LDAP/samba.schema</TT
->. The sambaAccount objectclass is given here:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->objectclass ( 1.3.1.5.1.4.1.7165.2.2.2 NAME 'sambaAccount' SUP top STRUCTURAL
- DESC 'Samba Account'
- MUST ( uid $ rid )
- MAY ( cn $ lmPassword $ ntPassword $ pwdLastSet $ logonTime $
- logoffTime $ kickoffTime $ pwdCanChange $ pwdMustChange $ acctFlags $
- displayName $ smbHome $ homeDrive $ scriptPath $ profilePath $
- description $ userWorkstations $ primaryGroupID $ domain ))</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The samba.schema file has been formatted for OpenLDAP 2.0. The OID's are
-owned by the Samba Team and as such is legal to be openly published.
-If you translate the schema to be used with Netscape DS, please
-submit the modified schema file as a patch to <A
-HREF="mailto:jerry@samba.org"
-TARGET="_top"
->jerry@samba.org</A
-></P
-><P
->Just as the smbpasswd file is mean to store information which supplements a
-user's <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
-> entry, so is the sambaAccount object
-meant to supplement the UNIX user account information. A sambaAccount is a
-<CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->STRUCTURAL</CODE
-> objectclass so it can be stored individually
-in the directory. However, there are several fields (e.g. uid) which overlap
-with the posixAccount objectclass outlined in RFC2307. This is by design.</P
-><P
->In order to store all user account information (UNIX and Samba) in the directory,
-it is necessary to use the sambaAccount and posixAccount objectclasses in
-combination. However, smbd will still obtain the user's UNIX account
-information via the standard C library calls (e.g. getpwnam(), et. al.).
-This means that the Samba server must also have the LDAP NSS library installed
-and functioning correctly. This division of information makes it possible to
-store all Samba account information in LDAP, but still maintain UNIX account
-information in NIS while the network is transitioning to a full LDAP infrastructure.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN615"
->4.6.5. Configuring Samba with LDAP</A
-></H3
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN617"
->4.6.5.1. OpenLDAP configuration</A
-></H4
-><P
->To include support for the sambaAccount object in an OpenLDAP directory
-server, first copy the samba.schema file to slapd's configuration directory.</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->cp samba.schema /etc/openldap/schema/</KBD
-></P
-><P
->Next, include the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->samba.schema</TT
-> file in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->slapd.conf</TT
->.
-The sambaAccount object contains two attributes which depend upon other schema
-files. The 'uid' attribute is defined in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->cosine.schema</TT
-> and
-the 'displayName' attribute is defined in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->inetorgperson.schema</TT
->
-file. Both of these must be included before the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->samba.schema</TT
-> file.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->## /etc/openldap/slapd.conf
-
-## schema files (core.schema is required by default)
-include /etc/openldap/schema/core.schema
-
-## needed for sambaAccount
-include /etc/openldap/schema/cosine.schema
-include /etc/openldap/schema/inetorgperson.schema
-include /etc/openldap/schema/samba.schema
-include /etc/openldap/schema/nis.schema
-
-....</PRE
-></P
-><P
->It is recommended that you maintain some indices on some of the most usefull attributes,
-like in the following example, to speed up searches made on sambaAccount objectclasses
-(and possibly posixAccount and posixGroup as well).</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-># Indices to maintain
-## required by OpenLDAP 2.0
-index objectclass eq
-
-## support pb_getsampwnam()
-index uid pres,eq
-## support pdb_getsambapwrid()
-index rid eq
-
-## uncomment these if you are storing posixAccount and
-## posixGroup entries in the directory as well
-##index uidNumber eq
-##index gidNumber eq
-##index cn eq
-##index memberUid eq</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN634"
->4.6.5.2. Configuring Samba</A
-></H4
-><P
->The following parameters are available in smb.conf only with <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->--with-ldapsam</VAR
->
-was included with compiling Samba.</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#LDAPSSL"
-TARGET="_top"
->ldap ssl</A
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#LDAPSERVER"
-TARGET="_top"
->ldap server</A
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#LDAPADMINDN"
-TARGET="_top"
->ldap admin dn</A
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#LDAPSUFFIX"
-TARGET="_top"
->ldap suffix</A
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#LDAPFILTER"
-TARGET="_top"
->ldap filter</A
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#LDAPPORT"
-TARGET="_top"
->ldap port</A
-></P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->These are described in the <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->smb.conf(5)</A
-> man
-page and so will not be repeated here. However, a sample smb.conf file for
-use with an LDAP directory could appear as</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->## /usr/local/samba/lib/smb.conf
-[global]
- security = user
- encrypt passwords = yes
-
- netbios name = TASHTEGO
- workgroup = NARNIA
-
- # ldap related parameters
-
- # define the DN to use when binding to the directory servers
- # The password for this DN is not stored in smb.conf. Rather it
- # must be set by using 'smbpasswd -w <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->secretpw</VAR
->' to store the
- # passphrase in the secrets.tdb file. If the "ldap admin dn" values
- # changes, this password will need to be reset.
- ldap admin dn = "cn=Samba Manager,ou=people,dc=samba,dc=org"
-
- # specify the LDAP server's hostname (defaults to locahost)
- ldap server = ahab.samba.org
-
- # Define the SSL option when connecting to the directory
- # ('off', 'start tls', or 'on' (default))
- ldap ssl = start tls
-
- # define the port to use in the LDAP session (defaults to 636 when
- # "ldap ssl = on")
- ldap port = 389
-
- # specify the base DN to use when searching the directory
- ldap suffix = "ou=people,dc=samba,dc=org"
-
- # generally the default ldap search filter is ok
- # ldap filter = "(&#38;(uid=%u)(objectclass=sambaAccount))"</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN662"
->4.6.6. Accounts and Groups management</A
-></H3
-><P
->As users accounts are managed thru the sambaAccount objectclass, you should
-modify you existing administration tools to deal with sambaAccount attributes.</P
-><P
->Machines accounts are managed with the sambaAccount objectclass, just
-like users accounts. However, it's up to you to stored thoses accounts
-in a different tree of you LDAP namespace: you should use
-"ou=Groups,dc=plainjoe,dc=org" to store groups and
-"ou=People,dc=plainjoe,dc=org" to store users. Just configure your
-NSS and PAM accordingly (usually, in the /etc/ldap.conf configuration
-file).</P
-><P
->In Samba release 3.0, the group management system is based on posix
-groups. This means that Samba make usage of the posixGroup objectclass.
-For now, there is no NT-like group system management (global and local
-groups).</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN667"
->4.6.7. Security and sambaAccount</A
-></H3
-><P
->There are two important points to remember when discussing the security
-of sambaAccount entries in the directory.</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Never</I
-></SPAN
-> retrieve the lmPassword or
- ntPassword attribute values over an unencrypted LDAP session.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Never</I
-></SPAN
-> allow non-admin users to
- view the lmPassword or ntPassword attribute values.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->These password hashes are clear text equivalents and can be used to impersonate
-the user without deriving the original clear text strings. For more information
-on the details of LM/NT password hashes, refer to the <A
-HREF="#PASSDB"
->User Database</A
-> of the Samba-HOWTO-Collection.</P
-><P
->To remedy the first security issue, the "ldap ssl" smb.conf parameter defaults
-to require an encrypted session (<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->ldap ssl = on</B
->) using
-the default port of 636
-when contacting the directory server. When using an OpenLDAP 2.0 server, it
-is possible to use the use the StartTLS LDAP extended operation in the place of
-LDAPS. In either case, you are strongly discouraged to disable this security
-(<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->ldap ssl = off</B
->).</P
-><P
->Note that the LDAPS protocol is deprecated in favor of the LDAPv3 StartTLS
-extended operation. However, the OpenLDAP library still provides support for
-the older method of securing communication between clients and servers.</P
-><P
->The second security precaution is to prevent non-administrative users from
-harvesting password hashes from the directory. This can be done using the
-following ACL in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->slapd.conf</TT
->:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->## allow the "ldap admin dn" access, but deny everyone else
-access to attrs=lmPassword,ntPassword
- by dn="cn=Samba Admin,ou=people,dc=plainjoe,dc=org" write
- by * none</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN687"
->4.6.8. LDAP specials attributes for sambaAccounts</A
-></H3
-><P
->The sambaAccount objectclass is composed of the following attributes:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->lmPassword</CODE
->: the LANMAN password 16-byte hash stored as a character
- representation of a hexidecimal string.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->ntPassword</CODE
->: the NT password hash 16-byte stored as a character
- representation of a hexidecimal string.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->pwdLastSet</CODE
->: The integer time in seconds since 1970 when the
- <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->lmPassword</CODE
-> and <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->ntPassword</CODE
-> attributes were last set.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->acctFlags</CODE
->: string of 11 characters surrounded by square brackets []
- representing account flags such as U (user), W(workstation), X(no password expiration), and
- D(disabled).</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->logonTime</CODE
->: Integer value currently unused</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->logoffTime</CODE
->: Integer value currently unused</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->kickoffTime</CODE
->: Integer value currently unused</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->pwdCanChange</CODE
->: Integer value currently unused</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->pwdMustChange</CODE
->: Integer value currently unused</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->homeDrive</CODE
->: specifies the drive letter to which to map the
- UNC path specified by homeDirectory. The drive letter must be specified in the form "X:"
- where X is the letter of the drive to map. Refer to the "logon drive" parameter in the
- smb.conf(5) man page for more information.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->scriptPath</CODE
->: The scriptPath property specifies the path of
- the user's logon script, .CMD, .EXE, or .BAT file. The string can be null. The path
- is relative to the netlogon share. Refer to the "logon script" parameter in the
- smb.conf(5) man page for more information.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->profilePath</CODE
->: specifies a path to the user's profile.
- This value can be a null string, a local absolute path, or a UNC path. Refer to the
- "logon path" parameter in the smb.conf(5) man page for more information.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->smbHome</CODE
->: The homeDirectory property specifies the path of
- the home directory for the user. The string can be null. If homeDrive is set and specifies
- a drive letter, homeDirectory should be a UNC path. The path must be a network
- UNC path of the form \\server\share\directory. This value can be a null string.
- Refer to the "logon home" parameter in the smb.conf(5) man page for more information.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->userWorkstation</CODE
->: character string value currently unused.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->rid</CODE
->: the integer representation of the user's relative identifier
- (RID).</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->primaryGroupID</CODE
->: the relative identifier (RID) of the primary group
- of the user.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->The majority of these parameters are only used when Samba is acting as a PDC of
-a domain (refer to the <A
-HREF="Samba-PDC-HOWTO.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->Samba-PDC-HOWTO</A
-> for details on
-how to configure Samba as a Primary Domain Controller). The following four attributes
-are only stored with the sambaAccount entry if the values are non-default values:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->smbHome</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->scriptPath</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->logonPath</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->homeDrive</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->These attributes are only stored with the sambaAccount entry if
-the values are non-default values. For example, assume TASHTEGO has now been
-configured as a PDC and that <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->logon home = \\%L\%u</B
-> was defined in
-its <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file. When a user named "becky" logons to the domain,
-the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->logon home</VAR
-> string is expanded to \\TASHTEGO\becky.
-If the smbHome attribute exists in the entry "uid=becky,ou=people,dc=samba,dc=org",
-this value is used. However, if this attribute does not exist, then the value
-of the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->logon home</VAR
-> parameter is used in its place. Samba
-will only write the attribute value to the directory entry is the value is
-something other than the default (e.g. \\MOBY\becky).</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN757"
->4.6.9. Example LDIF Entries for a sambaAccount</A
-></H3
-><P
->The following is a working LDIF with the inclusion of the posixAccount objectclass:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->dn: uid=guest2, ou=people,dc=plainjoe,dc=org
-ntPassword: 878D8014606CDA29677A44EFA1353FC7
-pwdMustChange: 2147483647
-primaryGroupID: 1201
-lmPassword: 552902031BEDE9EFAAD3B435B51404EE
-pwdLastSet: 1010179124
-logonTime: 0
-objectClass: sambaAccount
-uid: guest2
-kickoffTime: 2147483647
-acctFlags: [UX ]
-logoffTime: 2147483647
-rid: 19006
-pwdCanChange: 0</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The following is an LDIF entry for using both the sambaAccount and
-posixAccount objectclasses:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->dn: uid=gcarter, ou=people,dc=plainjoe,dc=org
-logonTime: 0
-displayName: Gerald Carter
-lmPassword: 552902031BEDE9EFAAD3B435B51404EE
-primaryGroupID: 1201
-objectClass: posixAccount
-objectClass: sambaAccount
-acctFlags: [UX ]
-userPassword: {crypt}BpM2ej8Rkzogo
-uid: gcarter
-uidNumber: 9000
-cn: Gerald Carter
-loginShell: /bin/bash
-logoffTime: 2147483647
-gidNumber: 100
-kickoffTime: 2147483647
-pwdLastSet: 1010179230
-rid: 19000
-homeDirectory: /home/tashtego/gcarter
-pwdCanChange: 0
-pwdMustChange: 2147483647
-ntPassword: 878D8014606CDA29677A44EFA1353FC7</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN765"
->4.7. MySQL</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN767"
->4.7.1. Creating the database</A
-></H3
-><P
->You either can set up your own table and specify the field names to pdb_mysql (see below
-for the column names) or use the default table. The file <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->examples/pdb/mysql/mysql.dump</TT
->
-contains the correct queries to create the required tables. Use the command :
-
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->mysql -u<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->username</VAR
-> -h<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->hostname</VAR
-> -p<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->password</VAR
-> <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->databasename</VAR
-> &#60; <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/path/to/samba/examples/pdb/mysql/mysql.dump</TT
-></B
->&#13;</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN777"
->4.7.2. Configuring</A
-></H3
-><P
->This plugin lacks some good documentation, but here is some short info:</P
-><P
->Add a the following to the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->passdb backend</B
-> variable in your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->:
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->passdb backend = [other-plugins] mysql:identifier [other-plugins]</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The identifier can be any string you like, as long as it doesn't collide with
-the identifiers of other plugins or other instances of pdb_mysql. If you
-specify multiple pdb_mysql.so entries in 'passdb backend', you also need to
-use different identifiers!</P
-><P
->Additional options can be given thru the smb.conf file in the [global] section.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->identifier:mysql host - host name, defaults to 'localhost'
-identifier:mysql password
-identifier:mysql user - defaults to 'samba'
-identifier:mysql database - defaults to 'samba'
-identifier:mysql port - defaults to 3306
-identifier:table - Name of the table containing users</PRE
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="WARNING"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="WARNING"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/warning.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Warning"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Since the password for the mysql user is stored in the
-smb.conf file, you should make the the smb.conf file
-readable only to the user that runs samba. This is considered a security
-bug and will be fixed soon.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->Names of the columns in this table(I've added column types those columns should have first):</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->identifier:logon time column - int(9)
-identifier:logoff time column - int(9)
-identifier:kickoff time column - int(9)
-identifier:pass last set time column - int(9)
-identifier:pass can change time column - int(9)
-identifier:pass must change time column - int(9)
-identifier:username column - varchar(255) - unix username
-identifier:domain column - varchar(255) - NT domain user is part of
-identifier:nt username column - varchar(255) - NT username
-identifier:fullname column - varchar(255) - Full name of user
-identifier:home dir column - varchar(255) - Unix homedir path
-identifier:dir drive column - varchar(2) - Directory drive path (eg: 'H:')
-identifier:logon script column - varchar(255) - Batch file to run on client side when logging on
-identifier:profile path column - varchar(255) - Path of profile
-identifier:acct desc column - varchar(255) - Some ASCII NT user data
-identifier:workstations column - varchar(255) - Workstations user can logon to (or NULL for all)
-identifier:unknown string column - varchar(255) - unknown string
-identifier:munged dial column - varchar(255) - ?
-identifier:uid column - int(9) - Unix user ID (uid)
-identifier:gid column - int(9) - Unix user group (gid)
-identifier:user sid column - varchar(255) - NT user SID
-identifier:group sid column - varchar(255) - NT group ID
-identifier:lanman pass column - varchar(255) - encrypted lanman password
-identifier:nt pass column - varchar(255) - encrypted nt passwd
-identifier:plain pass column - varchar(255) - plaintext password
-identifier:acct control column - int(9) - nt user data
-identifier:unknown 3 column - int(9) - unknown
-identifier:logon divs column - int(9) - ?
-identifier:hours len column - int(9) - ?
-identifier:unknown 5 column - int(9) - unknown
-identifier:unknown 6 column - int(9) - unknown</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Eventually, you can put a colon (:) after the name of each column, which
-should specify the column to update when updating the table. You can also
-specify nothing behind the colon - then the data from the field will not be
-updated. </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN794"
->4.7.3. Using plaintext passwords or encrypted password</A
-></H3
-><P
->I strongly discourage the use of plaintext passwords, however, you can use them:</P
-><P
->If you would like to use plaintext passwords, set 'identifier:lanman pass column' and 'identifier:nt pass column' to 'NULL' (without the quotes) and 'identifier:plain pass column' to the name of the column containing the plaintext passwords. </P
-><P
->If you use encrypted passwords, set the 'identifier:plain pass column' to 'NULL' (without the quotes). This is the default.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN799"
->4.7.4. Getting non-column data from the table</A
-></H3
-><P
->It is possible to have not all data in the database and making some 'constant'.</P
-><P
->For example, you can set 'identifier:fullname column' to :
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->CONCAT(First_name,' ',Sur_name)</B
-></P
-><P
->Or, set 'identifier:workstations column' to :
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->NULL</B
-></P
-><P
->See the MySQL documentation for more language constructs.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN807"
->4.8. XML</A
-></H2
-><P
->This module requires libxml2 to be installed.</P
-><P
->The usage of pdb_xml is pretty straightforward. To export data, use:
-
-<KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->pdbedit -e xml:filename</KBD
->
-
-(where filename is the name of the file to put the data in)</P
-><P
->To import data, use:
-<KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->pdbedit -i xml:filename -e current-pdb</KBD
->
-
-Where filename is the name to read the data from and current-pdb to put it in.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="PART"
-><A
-NAME="TYPE"
-></A
-><DIV
-CLASS="TITLEPAGE"
-><H1
-CLASS="TITLE"
->II. Type of installation</H1
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="PARTINTRO"
-><A
-NAME="AEN816"
-></A
-><H1
->Introduction</H1
-><P
->Samba can operate in various SMB networks. This part contains information on configuring samba
-for various environments.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="SERVERTYPE"
-></A
->Chapter 5. Nomenclature of Server Types</H1
-><P
->Adminstrators of Microsoft networks often refer to there being three
-different type of servers:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Stand Alone Server</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Domain Member Server</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Domain Controller</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Primary Domain Controller</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Backup Domain Controller</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->ADS Domain Controller</P
-></LI
-></UL
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->A network administrator who is familiar with these terms and who
-wishes to migrate to or use Samba will want to know what these terms mean
-within a Samba context.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN846"
->5.1. Stand Alone Server</A
-></H2
-><P
->The term <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->stand alone server</I
-></SPAN
-> means that the server
-will provide local authentication and access control for all resources
-that are available from it. In general this means that there will be a
-local user database. In more technical terms, it means that resources
-on the machine will either be made available in either SHARE mode or in
-USER mode. SHARE mode and USER mode security are documented under
-discussions regarding "security mode". The smb.conf configuration parameters
-that control security mode are: "security = user" and "security = share".</P
-><P
->No special action is needed other than to create user accounts. Stand-alone
-servers do NOT provide network logon services, meaning that machines that
-use this server do NOT perform a domain logon but instead make use only of
-the MS Windows logon which is local to the MS Windows workstation/server.</P
-><P
->Samba tends to blur the distinction a little in respect of what is
-a stand alone server. This is because the authentication database may be
-local or on a remote server, even if from the samba protocol perspective
-the samba server is NOT a member of a domain security context.</P
-><P
->Through the use of PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) and nsswitch
-(the name service switcher) the source of authentication may reside on
-another server. We would be inclined to call this the authentication server.
-This means that the samba server may use the local Unix/Linux system
-password database (/etc/passwd or /etc/shadow), may use a local smbpasswd
-file (/etc/samba/smbpasswd or /usr/local/samba/lib/private/smbpasswd), or
-may use an LDAP back end, or even via PAM and Winbind another CIFS/SMB
-server for authentication.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN853"
->5.2. Domain Member Server</A
-></H2
-><P
->This mode of server operation involves the samba machine being made a member
-of a domain security context. This means by definition that all user authentication
-will be done from a centrally defined authentication regime. The authentication
-regime may come from an NT3/4 style (old domain technology) server, or it may be
-provided from an Active Directory server (ADS) running on MS Windows 2000 or later.</P
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Of course it should be clear that the authentication back end itself could be from any
-distributed directory architecture server that is supported by Samba. This can be
-LDAP (from OpenLDAP), or Sun's iPlanet, of NetWare Directory Server, etc.</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
->Please refer to the section on Howto configure Samba as a Primary Domain Controller
-and for more information regarding how to create a domain machine account for a
-domain member server as well as for information regading how to enable the samba
-domain member machine to join the domain and to be fully trusted by it.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN859"
->5.3. Domain Controller</A
-></H2
-><P
->Over the years public perceptions of what Domain Control really is has taken on an
-almost mystical nature. Before we branch into a brief overview of what Domain Control
-is the following types of controller are known:</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN862"
->5.3.1. Domain Controller Types</A
-></H3
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->Primary Domain Controller</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Backup Domain Controller</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->ADS Domain Controller</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
->The <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Primary Domain Controller</I
-></SPAN
-> or PDC plays an important role in the MS
-Windows NT3 and NT4 Domain Control architecture, but not in the manner that so many
-expect. The PDC seeds the Domain Control database (a part of the Windows registry) and
-it plays a key part in synchronisation of the domain authentication database. </P
-><P
->New to Samba-3.0.0 is the ability to use a back-end file that holds the same type of data as
-the NT4 style SAM (Security Account Manager) database (one of the registry files).
-The samba-3.0.0 SAM can be specified via the smb.conf file parameter "passwd backend" and
-valid options include <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
-> smbpasswd tdbsam ldapsam nisplussam plugin unixsam</I
-></SPAN
->.
-The smbpasswd, tdbsam and ldapsam options can have a "_nua" suffix to indicate that No Unix
-Accounts need to be created. In other words, the Samba SAM will be independant of Unix/Linux
-system accounts, provided a uid range is defined from which SAM accounts can be created.</P
-><P
->The <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Backup Domain Controller</I
-></SPAN
-> or BDC plays a key role in servicing network
-authentication requests. The BDC is biased to answer logon requests so that on a network segment
-that has a BDC and a PDC the BDC will be most likely to service network logon requests. The PDC will
-answer network logon requests when the BDC is too busy (high load). A BDC can be promoted to
-a PDC. If the PDC is on line at the time that the BDC is promoted to PDC the previous PDC is
-automatically demoted to a BDC.</P
-><P
->At this time Samba is NOT capable of acting as an <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->ADS Domain Controller</I
-></SPAN
->.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="SECURITYLEVELS"
-></A
->Chapter 6. Samba as Stand-Alone Server</H1
-><P
->In this section the function and purpose of Samba's <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->security</I
-></SPAN
->
-modes are described.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN896"
->6.1. User and Share security level</A
-></H2
-><P
->A SMB server tells the client at startup what "security level" it is
-running. There are two options "share level" and "user level". Which
-of these two the client receives affects the way the client then tries
-to authenticate itself. It does not directly affect (to any great
-extent) the way the Samba server does security. I know this is
-strange, but it fits in with the client/server approach of SMB. In SMB
-everything is initiated and controlled by the client, and the server
-can only tell the client what is available and whether an action is
-allowed. </P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN899"
->6.1.1. User Level Security</A
-></H3
-><P
->I'll describe user level security first, as its simpler. In user level
-security the client will send a "session setup" command directly after
-the protocol negotiation. This contains a username and password. The
-server can either accept or reject that username/password
-combination. Note that at this stage the server has no idea what
-share the client will eventually try to connect to, so it can't base
-the "accept/reject" on anything other than:</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
->the username/password</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->the machine that the client is coming from</P
-></LI
-></OL
-><P
->If the server accepts the username/password then the client expects to
-be able to mount any share (using a "tree connection") without
-specifying a password. It expects that all access rights will be as
-the username/password specified in the "session setup". </P
-><P
->It is also possible for a client to send multiple "session setup"
-requests. When the server responds it gives the client a "uid" to use
-as an authentication tag for that username/password. The client can
-maintain multiple authentication contexts in this way (WinDD is an
-example of an application that does this)</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN909"
->6.1.2. Share Level Security</A
-></H3
-><P
->Ok, now for share level security. In share level security the client
-authenticates itself separately for each share. It will send a
-password along with each "tree connection" (share mount). It does not
-explicitly send a username with this operation. The client is
-expecting a password to be associated with each share, independent of
-the user. This means that samba has to work out what username the
-client probably wants to use. It is never explicitly sent the
-username. Some commercial SMB servers such as NT actually associate
-passwords directly with shares in share level security, but samba
-always uses the unix authentication scheme where it is a
-username/password that is authenticated, not a "share/password".</P
-><P
->Many clients send a "session setup" even if the server is in share
-level security. They normally send a valid username but no
-password. Samba records this username in a list of "possible
-usernames". When the client then does a "tree connection" it also adds
-to this list the name of the share they try to connect to (useful for
-home directories) and any users listed in the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->user =</B
-> <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->
-line. The password is then checked in turn against these "possible
-usernames". If a match is found then the client is authenticated as
-that user.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN915"
->6.1.3. Server Level Security</A
-></H3
-><P
->Finally "server level" security. In server level security the samba
-server reports to the client that it is in user level security. The
-client then does a "session setup" as described earlier. The samba
-server takes the username/password that the client sends and attempts
-to login to the "password server" by sending exactly the same
-username/password that it got from the client. If that server is in
-user level security and accepts the password then samba accepts the
-clients connection. This allows the samba server to use another SMB
-server as the "password server". </P
-><P
->You should also note that at the very start of all this, where the
-server tells the client what security level it is in, it also tells
-the client if it supports encryption. If it does then it supplies the
-client with a random "cryptkey". The client will then send all
-passwords in encrypted form. You have to compile samba with encryption
-enabled to support this feature, and you have to maintain a separate
-smbpasswd file with SMB style encrypted passwords. It is
-cryptographically impossible to translate from unix style encryption
-to SMB style encryption, although there are some fairly simple management
-schemes by which the two could be kept in sync.</P
-><P
->"security = server" means that Samba reports to clients that
-it is running in "user mode" but actually passes off all authentication
-requests to another "user mode" server. This requires an additional
-parameter "password server =" that points to the real authentication server.
-That real authentication server can be another Samba server or can be a
-Windows NT server, the later natively capable of encrypted password support.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN920"
->6.1.3.1. Configuring Samba for Seemless Windows Network Integration</A
-></H4
-><P
->MS Windows clients may use encrypted passwords as part of a challenege/response
-authentication model (a.k.a. NTLMv1) or alone, or clear text strings for simple
-password based authentication. It should be realized that with the SMB protocol
-the password is passed over the network either in plain text or encrypted, but
-not both in the same authentication requests.</P
-><P
->When encrypted passwords are used a password that has been entered by the user
-is encrypted in two ways:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->An MD4 hash of the UNICODE of the password
- string. This is known as the NT hash.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->The password is converted to upper case,
- and then padded or trucated to 14 bytes. This string is
- then appended with 5 bytes of NULL characters and split to
- form two 56 bit DES keys to encrypt a "magic" 8 byte value.
- The resulting 16 bytes for the LanMan hash.
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->MS Windows 95 pre-service pack 1, MS Windows NT versions 3.x and version 4.0
-pre-service pack 3 will use either mode of password authentication. All
-versions of MS Windows that follow these versions no longer support plain
-text passwords by default.</P
-><P
->MS Windows clients have a habit of dropping network mappings that have been idle
-for 10 minutes or longer. When the user attempts to use the mapped drive
-connection that has been dropped, the client re-establishes the connection using
-a cached copy of the password.</P
-><P
->When Microsoft changed the default password mode, support was dropped for caching
-of the plain text password. This means that when the registry parameter is changed
-to re-enable use of plain text passwords it appears to work, but when a dropped
-service connection mapping attempts to revalidate it will fail if the remote
-authentication server does not support encrypted passwords. This means that it
-is definitely not a good idea to re-enable plain text password support in such clients.</P
-><P
->The following parameters can be used to work around the issue of Windows 9x client
-upper casing usernames and password before transmitting them to the SMB server
-when using clear text authentication.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#PASSWORDLEVEL"
-TARGET="_top"
->passsword level</A
-> = <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->integer</VAR
->
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#USERNAMELEVEL"
-TARGET="_top"
->username level</A
-> = <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->integer</VAR
-></PRE
-></P
-><P
->By default Samba will lower case the username before attempting to lookup the user
-in the database of local system accounts. Because UNIX usernames conventionally
-only contain lower case character, the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->username level</VAR
-> parameter
-is rarely needed.</P
-><P
->However, passwords on UNIX systems often make use of mixed case characters.
-This means that in order for a user on a Windows 9x client to connect to a Samba
-server using clear text authentication, the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->password level</VAR
->
-must be set to the maximum number of upper case letter which <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->could</I
-></SPAN
->
-appear is a password. Note that is the server OS uses the traditional DES version
-of crypt(), then a <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->password level</VAR
-> of 8 will result in case
-insensitive passwords as seen from Windows users. This will also result in longer
-login times as Samba hash to compute the permutations of the password string and
-try them one by one until a match is located (or all combinations fail).</P
-><P
->The best option to adopt is to enable support for encrypted passwords
-where ever Samba is used. There are three configuration possibilities
-for support of encrypted passwords:</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN946"
->6.1.3.2. Use MS Windows NT as an authentication server</A
-></H4
-><P
->This method involves the additions of the following parameters in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> encrypt passwords = Yes
- security = server
- password server = "NetBIOS_name_of_PDC"</PRE
-></P
-><P
->There are two ways of identifying whether or not a username and
-password pair was valid or not. One uses the reply information provided
-as part of the authentication messaging process, the other uses
-just and error code.</P
-><P
->The down-side of this mode of configuration is the fact that
-for security reasons Samba will send the password server a bogus
-username and a bogus password and if the remote server fails to
-reject the username and password pair then an alternative mode
-of identification of validation is used. Where a site uses password
-lock out after a certain number of failed authentication attempts
-this will result in user lockouts.</P
-><P
->Use of this mode of authentication does require there to be
-a standard Unix account for the user, this account can be blocked
-to prevent logons by other than MS Windows clients.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN955"
->6.1.4. Domain Level Security</A
-></H3
-><P
->When samba is operating in <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->security = domain</I
-></SPAN
-> mode this means that
-the Samba server has a domain security trust account (a machine account) and will cause
-all authentication requests to be passed through to the domain controllers.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN959"
->6.1.4.1. Samba as a member of an MS Windows NT security domain</A
-></H4
-><P
->This method involves additon of the following paramters in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> encrypt passwords = Yes
- security = domain
- workgroup = "name of NT domain"
- password server = *</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The use of the "*" argument to <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->password server</B
-> will cause samba to locate the
-domain controller in a way analogous to the way this is done within MS Windows NT.
-This is the default behaviour.</P
-><P
->In order for this method to work the Samba server needs to join the
-MS Windows NT security domain. This is done as follows:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->On the MS Windows NT domain controller using
- the Server Manager add a machine account for the Samba server.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Next, on the Linux system execute:
- <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbpasswd -r PDC_NAME -j DOMAIN_NAME</B
->
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Use of this mode of authentication does require there to be a standard Unix account
-for the user in order to assign a uid once the account has been authenticated by
-the remote Windows DC. This account can be blocked to prevent logons by other than
-MS Windows clients by things such as setting an invalid shell in the
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
-> entry. </P
-><P
->An alternative to assigning UIDs to Windows users on a Samba member server is
-presented in the <A
-HREF="winbind.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->Winbind Overview</A
-> chapter
-in this HOWTO collection.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN978"
->6.1.5. ADS Level Security</A
-></H3
-><P
->For information about the configuration option please refer to the entire section entitled
-<SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Samba as an ADS Domain Member.</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="SAMBA-PDC"
-></A
->Chapter 7. Samba as an NT4 or Win2k Primary Domain Controller</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1009"
->7.1. Prerequisite Reading</A
-></H2
-><P
->Before you continue reading in this chapter, please make sure
-that you are comfortable with configuring basic files services
-in smb.conf and how to enable and administer password
-encryption in Samba. Theses two topics are covered in the
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> manpage.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1013"
->7.2. Background</A
-></H2
-><P
->This article outlines the steps necessary for configuring Samba as a PDC.
-It is necessary to have a working Samba server prior to implementing the
-PDC functionality.</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> Domain logons for Windows NT 4.0 / 200x / XP Professional clients.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Placing Windows 9x / Me clients in user level security
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Retrieving a list of users and groups from a Samba PDC to
- Windows 9x / Me / NT / 200x / XP Professional clients
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Roaming Profiles
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Network/System Policies
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Roaming Profiles and System/Network policies are advanced network administration topics
-that are covered separately in this document.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->The following functionalities are new to the Samba 3.0 release:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> Windows NT 4 domain trusts
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Adding users via the User Manager for Domains
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->The following functionalities are NOT provided by Samba 3.0:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> SAM replication with Windows NT 4.0 Domain Controllers
- (i.e. a Samba PDC and a Windows NT BDC or vice versa)
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Acting as a Windows 2000 Domain Controller (i.e. Kerberos and
- Active Directory)
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Please note that Windows 9x / Me / XP Home clients are not true members of a domain
-for reasons outlined in this article. Therefore the protocol for
-support Windows 9x-style domain logons is completely different
-from NT4 / Win2k type domain logons and has been officially supported for some
-time.</P
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->MS Windows XP Home edition is NOT able to join a domain and does not permit
-the use of domain logons.</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
->Implementing a Samba PDC can basically be divided into 3 broad
-steps.</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> Configuring the Samba PDC
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Creating machine trust accounts and joining clients to the domain
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Adding and managing domain user accounts
- </P
-></LI
-></OL
-><P
->There are other minor details such as user profiles, system
-policies, etc... However, these are not necessarily specific
-to a Samba PDC as much as they are related to Windows NT networking
-concepts.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1053"
->7.3. Configuring the Samba Domain Controller</A
-></H2
-><P
->The first step in creating a working Samba PDC is to
-understand the parameters necessary in smb.conf. Here we
-attempt to explain the parameters that are covered in
-the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> man page.</P
-><P
->Here is an example <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> for acting as a PDC:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->[global]
- ; Basic server settings
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#NETBIOSNAME"
-TARGET="_top"
->netbios name</A
-> = <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->POGO</VAR
->
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#WORKGROUP"
-TARGET="_top"
->workgroup</A
-> = <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->NARNIA</VAR
->
-
- ; we should act as the domain and local master browser
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#OSLEVEL"
-TARGET="_top"
->os level</A
-> = 64
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#PERFERREDMASTER"
-TARGET="_top"
->preferred master</A
-> = yes
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#DOMAINMASTER"
-TARGET="_top"
->domain master</A
-> = yes
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#LOCALMASTER"
-TARGET="_top"
->local master</A
-> = yes
-
- ; security settings (must user security = user)
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#SECURITYEQUALSUSER"
-TARGET="_top"
->security</A
-> = user
-
- ; encrypted passwords are a requirement for a PDC
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#ENCRYPTPASSWORDS"
-TARGET="_top"
->encrypt passwords</A
-> = yes
-
- ; support domain logons
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#DOMAINLOGONS"
-TARGET="_top"
->domain logons</A
-> = yes
-
- ; where to store user profiles?
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#LOGONPATH"
-TARGET="_top"
->logon path</A
-> = \\%N\profiles\%u
-
- ; where is a user's home directory and where should it be mounted at?
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#LOGONDRIVE"
-TARGET="_top"
->logon drive</A
-> = H:
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#LOGONHOME"
-TARGET="_top"
->logon home</A
-> = \\homeserver\%u
-
- ; specify a generic logon script for all users
- ; this is a relative **DOS** path to the [netlogon] share
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#LOGONSCRIPT"
-TARGET="_top"
->logon script</A
-> = logon.cmd
-
-; necessary share for domain controller
-[netlogon]
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#PATH"
-TARGET="_top"
->path</A
-> = /usr/local/samba/lib/netlogon
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#READONLY"
-TARGET="_top"
->read only</A
-> = yes
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#WRITELIST"
-TARGET="_top"
->write list</A
-> = <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->ntadmin</VAR
->
-
-; share for storing user profiles
-[profiles]
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#PATH"
-TARGET="_top"
->path</A
-> = /export/smb/ntprofile
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#READONLY"
-TARGET="_top"
->read only</A
-> = no
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#CREATEMASK"
-TARGET="_top"
->create mask</A
-> = 0600
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#DIRECTORYMASK"
-TARGET="_top"
->directory mask</A
-> = 0700</PRE
-></P
-><P
->There are a couple of points to emphasize in the above configuration.</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> Encrypted passwords must be enabled. For more details on how
- to do this, refer to <A
-HREF="#PASSDB"
->the User Database chapter</A
->.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> The server must support domain logons and a
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->[netlogon]</TT
-> share
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> The server must be the domain master browser in order for Windows
- client to locate the server as a DC. Please refer to the various
- Network Browsing documentation included with this distribution for
- details.
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Samba 3.0 offers a complete implementation of group mapping
-between Windows NT groups and Unix groups (this is really quite
-complicated to explain in a short space).</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1095"
->7.4. Creating Machine Trust Accounts and Joining Clients to the Domain</A
-></H2
-><P
->A machine trust account is a Samba account that is used to
-authenticate a client machine (rather than a user) to the Samba
-server. In Windows terminology, this is known as a "Computer
-Account."</P
-><P
->The password of a machine trust account acts as the shared secret for
-secure communication with the Domain Controller. This is a security
-feature to prevent an unauthorized machine with the same NetBIOS name
-from joining the domain and gaining access to domain user/group
-accounts. Windows NT, 200x, XP Professional clients use machine trust
-accounts, but Windows 9x / Me / XP Home clients do not. Hence, a
-Windows 9x / Me / XP Home client is never a true member of a domain
-because it does not possess a machine trust account, and thus has no
-shared secret with the domain controller.</P
-><P
->A Windows PDC stores each machine trust account in the Windows
-Registry. A Samba-3 PDC also has to stoe machine trust account information
-in a suitable back-end data store. With Samba-3 there can be multiple back-ends
-for this including:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->smbpaswd</I
-></SPAN
-> - the plain ascii file stored used by
- earlier versions of Samba. This file configuration option requires
- a Unix/Linux system account for EVERY entry (ie: both for user and for
- machine accounts). This file will be located in the <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->private</I
-></SPAN
->
- directory (default is /usr/local/samba/lib/private or on linux /etc/samba).
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->smbpasswd_nua</I
-></SPAN
-> - This file is independant of the
- system wide user accounts. The use of this back-end option requires
- specification of the "non unix account range" option also. It is called
- smbpasswd and will be located in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->private</TT
-> directory.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->tdbsam</I
-></SPAN
-> - a binary database backend that will be
- stored in the <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->private</I
-></SPAN
-> directory in a file called
- <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->passwd.tdb</I
-></SPAN
->. The key benefit of this binary format
- file is that it can store binary objects that can not be accomodated
- in the traditional plain text smbpasswd file.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->tdbsam_nua</I
-></SPAN
-> like the smbpasswd_nua option above, this
- file allows the creation of arbitrary user and machine accounts without
- requiring that account to be added to the system (/etc/passwd) file. It
- too requires the specification of the "non unix account range" option
- in the [globals] section of the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->ldapsam</I
-></SPAN
-> - An LDAP based back-end. Permits the
- LDAP server to be specified. eg: ldap://localhost or ldap://frodo.murphy.com
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->ldapsam_nua</I
-></SPAN
-> - LDAP based back-end with no unix
- account requirement, like smbpasswd_nua and tdbsam_nua above.
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Read the chapter about the <A
-HREF="#PASSDB"
->User Database</A
->
-for details.</P
-><P
->A Samba PDC, however, stores each machine trust account in two parts,
-as follows:
-
-<P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->A Samba account, stored in the same location as user
- LanMan and NT password hashes (currently
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smbpasswd</TT
->). The Samba account
- possesses and uses only the NT password hash.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->A corresponding Unix account, typically stored in
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
->. (Future releases will alleviate the need to
- create <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
-> entries.) </P
-></LI
-></UL
-></P
-><P
->There are two ways to create machine trust accounts:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> Manual creation. Both the Samba and corresponding
- Unix account are created by hand.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> "On-the-fly" creation. The Samba machine trust
- account is automatically created by Samba at the time the client
- is joined to the domain. (For security, this is the
- recommended method.) The corresponding Unix account may be
- created automatically or manually. </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1141"
->7.4.1. Manual Creation of Machine Trust Accounts</A
-></H3
-><P
->The first step in manually creating a machine trust account is to
-manually create the corresponding Unix account in
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
->. This can be done using
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->vipw</B
-> or other 'add user' command that is normally
-used to create new Unix accounts. The following is an example for a
-Linux based Samba server:</P
-><P
-> <SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->/usr/sbin/useradd -g 100 -d /dev/null -c <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->"machine
-nickname"</VAR
-> -s /bin/false <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->machine_name</VAR
->$ </B
-></P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->passwd -l <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->machine_name</VAR
->$</B
-></P
-><P
->On *BSD systems, this can be done using the 'chpass' utility:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->chpass -a "<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->machine_name</VAR
->$:*:101:100::0:0:Workstation <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->machine_name</VAR
->:/dev/null:/sbin/nologin"</B
-></P
-><P
->The <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
-> entry will list the machine name
-with a "$" appended, won't have a password, will have a null shell and no
-home directory. For example a machine named 'doppy' would have an
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
-> entry like this:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->doppy$:x:505:501:<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->machine_nickname</VAR
->:/dev/null:/bin/false</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Above, <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->machine_nickname</VAR
-> can be any
-descriptive name for the client, i.e., BasementComputer.
-<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->machine_name</VAR
-> absolutely must be the NetBIOS
-name of the client to be joined to the domain. The "$" must be
-appended to the NetBIOS name of the client or Samba will not recognize
-this as a machine trust account.</P
-><P
->Now that the corresponding Unix account has been created, the next step is to create
-the Samba account for the client containing the well-known initial
-machine trust account password. This can be done using the <A
-HREF="smbpasswd.8.html"
-TARGET="_top"
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbpasswd(8)</B
-></A
-> command
-as shown here:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbpasswd -a -m <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->machine_name</VAR
-></KBD
-></P
-><P
->where <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->machine_name</VAR
-> is the machine's NetBIOS
-name. The RID of the new machine account is generated from the UID of
-the corresponding Unix account.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="WARNING"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="WARNING"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/warning.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Warning"></TD
-><TH
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="CENTER"
-><B
->Join the client to the domain immediately</B
-></TH
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->&nbsp;</TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> Manually creating a machine trust account using this method is the
- equivalent of creating a machine trust account on a Windows NT PDC using
- the "Server Manager". From the time at which the account is created
- to the time which the client joins the domain and changes the password,
- your domain is vulnerable to an intruder joining your domain using a
- a machine with the same NetBIOS name. A PDC inherently trusts
- members of the domain and will serve out a large degree of user
- information to such clients. You have been warned!
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1182"
->7.4.2. "On-the-Fly" Creation of Machine Trust Accounts</A
-></H3
-><P
->The second (and recommended) way of creating machine trust accounts is
-simply to allow the Samba server to create them as needed when the client
-is joined to the domain. </P
-><P
->Since each Samba machine trust account requires a corresponding
-Unix account, a method for automatically creating the
-Unix account is usually supplied; this requires configuration of the
-<A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#ADDUSERSCRIPT"
-TARGET="_top"
->add user script</A
->
-option in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->. This
-method is not required, however; corresponding Unix accounts may also
-be created manually.</P
-><P
->Below is an example for a RedHat 6.2 Linux system.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->[global]
- # &#60;...remainder of parameters...&#62;
- add user script = /usr/sbin/useradd -d /dev/null -g 100 -s /bin/false -M %u </PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1191"
->7.4.3. Joining the Client to the Domain</A
-></H3
-><P
->The procedure for joining a client to the domain varies with the
-version of Windows.</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Windows 2000</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
-> When the user elects to join the client to a domain, Windows prompts for
- an account and password that is privileged to join the domain. A
- Samba administrative account (i.e., a Samba account that has root
- privileges on the Samba server) must be entered here; the
- operation will fail if an ordinary user account is given.
- The password for this account should be
- set to a different password than the associated
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
-> entry, for security
- reasons. </P
-><P
->The session key of the Samba administrative account acts as an
- encryption key for setting the password of the machine trust
- account. The machine trust account will be created on-the-fly, or
- updated if it already exists.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Windows NT</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
-> If the machine trust account was created manually, on the
- Identification Changes menu enter the domain name, but do not
- check the box "Create a Computer Account in the Domain." In this case,
- the existing machine trust account is used to join the machine to
- the domain.</P
-><P
-> If the machine trust account is to be created
- on-the-fly, on the Identification Changes menu enter the domain
- name, and check the box "Create a Computer Account in the Domain." In
- this case, joining the domain proceeds as above for Windows 2000
- (i.e., you must supply a Samba administrative account when
- prompted).</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Samba</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
->Joining a samba client to a domain is documented in
- the <A
-HREF="#DOMAIN-MEMBER"
->Domain Member</A
-> chapter.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1211"
->7.5. Common Problems and Errors</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1213"
->7.5.1. I cannot include a '$' in a machine name</A
-></H3
-><P
->A 'machine name' in (typically) <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
->
-of the machine name with a '$' appended. FreeBSD (and other BSD
-systems?) won't create a user with a '$' in their name.</P
-><P
->The problem is only in the program used to make the entry, once
-made, it works perfectly. So create a user without the '$' and
-use <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->vipw</B
-> to edit the entry, adding the '$'. Or create
-the whole entry with vipw if you like, make sure you use a
-unique User ID !</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1219"
->7.5.2. I get told "You already have a connection to the Domain...."
-or "Cannot join domain, the credentials supplied conflict with an
-existing set.." when creating a machine trust account.</A
-></H3
-><P
->This happens if you try to create a machine trust account from the
-machine itself and already have a connection (e.g. mapped drive)
-to a share (or IPC$) on the Samba PDC. The following command
-will remove all network drive connections:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->C:\WINNT\&#62;</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->net use * /d</B
-></P
-><P
->Further, if the machine is a already a 'member of a workgroup' that
-is the same name as the domain you are joining (bad idea) you will
-get this message. Change the workgroup name to something else, it
-does not matter what, reboot, and try again.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1226"
->7.5.3. The system can not log you on (C000019B)....</A
-></H3
-><P
->I joined the domain successfully but after upgrading
-to a newer version of the Samba code I get the message, "The system
-can not log you on (C000019B), Please try again or consult your
-system administrator" when attempting to logon.</P
-><P
->This occurs when the domain SID stored in the secrets.tdb database
-is changed. The most common cause of a change in domain SID is when
-the domain name and/or the server name (netbios name) is changed.
-The only way to correct the problem is to restore the original domain
-SID or remove the domain client from the domain and rejoin. The domain
-SID may be reset using either the smbpasswd or rpcclient utilities.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1230"
->7.5.4. The machine trust account for this computer either does not
-exist or is not accessible.</A
-></H3
-><P
->When I try to join the domain I get the message "The machine account
-for this computer either does not exist or is not accessible". What's
-wrong?</P
-><P
->This problem is caused by the PDC not having a suitable machine trust account.
-If you are using the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->add user script</VAR
-> method to create
-accounts then this would indicate that it has not worked. Ensure the domain
-admin user system is working.</P
-><P
->Alternatively if you are creating account entries manually then they
-have not been created correctly. Make sure that you have the entry
-correct for the machine trust account in smbpasswd file on the Samba PDC.
-If you added the account using an editor rather than using the smbpasswd
-utility, make sure that the account name is the machine NetBIOS name
-with a '$' appended to it ( i.e. computer_name$ ). There must be an entry
-in both /etc/passwd and the smbpasswd file. Some people have reported
-that inconsistent subnet masks between the Samba server and the NT
-client have caused this problem. Make sure that these are consistent
-for both client and server.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1236"
->7.5.5. When I attempt to login to a Samba Domain from a NT4/W2K workstation,
-I get a message about my account being disabled.</A
-></H3
-><P
->At first be ensure to enable the useraccounts with <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbpasswd -e
-%user%</B
->, this is normally done, when you create an account.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1240"
->7.6. Domain Control for Windows 9x/ME</A
-></H2
-><P
->A domain and a workgroup are exactly the same thing in terms of network
-browsing. The difference is that a distributable authentication
-database is associated with a domain, for secure login access to a
-network. Also, different access rights can be granted to users if they
-successfully authenticate against a domain logon server. Samba-3 does this
-now in the same way that MS Windows NT/2K.</P
-><P
->The SMB client logging on to a domain has an expectation that every other
-server in the domain should accept the same authentication information.
-Network browsing functionality of domains and workgroups is identical and
-is explained in this documentation under the browsing discussions.
-It should be noted, that browsing is totally orthogonal to logon support.</P
-><P
->Issues related to the single-logon network model are discussed in this
-section. Samba supports domain logons, network logon scripts, and user
-profiles for MS Windows for workgroups and MS Windows 9X/ME clients
-which are the focus of this section.</P
-><P
->When an SMB client in a domain wishes to logon it broadcast requests for a
-logon server. The first one to reply gets the job, and validates its
-password using whatever mechanism the Samba administrator has installed.
-It is possible (but very stupid) to create a domain where the user
-database is not shared between servers, i.e. they are effectively workgroup
-servers advertising themselves as participating in a domain. This
-demonstrates how authentication is quite different from but closely
-involved with domains.</P
-><P
->Using these features you can make your clients verify their logon via
-the Samba server; make clients run a batch file when they logon to
-the network and download their preferences, desktop and start menu.</P
-><P
->Before launching into the configuration instructions, it is
-worthwhile lookingat how a Windows 9x/ME client performs a logon:</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> The client broadcasts (to the IP broadcast address of the subnet it is in)
- a NetLogon request. This is sent to the NetBIOS name DOMAIN&#60;1c&#62; at the
- NetBIOS layer. The client chooses the first response it receives, which
- contains the NetBIOS name of the logon server to use in the format of
- \\SERVER.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> The client then connects to that server, logs on (does an SMBsessetupX) and
- then connects to the IPC$ share (using an SMBtconX).
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> The client then does a NetWkstaUserLogon request, which retrieves the name
- of the user's logon script.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> The client then connects to the NetLogon share and searches for this
- and if it is found and can be read, is retrieved and executed by the client.
- After this, the client disconnects from the NetLogon share.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> The client then sends a NetUserGetInfo request to the server, to retrieve
- the user's home share, which is used to search for profiles. Since the
- response to the NetUserGetInfo request does not contain much more
- the user's home share, profiles for Win9X clients MUST reside in the user
- home directory.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> The client then connects to the user's home share and searches for the
- user's profile. As it turns out, you can specify the user's home share as
- a sharename and path. For example, \\server\fred\.profile.
- If the profiles are found, they are implemented.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> The client then disconnects from the user's home share, and reconnects to
- the NetLogon share and looks for CONFIG.POL, the policies file. If this is
- found, it is read and implemented.
- </P
-></LI
-></OL
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1263"
->7.6.1. Configuration Instructions: Network Logons</A
-></H3
-><P
->The main difference between a PDC and a Windows 9x logon
-server configuration is that</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Password encryption is not required for a Windows 9x logon server.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Windows 9x/ME clients do not possess machine trust accounts.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Therefore, a Samba PDC will also act as a Windows 9x logon
-server.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="WARNING"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="WARNING"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/warning.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Warning"></TD
-><TH
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="CENTER"
-><B
->security mode and master browsers</B
-></TH
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->&nbsp;</TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->There are a few comments to make in order to tie up some
-loose ends. There has been much debate over the issue of whether
-or not it is ok to configure Samba as a Domain Controller in security
-modes other than <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->USER</CODE
->. The only security mode
-which will not work due to technical reasons is <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->SHARE</CODE
->
-mode security. <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->DOMAIN</CODE
-> and <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->SERVER</CODE
->
-mode security is really just a variation on SMB user level security.</P
-><P
->Actually, this issue is also closely tied to the debate on whether
-or not Samba must be the domain master browser for its workgroup
-when operating as a DC. While it may technically be possible
-to configure a server as such (after all, browsing and domain logons
-are two distinctly different functions), it is not a good idea to
-so. You should remember that the DC must register the DOMAIN#1b NetBIOS
-name. This is the name used by Windows clients to locate the DC.
-Windows clients do not distinguish between the DC and the DMB.
-For this reason, it is very wise to configure the Samba DC as the DMB.</P
-><P
->Now back to the issue of configuring a Samba DC to use a mode other
-than "security = user". If a Samba host is configured to use
-another SMB server or DC in order to validate user connection
-requests, then it is a fact that some other machine on the network
-(the "password server") knows more about user than the Samba host.
-99% of the time, this other host is a domain controller. Now
-in order to operate in domain mode security, the "workgroup" parameter
-must be set to the name of the Windows NT domain (which already
-has a domain controller, right?)</P
-><P
->Therefore configuring a Samba box as a DC for a domain that
-already by definition has a PDC is asking for trouble.
-Therefore, you should always configure the Samba DC to be the DMB
-for its domain.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="SAMBA-BDC"
-></A
->Chapter 8. Samba Backup Domain Controller to Samba Domain Control</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1293"
->8.1. Prerequisite Reading</A
-></H2
-><P
->Before you continue reading in this chapter, please make sure
-that you are comfortable with configuring a Samba PDC
-as described in the <A
-HREF="Samba-PDC-HOWTO.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->Samba-PDC-HOWTO</A
->.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1297"
->8.2. Background</A
-></H2
-><P
->What is a Domain Controller? It is a machine that is able to answer
-logon requests from workstations in a Windows NT Domain. Whenever a
-user logs into a Windows NT Workstation, the workstation connects to a
-Domain Controller and asks him whether the username and password the
-user typed in is correct. The Domain Controller replies with a lot of
-information about the user, for example the place where the users
-profile is stored, the users full name of the user. All this
-information is stored in the NT user database, the so-called SAM.</P
-><P
->There are two kinds of Domain Controller in a NT 4 compatible Domain:
-A Primary Domain Controller (PDC) and one or more Backup Domain
-Controllers (BDC). The PDC contains the master copy of the
-SAM. Whenever the SAM has to change, for example when a user changes
-his password, this change has to be done on the PDC. A Backup Domain
-Controller is a machine that maintains a read-only copy of the
-SAM. This way it is able to reply to logon requests and authenticate
-users in case the PDC is not available. During this time no changes to
-the SAM are possible. Whenever changes to the SAM are done on the PDC,
-all BDC receive the changes from the PDC.</P
-><P
->Since version 2.2 Samba officially supports domain logons for all
-current Windows Clients, including Windows 2000 and XP. This text
-assumes the domain to be named SAMBA. To be able to act as a PDC, some
-parameters in the [global]-section of the smb.conf have to be set:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->workgroup = SAMBA
-domain master = yes
-domain logons = yes</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Several other things like a [homes] and a [netlogon] share also may be
-set along with settings for the profile path, the users home drive and
-others. This will not be covered in this document.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1305"
->8.3. What qualifies a Domain Controller on the network?</A
-></H2
-><P
->Every machine that is a Domain Controller for the domain SAMBA has to
-register the NetBIOS group name SAMBA#1c with the WINS server and/or
-by broadcast on the local network. The PDC also registers the unique
-NetBIOS name SAMBA#1b with the WINS server. The name type #1b is
-normally reserved for the domain master browser, a role that has
-nothing to do with anything related to authentication, but the
-Microsoft Domain implementation requires the domain master browser to
-be on the same machine as the PDC.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1308"
->8.3.1. How does a Workstation find its domain controller?</A
-></H3
-><P
->A NT workstation in the domain SAMBA that wants a local user to be
-authenticated has to find the domain controller for SAMBA. It does
-this by doing a NetBIOS name query for the group name SAMBA#1c. It
-assumes that each of the machines it gets back from the queries is a
-domain controller and can answer logon requests. To not open security
-holes both the workstation and the selected (TODO: How is the DC
-chosen) domain controller authenticate each other. After that the
-workstation sends the user's credentials (his name and password) to
-the domain controller, asking for approval.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1311"
->8.3.2. When is the PDC needed?</A
-></H3
-><P
->Whenever a user wants to change his password, this has to be done on
-the PDC. To find the PDC, the workstation does a NetBIOS name query
-for SAMBA#1b, assuming this machine maintains the master copy of the
-SAM. The workstation contacts the PDC, both mutually authenticate and
-the password change is done.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1314"
->8.4. Can Samba be a Backup Domain Controller to an NT PDC?</A
-></H2
-><P
->With version 2.2, no. The native NT SAM replication protocols have
-not yet been fully implemented. The Samba Team is working on
-understanding and implementing the protocols, but this work has not
-been finished for version 2.2.</P
-><P
->With version 3.0, the work on both the replication protocols and a
-suitable storage mechanism has progressed, and some form of NT4 BDC
-support is expected soon.</P
-><P
->Can I get the benefits of a BDC with Samba? Yes. The main reason for
-implementing a BDC is availability. If the PDC is a Samba machine,
-a second Samba machine can be set up to
-service logon requests whenever the PDC is down.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1319"
->8.5. How do I set up a Samba BDC?</A
-></H2
-><P
->Several things have to be done:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->The domain SID has to be the same on the PDC and the BDC. This used to
-be stored in the file private/MACHINE.SID. This file is not created
-anymore since Samba 2.2.5 or even earlier. Nowadays the domain SID is
-stored in the file private/secrets.tdb. Simply copying the secrets.tdb
-from the PDC to the BDC does not work, as the BDC would
-generate a new SID for itself and override the domain SID with this
-new BDC SID.</P
-><P
->To retrieve the domain SID from the PDC or an existing BDC and store it in the
-secrets.tdb, execute 'net rpc getsid' on the BDC.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->The Unix user database has to be synchronized from the PDC to the
-BDC. This means that both the /etc/passwd and /etc/group have to be
-replicated from the PDC to the BDC. This can be done manually
-whenever changes are made, or the PDC is set up as a NIS master
-server and the BDC as a NIS slave server. To set up the BDC as a
-mere NIS client would not be enough, as the BDC would not be able to
-access its user database in case of a PDC failure.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->The Samba password database in the file private/smbpasswd has to be
-replicated from the PDC to the BDC. This is a bit tricky, see the
-next section.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Any netlogon share has to be replicated from the PDC to the
-BDC. This can be done manually whenever login scripts are changed,
-or it can be done automatically together with the smbpasswd
-synchronization.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Finally, the BDC has to be found by the workstations. This can be done
-by setting</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->workgroup = samba
-domain master = no
-domain logons = yes</PRE
-></P
-><P
->in the [global]-section of the smb.conf of the BDC. This makes the BDC
-only register the name SAMBA#1c with the WINS server. This is no
-problem as the name SAMBA#1c is a NetBIOS group name that is meant to
-be registered by more than one machine. The parameter 'domain master =
-no' forces the BDC not to register SAMBA#1b which as a unique NetBIOS
-name is reserved for the Primary Domain Controller.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1336"
->8.5.1. How do I replicate the smbpasswd file?</A
-></H3
-><P
->Replication of the smbpasswd file is sensitive. It has to be done
-whenever changes to the SAM are made. Every user's password change is
-done in the smbpasswd file and has to be replicated to the BDC. So
-replicating the smbpasswd file very often is necessary.</P
-><P
->As the smbpasswd file contains plain text password equivalents, it
-must not be sent unencrypted over the wire. The best way to set up
-smbpasswd replication from the PDC to the BDC is to use the utility
-rsync. rsync can use ssh as a transport. ssh itself can be set up to
-accept *only* rsync transfer without requiring the user to type a
-password.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1340"
->8.5.2. Can I do this all with LDAP?</A
-></H3
-><P
->The simple answer is YES. Samba's pdb_ldap code supports
-binding to a replica LDAP server, and will also follow referrals and
-rebind to the master if it ever needs to make a modification to the
-database. (Normally BDCs are read only, so this will not occur
-often).</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="ADS"
-></A
->Chapter 9. Samba as a ADS domain member</H1
-><P
->This is a rough guide to setting up Samba 3.0 with kerberos authentication against a
-Windows2000 KDC. </P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1363"
->9.1. Setup your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-></A
-></H2
-><P
->You must use at least the following 3 options in smb.conf:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> realm = YOUR.KERBEROS.REALM
- security = ADS
- encrypt passwords = yes</PRE
-></P
-><P
->In case samba can't figure out your ads server using your realm name, use the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->ads server</B
-> option in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->:
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> ads server = your.kerberos.server</PRE
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->You do *not* need a smbpasswd file, and older clients will
- be authenticated as if <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->security = domain</B
->,
- although it won't do any harm
- and allows you to have local users not in the domain.
- I expect that the above required options will change soon when we get better
- active directory integration.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1376"
->9.2. Setup your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/krb5.conf</TT
-></A
-></H2
-><P
->The minimal configuration for <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->krb5.conf</TT
-> is:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->[realms]
- YOUR.KERBEROS.REALM = {
- kdc = your.kerberos.server
- }</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Test your config by doing a <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->kinit <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->USERNAME</VAR
->@<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->REALM</VAR
-></KBD
-> and making sure that
- your password is accepted by the Win2000 KDC. </P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->The realm must be uppercase. </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->You also must ensure that you can do a reverse DNS lookup on the IP
-address of your KDC. Also, the name that this reverse lookup maps to
-must either be the netbios name of the KDC (ie. the hostname with no
-domain attached) or it can alternatively be the netbios name
-followed by the realm. </P
-><P
->The easiest way to ensure you get this right is to add a
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/hosts</TT
-> entry mapping the IP address of your KDC to
-its netbios name. If you don't get this right then you will get a
-"local error" when you try to join the realm.</P
-><P
->If all you want is kerberos support in <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbclient</SPAN
-> then you can skip
-straight to <A
-HREF="#ADS-TEST-SMBCLIENT"
->Test with <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbclient</SPAN
-></A
-> now.
-<A
-HREF="#ADS-CREATE-MACHINE-ACCOUNT"
->Creating a computer account</A
->
-and <A
-HREF="#ADS-TEST-SERVER"
->testing your servers</A
->
-is only needed if you want kerberos
-support for <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbd</SPAN
-> and <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->winbindd</SPAN
->.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="ADS-CREATE-MACHINE-ACCOUNT"
->9.3. Create the computer account</A
-></H2
-><P
->As a user that has write permission on the Samba private directory
-(usually root) run:
-<KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->net ads join</KBD
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1404"
->9.3.1. Possible errors</A
-></H3
-><P
-><P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
->"ADS support not compiled in"</DT
-><DD
-><P
->Samba must be reconfigured (remove config.cache) and recompiled (make clean all install) after the kerberos libs and headers are installed.</P
-></DD
-></DL
-></DIV
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="ADS-TEST-SERVER"
->9.4. Test your server setup</A
-></H2
-><P
->On a Windows 2000 client try <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->net use * \\server\share</KBD
->. You should
-be logged in with kerberos without needing to know a password. If
-this fails then run <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->klist tickets</KBD
->. Did you get a ticket for the
-server? Does it have an encoding type of DES-CBC-MD5 ? </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="ADS-TEST-SMBCLIENT"
->9.5. Testing with <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbclient</SPAN
-></A
-></H2
-><P
->On your Samba server try to login to a Win2000 server or your Samba
-server using <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbclient</SPAN
-> and kerberos. Use <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbclient</SPAN
-> as usual, but
-specify the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->-k</VAR
-> option to choose kerberos authentication.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1424"
->9.6. Notes</A
-></H2
-><P
->You must change administrator password at least once after DC
-install, to create the right encoding types</P
-><P
->w2k doesn't seem to create the _kerberos._udp and _ldap._tcp in
- their defaults DNS setup. Maybe fixed in service packs?</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="DOMAIN-MEMBER"
-></A
->Chapter 10. Samba as a NT4 or Win2k domain member</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1447"
->10.1. Joining an NT Domain with Samba 3.0</A
-></H2
-><P
->Assume you have a Samba 3.0 server with a NetBIOS name of
- <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->SERV1</CODE
-> and are joining an or Win2k NT domain called
- <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->DOM</CODE
->, which has a PDC with a NetBIOS name
- of <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->DOMPDC</CODE
-> and two backup domain controllers
- with NetBIOS names <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->DOMBDC1</CODE
-> and <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->DOMBDC2
- </CODE
->.</P
-><P
->Firstly, you must edit your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file to tell Samba it should
- now use domain security.</P
-><P
->Change (or add) your <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#SECURITY"
-TARGET="_top"
-> <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->security =</VAR
-></A
-> line in the [global] section
- of your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> to read:</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->security = domain</B
-></P
-><P
->Next change the <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#WORKGROUP"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
-> workgroup =</VAR
-></A
-> line in the [global] section to read: </P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->workgroup = DOM</B
-></P
-><P
->as this is the name of the domain we are joining. </P
-><P
->You must also have the parameter <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#ENCRYPTPASSWORDS"
-TARGET="_top"
-> <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->encrypt passwords</VAR
-></A
-> set to <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->yes
- </CODE
-> in order for your users to authenticate to the NT PDC.</P
-><P
->Finally, add (or modify) a <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#PASSWORDSERVER"
-TARGET="_top"
-> <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->password server =</VAR
-></A
-> line in the [global]
- section to read: </P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->password server = DOMPDC DOMBDC1 DOMBDC2</B
-></P
-><P
->These are the primary and backup domain controllers Samba
- will attempt to contact in order to authenticate users. Samba will
- try to contact each of these servers in order, so you may want to
- rearrange this list in order to spread out the authentication load
- among domain controllers.</P
-><P
->Alternatively, if you want smbd to automatically determine
- the list of Domain controllers to use for authentication, you may
- set this line to be :</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->password server = *</B
-></P
-><P
->This method, allows Samba to use exactly the same
- mechanism that NT does. This
- method either broadcasts or uses a WINS database in order to
- find domain controllers to authenticate against.</P
-><P
->In order to actually join the domain, you must run this
- command:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->net rpc join -S DOMPDC
- -U<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->Administrator%password</VAR
-></KBD
-></P
-><P
->as we are joining the domain DOM and the PDC for that domain
- (the only machine that has write access to the domain SAM database)
- is DOMPDC. The <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->Administrator%password</VAR
-> is
- the login name and password for an account which has the necessary
- privilege to add machines to the domain. If this is successful
- you will see the message:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="COMPUTEROUTPUT"
->Joined domain DOM.</SAMP
->
- or <SAMP
-CLASS="COMPUTEROUTPUT"
->Joined 'SERV1' to realm 'MYREALM'</SAMP
->
- </P
-><P
->in your terminal window. See the <A
-HREF="net.8.html"
-TARGET="_top"
-> net(8)</A
-> man page for more details.</P
-><P
->This process joins the server to thedomain
- without having to create the machine trust account on the PDC
- beforehand.</P
-><P
->This command goes through the machine account password
- change protocol, then writes the new (random) machine account
- password for this Samba server into a file in the same directory
- in which an smbpasswd file would be stored - normally :</P
-><P
-><TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/local/samba/private/secrets.tdb</TT
-></P
-><P
->This file is created and owned by root and is not
- readable by any other user. It is the key to the domain-level
- security for your system, and should be treated as carefully
- as a shadow password file.</P
-><P
->Finally, restart your Samba daemons and get ready for
- clients to begin using domain security!</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1501"
->10.2. Why is this better than security = server?</A
-></H2
-><P
->Currently, domain security in Samba doesn't free you from
- having to create local Unix users to represent the users attaching
- to your server. This means that if domain user <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->DOM\fred
- </CODE
-> attaches to your domain security Samba server, there needs
- to be a local Unix user fred to represent that user in the Unix
- filesystem. This is very similar to the older Samba security mode
- <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#SECURITYEQUALSSERVER"
-TARGET="_top"
->security = server</A
->,
- where Samba would pass through the authentication request to a Windows
- NT server in the same way as a Windows 95 or Windows 98 server would.
- </P
-><P
->Please refer to the <A
-HREF="winbind.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->Winbind
- paper</A
-> for information on a system to automatically
- assign UNIX uids and gids to Windows NT Domain users and groups.
- This code is available in development branches only at the moment,
- but will be moved to release branches soon.</P
-><P
->The advantage to domain-level security is that the
- authentication in domain-level security is passed down the authenticated
- RPC channel in exactly the same way that an NT server would do it. This
- means Samba servers now participate in domain trust relationships in
- exactly the same way NT servers do (i.e., you can add Samba servers into
- a resource domain and have the authentication passed on from a resource
- domain PDC to an account domain PDC.</P
-><P
->In addition, with <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->security = server</B
-> every Samba
- daemon on a server has to keep a connection open to the
- authenticating server for as long as that daemon lasts. This can drain
- the connection resources on a Microsoft NT server and cause it to run
- out of available connections. With <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->security = domain</B
->,
- however, the Samba daemons connect to the PDC/BDC only for as long
- as is necessary to authenticate the user, and then drop the connection,
- thus conserving PDC connection resources.</P
-><P
->And finally, acting in the same manner as an NT server
- authenticating to a PDC means that as part of the authentication
- reply, the Samba server gets the user identification information such
- as the user SID, the list of NT groups the user belongs to, etc. </P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> Much of the text of this document
- was first published in the Web magazine <A
-HREF="http://www.linuxworld.com"
-TARGET="_top"
->
- LinuxWorld</A
-> as the article <A
-HREF="http://www.linuxworld.com/linuxworld/lw-1998-10/lw-10-samba.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->Doing
- the NIS/NT Samba</A
->.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="PART"
-><A
-NAME="OPTIONAL"
-></A
-><DIV
-CLASS="TITLEPAGE"
-><H1
-CLASS="TITLE"
->III. Advanced Configuration</H1
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="PARTINTRO"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1519"
-></A
-><H1
->Introduction</H1
-><P
->Samba has several features that you might want or might not want to use. The chapters in this part each cover one specific feature.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="UNIX-PERMISSIONS"
-></A
->Chapter 11. UNIX Permission Bits and Windows NT Access Control Lists</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1533"
->11.1. Viewing and changing UNIX permissions using the NT
- security dialogs</A
-></H2
-><P
->Windows NT clients can use their native security settings
- dialog box to view and modify the underlying UNIX permissions.</P
-><P
->Note that this ability is careful not to compromise
- the security of the UNIX host Samba is running on, and
- still obeys all the file permission rules that a Samba
- administrator can set.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> All access to Unix/Linux system file via Samba is controlled at
- the operating system file access control level. When trying to
- figure out file access problems it is vitally important to identify
- the identity of the Windows user as it is presented by Samba at
- the point of file access. This can best be determined from the
- Samba log files.
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1539"
->11.2. How to view file security on a Samba share</A
-></H2
-><P
->From an NT4/2000/XP client, single-click with the right
- mouse button on any file or directory in a Samba mounted
- drive letter or UNC path. When the menu pops-up, click
- on the <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Properties</I
-></SPAN
-> entry at the bottom of
- the menu. This brings up the file properties dialog
- box. Click on the tab <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Security</I
-></SPAN
-> and you
- will see three buttons, <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Permissions</I
-></SPAN
->,
- <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Auditing</I
-></SPAN
->, and <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Ownership</I
-></SPAN
->.
- The <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Auditing</I
-></SPAN
-> button will cause either
- an error message <SPAN
-CLASS="ERRORNAME"
->A requested privilege is not held
- by the client</SPAN
-> to appear if the user is not the
- NT Administrator, or a dialog which is intended to allow an
- Administrator to add auditing requirements to a file if the
- user is logged on as the NT Administrator. This dialog is
- non-functional with a Samba share at this time, as the only
- useful button, the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Add</B
-> button will not currently
- allow a list of users to be seen.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1550"
->11.3. Viewing file ownership</A
-></H2
-><P
->Clicking on the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"Ownership"</B
-> button
- brings up a dialog box telling you who owns the given file. The
- owner name will be of the form :</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"SERVER\user (Long name)"</B
-></P
-><P
->Where <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->SERVER</VAR
-> is the NetBIOS name of
- the Samba server, <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->user</VAR
-> is the user name of
- the UNIX user who owns the file, and <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->(Long name)</VAR
->
- is the descriptive string identifying the user (normally found in the
- GECOS field of the UNIX password database). Click on the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Close
- </B
-> button to remove this dialog.</P
-><P
->If the parameter <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->nt acl support</VAR
->
- is set to <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->false</CODE
-> then the file owner will
- be shown as the NT user <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"Everyone"</B
->.</P
-><P
->The <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Take Ownership</B
-> button will not allow
- you to change the ownership of this file to yourself (clicking on
- it will display a dialog box complaining that the user you are
- currently logged onto the NT client cannot be found). The reason
- for this is that changing the ownership of a file is a privileged
- operation in UNIX, available only to the <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->root</I
-></SPAN
->
- user. As clicking on this button causes NT to attempt to change
- the ownership of a file to the current user logged into the NT
- client this will not work with Samba at this time.</P
-><P
->There is an NT chown command that will work with Samba
- and allow a user with Administrator privilege connected
- to a Samba server as root to change the ownership of
- files on both a local NTFS filesystem or remote mounted NTFS
- or Samba drive. This is available as part of the <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Seclib
- </I
-></SPAN
-> NT security library written by Jeremy Allison of
- the Samba Team, available from the main Samba ftp site.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1570"
->11.4. Viewing file or directory permissions</A
-></H2
-><P
->The third button is the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"Permissions"</B
->
- button. Clicking on this brings up a dialog box that shows both
- the permissions and the UNIX owner of the file or directory.
- The owner is displayed in the form :</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"SERVER\user (Long name)"</B
-></P
-><P
->Where <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->SERVER</VAR
-> is the NetBIOS name of
- the Samba server, <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->user</VAR
-> is the user name of
- the UNIX user who owns the file, and <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->(Long name)</VAR
->
- is the descriptive string identifying the user (normally found in the
- GECOS field of the UNIX password database).</P
-><P
->If the parameter <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->nt acl support</VAR
->
- is set to <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->false</CODE
-> then the file owner will
- be shown as the NT user <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"Everyone"</B
-> and the
- permissions will be shown as NT "Full Control".</P
-><P
->The permissions field is displayed differently for files
- and directories, so I'll describe the way file permissions
- are displayed first.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1585"
->11.4.1. File Permissions</A
-></H3
-><P
->The standard UNIX user/group/world triple and
- the corresponding "read", "write", "execute" permissions
- triples are mapped by Samba into a three element NT ACL
- with the 'r', 'w', and 'x' bits mapped into the corresponding
- NT permissions. The UNIX world permissions are mapped into
- the global NT group <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Everyone</B
->, followed
- by the list of permissions allowed for UNIX world. The UNIX
- owner and group permissions are displayed as an NT
- <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->user</B
-> icon and an NT <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->local
- group</B
-> icon respectively followed by the list
- of permissions allowed for the UNIX user and group.</P
-><P
->As many UNIX permission sets don't map into common
- NT names such as <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"read"</B
->, <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
-> "change"</B
-> or <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"full control"</B
-> then
- usually the permissions will be prefixed by the words <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
-> "Special Access"</B
-> in the NT display list.</P
-><P
->But what happens if the file has no permissions allowed
- for a particular UNIX user group or world component ? In order
- to allow "no permissions" to be seen and modified then Samba
- overloads the NT <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"Take Ownership"</B
-> ACL attribute
- (which has no meaning in UNIX) and reports a component with
- no permissions as having the NT <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"O"</B
-> bit set.
- This was chosen of course to make it look like a zero, meaning
- zero permissions. More details on the decision behind this will
- be given below.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1599"
->11.4.2. Directory Permissions</A
-></H3
-><P
->Directories on an NT NTFS file system have two
- different sets of permissions. The first set of permissions
- is the ACL set on the directory itself, this is usually displayed
- in the first set of parentheses in the normal <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"RW"</B
->
- NT style. This first set of permissions is created by Samba in
- exactly the same way as normal file permissions are, described
- above, and is displayed in the same way.</P
-><P
->The second set of directory permissions has no real meaning
- in the UNIX permissions world and represents the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
-> "inherited"</B
-> permissions that any file created within
- this directory would inherit.</P
-><P
->Samba synthesises these inherited permissions for NT by
- returning as an NT ACL the UNIX permission mode that a new file
- created by Samba on this share would receive.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1606"
->11.5. Modifying file or directory permissions</A
-></H2
-><P
->Modifying file and directory permissions is as simple
- as changing the displayed permissions in the dialog box, and
- clicking the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->OK</B
-> button. However, there are
- limitations that a user needs to be aware of, and also interactions
- with the standard Samba permission masks and mapping of DOS
- attributes that need to also be taken into account.</P
-><P
->If the parameter <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->nt acl support</VAR
->
- is set to <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->false</CODE
-> then any attempt to set
- security permissions will fail with an <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"Access Denied"
- </B
-> message.</P
-><P
->The first thing to note is that the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"Add"</B
->
- button will not return a list of users in Samba (it will give
- an error message of <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"The remote procedure call failed
- and did not execute"</B
->). This means that you can only
- manipulate the current user/group/world permissions listed in
- the dialog box. This actually works quite well as these are the
- only permissions that UNIX actually has.</P
-><P
->If a permission triple (either user, group, or world)
- is removed from the list of permissions in the NT dialog box,
- then when the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"OK"</B
-> button is pressed it will
- be applied as "no permissions" on the UNIX side. If you then
- view the permissions again the "no permissions" entry will appear
- as the NT <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"O"</B
-> flag, as described above. This
- allows you to add permissions back to a file or directory once
- you have removed them from a triple component.</P
-><P
->As UNIX supports only the "r", "w" and "x" bits of
- an NT ACL then if other NT security attributes such as "Delete
- access" are selected then they will be ignored when applied on
- the Samba server.</P
-><P
->When setting permissions on a directory the second
- set of permissions (in the second set of parentheses) is
- by default applied to all files within that directory. If this
- is not what you want you must uncheck the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"Replace
- permissions on existing files"</B
-> checkbox in the NT
- dialog before clicking <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"OK"</B
->.</P
-><P
->If you wish to remove all permissions from a
- user/group/world component then you may either highlight the
- component and click the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"Remove"</B
-> button,
- or set the component to only have the special <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"Take
- Ownership"</B
-> permission (displayed as <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"O"
- </B
->) highlighted.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1628"
->11.6. Interaction with the standard Samba create mask
- parameters</A
-></H2
-><P
->There are four parameters
- to control interaction with the standard Samba create mask parameters.
- These are :</P
-><P
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->security mask</VAR
-></P
-><P
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force security mode</VAR
-></P
-><P
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->directory security mask</VAR
-></P
-><P
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force directory security mode</VAR
-></P
-><P
->Once a user clicks <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"OK"</B
-> to apply the
- permissions Samba maps the given permissions into a user/group/world
- r/w/x triple set, and then will check the changed permissions for a
- file against the bits set in the <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#SECURITYMASK"
-TARGET="_top"
->
- <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->security mask</VAR
-></A
-> parameter. Any bits that
- were changed that are not set to '1' in this parameter are left alone
- in the file permissions.</P
-><P
->Essentially, zero bits in the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->security mask</VAR
->
- mask may be treated as a set of bits the user is <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->not</I
-></SPAN
->
- allowed to change, and one bits are those the user is allowed to change.
- </P
-><P
->If not set explicitly this parameter is set to the same value as
- the <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#CREATEMASK"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->create mask
- </VAR
-></A
-> parameter. To allow a user to modify all the
- user/group/world permissions on a file, set this parameter
- to 0777.</P
-><P
->Next Samba checks the changed permissions for a file against
- the bits set in the <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#FORCESECURITYMODE"
-TARGET="_top"
-> <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force security mode</VAR
-></A
-> parameter. Any bits
- that were changed that correspond to bits set to '1' in this parameter
- are forced to be set.</P
-><P
->Essentially, bits set in the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force security mode
- </VAR
-> parameter may be treated as a set of bits that, when
- modifying security on a file, the user has always set to be 'on'.</P
-><P
->If not set explicitly this parameter is set to the same value
- as the <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#FORCECREATEMODE"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force
- create mode</VAR
-></A
-> parameter.
- To allow a user to modify all the user/group/world permissions on a file
- with no restrictions set this parameter to 000.</P
-><P
->The <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->security mask</VAR
-> and <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force
- security mode</VAR
-> parameters are applied to the change
- request in that order.</P
-><P
->For a directory Samba will perform the same operations as
- described above for a file except using the parameter <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
-> directory security mask</VAR
-> instead of <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->security
- mask</VAR
->, and <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force directory security mode
- </VAR
-> parameter instead of <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force security mode
- </VAR
->.</P
-><P
->The <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->directory security mask</VAR
-> parameter
- by default is set to the same value as the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->directory mask
- </VAR
-> parameter and the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force directory security
- mode</VAR
-> parameter by default is set to the same value as
- the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force directory mode</VAR
-> parameter. </P
-><P
->In this way Samba enforces the permission restrictions that
- an administrator can set on a Samba share, whilst still allowing users
- to modify the permission bits within that restriction.</P
-><P
->If you want to set up a share that allows users full control
- in modifying the permission bits on their files and directories and
- doesn't force any particular bits to be set 'on', then set the following
- parameters in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file in that share specific section :</P
-><P
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->security mask = 0777</VAR
-></P
-><P
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force security mode = 0</VAR
-></P
-><P
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->directory security mask = 0777</VAR
-></P
-><P
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->force directory security mode = 0</VAR
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1681"
->11.7. Interaction with the standard Samba file attribute
- mapping</A
-></H2
-><P
->Samba maps some of the DOS attribute bits (such as "read
- only") into the UNIX permissions of a file. This means there can
- be a conflict between the permission bits set via the security
- dialog and the permission bits set by the file attribute mapping.
- </P
-><P
->One way this can show up is if a file has no UNIX read access
- for the owner it will show up as "read only" in the standard
- file attributes tabbed dialog. Unfortunately this dialog is
- the same one that contains the security info in another tab.</P
-><P
->What this can mean is that if the owner changes the permissions
- to allow themselves read access using the security dialog, clicks
- <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"OK"</B
-> to get back to the standard attributes tab
- dialog, and then clicks <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"OK"</B
-> on that dialog, then
- NT will set the file permissions back to read-only (as that is what
- the attributes still say in the dialog). This means that after setting
- permissions and clicking <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"OK"</B
-> to get back to the
- attributes dialog you should always hit <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"Cancel"</B
->
- rather than <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->"OK"</B
-> to ensure that your changes
- are not overridden.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="GROUPMAPPING"
-></A
->Chapter 12. Configuring Group Mapping</H1
-><P
->
-Starting with Samba 3.0 alpha 2, a new group mapping function is available. The
-current method (likely to change) to manage the groups is a new command called
-<SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbgroupedit</SPAN
->.</P
-><P
->The first immediate reason to use the group mapping on a PDC, is that
-the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->domain admin group</B
-> of <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> is
-now gone. This parameter was used to give the listed users local admin rights
-on their workstations. It was some magic stuff that simply worked but didn't
-scale very well for complex setups.</P
-><P
->Let me explain how it works on NT/W2K, to have this magic fade away.
-When installing NT/W2K on a computer, the installer program creates some users
-and groups. Notably the 'Administrators' group, and gives to that group some
-privileges like the ability to change the date and time or to kill any process
-(or close too) running on the local machine. The 'Administrator' user is a
-member of the 'Administrators' group, and thus 'inherit' the 'Administrators'
-group privileges. If a 'joe' user is created and become a member of the
-'Administrator' group, 'joe' has exactly the same rights as 'Administrator'.</P
-><P
->When a NT/W2K machine is joined to a domain, during that phase, the "Domain
-Administrators' group of the PDC is added to the 'Administrators' group of the
-workstation. Every members of the 'Domain Administrators' group 'inherit' the
-rights of the 'Administrators' group when logging on the workstation.</P
-><P
->You are now wondering how to make some of your samba PDC users members of the
-'Domain Administrators' ? That's really easy.</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
->create a unix group (usually in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/group</TT
->), let's call it domadm</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->add to this group the users that must be Administrators. For example if you want joe,john and mary, your entry in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/group</TT
-> will look like:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->domadm:x:502:joe,john,mary</PRE
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Map this domadm group to the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->domain admins</B
-> group by running the command:</P
-><P
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbgroupedit -c "Domain Admins" -u domadm</KBD
-></P
-></LI
-></OL
-><P
->You're set, joe, john and mary are domain administrators !</P
-><P
->Like the Domain Admins group, you can map any arbitrary Unix group to any NT
-group. You can also make any Unix group a domain group. For example, on a domain
-member machine (an NT/W2K or a samba server running winbind), you would like to
-give access to a certain directory to some users who are member of a group on
-your samba PDC. Flag that group as a domain group by running:</P
-><P
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbgroupedit -a unixgroup -td</KBD
-></P
-><P
->You can list the various groups in the mapping database like this</P
-><P
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbgroupedit -v</KBD
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="PRINTING"
-></A
->Chapter 13. Printing Support</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1744"
->13.1. Introduction</A
-></H2
-><P
->Beginning with the 2.2.0 release, Samba supports
-the native Windows NT printing mechanisms implemented via
-MS-RPC (i.e. the SPOOLSS named pipe). Previous versions of
-Samba only supported LanMan printing calls.</P
-><P
->The additional functionality provided by the new
-SPOOLSS support includes:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Support for downloading printer driver
- files to Windows 95/98/NT/2000 clients upon demand.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Uploading of printer drivers via the
- Windows NT Add Printer Wizard (APW) or the
- Imprints tool set (refer to <A
-HREF="http://imprints.sourceforge.net"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://imprints.sourceforge.net</A
->).
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Support for the native MS-RPC printing
- calls such as StartDocPrinter, EnumJobs(), etc... (See
- the MSDN documentation at <A
-HREF="http://msdn.microsoft.com/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://msdn.microsoft.com/</A
->
- for more information on the Win32 printing API)
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Support for NT Access Control Lists (ACL)
- on printer objects</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Improved support for printer queue manipulation
- through the use of an internal databases for spooled job
- information</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->There has been some initial confusion about what all this means
-and whether or not it is a requirement for printer drivers to be
-installed on a Samba host in order to support printing from Windows
-clients. As a side note, Samba does not use these drivers in any way to process
-spooled files. They are utilized entirely by the clients.</P
-><P
->The following MS KB article, may be of some help if you are dealing with
-Windows 2000 clients: <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->How to Add Printers with No User
-Interaction in Windows 2000</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q189/1/05.ASP"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q189/1/05.ASP</A
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1766"
->13.2. Configuration</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="WARNING"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="WARNING"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/warning.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Warning"></TD
-><TH
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="CENTER"
-><B
->[print$] vs. [printer$]</B
-></TH
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->&nbsp;</TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Previous versions of Samba recommended using a share named [printer$].
-This name was taken from the printer$ service created by Windows 9x
-clients when a printer was shared. Windows 9x printer servers always have
-a printer$ service which provides read-only access via no
-password in order to support printer driver downloads.</P
-><P
->However, the initial implementation allowed for a
-parameter named <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->printer driver location</VAR
->
-to be used on a per share basis to specify the location of
-the driver files associated with that printer. Another
-parameter named <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->printer driver</VAR
-> provided
-a means of defining the printer driver name to be sent to
-the client.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1774"
->13.2.1. Creating [print$]</A
-></H3
-><P
->In order to support the uploading of printer driver
-files, you must first configure a file share named [print$].
-The name of this share is hard coded in Samba's internals so
-the name is very important (print$ is the service used by
-Windows NT print servers to provide support for printer driver
-download).</P
-><P
->You should modify the server's smb.conf file to add the global
-parameters and to create the
-following file share (of course, some of the parameter values,
-such as 'path' are arbitrary and should be replaced with
-appropriate values for your site):</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->[global]
- ; members of the ntadmin group should be able
- ; to add drivers and set printer properties
- ; root is implicitly a 'printer admin'
- printer admin = @ntadmin
-
-[print$]
- path = /usr/local/samba/printers
- guest ok = yes
- browseable = yes
- read only = yes
- ; since this share is configured as read only, then we need
- ; a 'write list'. Check the file system permissions to make
- ; sure this account can copy files to the share. If this
- ; is setup to a non-root account, then it should also exist
- ; as a 'printer admin'
- write list = @ntadmin,root</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#WRITELIST"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->write list</VAR
-></A
-> is used to allow administrative
-level user accounts to have write access in order to update files
-on the share. See the <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->smb.conf(5)
-man page</A
-> for more information on configuring file shares.</P
-><P
->The requirement for <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#GUESTOK"
-TARGET="_top"
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->guest
-ok = yes</B
-></A
-> depends upon how your
-site is configured. If users will be guaranteed to have
-an account on the Samba host, then this is a non-issue.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TH
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="CENTER"
-><B
->Author's Note</B
-></TH
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->&nbsp;</TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->The non-issue is that if all your Windows NT users are guaranteed to be
-authenticated by the Samba server (such as a domain member server and the NT
-user has already been validated by the Domain Controller in
-order to logon to the Windows NT console), then guest access
-is not necessary. Of course, in a workgroup environment where
-you just want to be able to print without worrying about
-silly accounts and security, then configure the share for
-guest access. You'll probably want to add <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#MAPTOGUEST"
-TARGET="_top"
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->map to guest = Bad User</B
-></A
-> in the [global] section as well. Make sure
-you understand what this parameter does before using it
-though. --jerry</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->In order for a Windows NT print server to support
-the downloading of driver files by multiple client architectures,
-it must create subdirectories within the [print$] service
-which correspond to each of the supported client architectures.
-Samba follows this model as well.</P
-><P
->Next create the directory tree below the [print$] share
-for each architecture you wish to support.</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="COMPUTEROUTPUT"
->[print$]-----
- |-W32X86 ; "Windows NT x86"
- |-WIN40 ; "Windows 95/98"
- |-W32ALPHA ; "Windows NT Alpha_AXP"
- |-W32MIPS ; "Windows NT R4000"
- |-W32PPC ; "Windows NT PowerPC"</SAMP
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="WARNING"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="WARNING"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/warning.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Warning"></TD
-><TH
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="CENTER"
-><B
->ATTENTION! REQUIRED PERMISSIONS</B
-></TH
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->&nbsp;</TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->In order to currently add a new driver to you Samba host,
-one of two conditions must hold true:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->The account used to connect to the Samba host
- must have a uid of 0 (i.e. a root account)</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->The account used to connect to the Samba host
- must be a member of the <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#PRINTERADMIN"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->printer
- admin</VAR
-></A
-> list.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Of course, the connected account must still possess access
-to add files to the subdirectories beneath [print$]. Remember
-that all file shares are set to 'read only' by default.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->Once you have created the required [print$] service and
-associated subdirectories, simply log onto the Samba server using
-a root (or <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->printer admin</VAR
->) account
-from a Windows NT 4.0/2k client. Open "Network Neighbourhood" or
-"My Network Places" and browse for the Samba host. Once you have located
-the server, navigate to the "Printers..." folder.
-You should see an initial listing of printers
-that matches the printer shares defined on your Samba host.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1809"
->13.2.2. Setting Drivers for Existing Printers</A
-></H3
-><P
->The initial listing of printers in the Samba host's
-Printers folder will have no real printer driver assigned
-to them. This defaults to a NULL string to allow the use
-of the local Add Printer Wizard on NT/2000 clients.
-Attempting to view the printer properties for a printer
-which has this default driver assigned will result in
-the error message:</P
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Device settings cannot be displayed. The driver
-for the specified printer is not installed, only spooler
-properties will be displayed. Do you want to install the
-driver now?</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
->Click "No" in the error dialog and you will be presented with
-the printer properties window. The way to assign a driver to a
-printer is to either</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Use the "New Driver..." button to install
- a new printer driver, or</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Select a driver from the popup list of
- installed drivers. Initially this list will be empty.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->If you wish to install printer drivers for client
-operating systems other than "Windows NT x86", you will need
-to use the "Sharing" tab of the printer properties dialog.</P
-><P
->Assuming you have connected with a root account, you
-will also be able modify other printer properties such as
-ACLs and device settings using this dialog box.</P
-><P
->A few closing comments for this section, it is possible
-on a Windows NT print server to have printers
-listed in the Printers folder which are not shared. Samba does
-not make this distinction. By definition, the only printers of
-which Samba is aware are those which are specified as shares in
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->.</P
-><P
->Another interesting side note is that Windows NT clients do
-not use the SMB printer share, but rather can print directly
-to any printer on another Windows NT host using MS-RPC. This
-of course assumes that the printing client has the necessary
-privileges on the remote host serving the printer. The default
-permissions assigned by Windows NT to a printer gives the "Print"
-permissions to the "Everyone" well-known group.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1825"
->13.2.3. Support a large number of printers</A
-></H3
-><P
->One issue that has arisen during the development
-phase of Samba 2.2 is the need to support driver downloads for
-100's of printers. Using the Windows NT APW is somewhat
-awkward to say the list. If more than one printer are using the
-same driver, the <A
-HREF="rpcclient.1.html"
-TARGET="_top"
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->rpcclient's
-setdriver command</B
-></A
-> can be used to set the driver
-associated with an installed driver. The following is example
-of how this could be accomplished:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->$ </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->rpcclient pogo -U root%secret -c "enumdrivers"</KBD
->
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->
-Domain=[NARNIA] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.0-alpha3]
-
-[Windows NT x86]
-Printer Driver Info 1:
- Driver Name: [HP LaserJet 4000 Series PS]
-
-Printer Driver Info 1:
- Driver Name: [HP LaserJet 2100 Series PS]
-
-Printer Driver Info 1:
- Driver Name: [HP LaserJet 4Si/4SiMX PS]</PRE
->
-<SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->$ </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->rpcclient pogo -U root%secret -c "enumprinters"</KBD
->
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->Domain=[NARNIA] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.0-alpha3]
- flags:[0x800000]
- name:[\\POGO\hp-print]
- description:[POGO\\POGO\hp-print,NO DRIVER AVAILABLE FOR THIS PRINTER,]
- comment:[]
- </PRE
->
-<SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->$ </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->rpcclient pogo -U root%secret -c "setdriver hp-print \"HP LaserJet 4000 Series PS\""</KBD
->
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->Domain=[NARNIA] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.0-alpha3]
-Successfully set hp-print to driver HP LaserJet 4000 Series PS.</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1840"
->13.2.4. Adding New Printers via the Windows NT APW</A
-></H3
-><P
->By default, Samba offers all printer shares defined in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->
-in the "Printers..." folder. Also existing in this folder is the Windows NT
-Add Printer Wizard icon. The APW will be show only if</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->The connected user is able to successfully
- execute an OpenPrinterEx(\\server) with administrative
- privileges (i.e. root or <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->printer admin</VAR
->).
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#SHOWADDPRINTERWIZARD"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->show
- add printer wizard = yes</VAR
-></A
-> (the default).
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->In order to be able to use the APW to successfully add a printer to a Samba
-server, the <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#ADDPRINTERCOMMAND"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->add
-printer command</VAR
-></A
-> must have a defined value. The program
-hook must successfully add the printer to the system (i.e.
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/printcap</TT
-> or appropriate files) and
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> if necessary.</P
-><P
->When using the APW from a client, if the named printer share does
-not exist, <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbd</B
-> will execute the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->add printer
-command</VAR
-> and reparse to the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->
-to attempt to locate the new printer share. If the share is still not defined,
-an error of "Access Denied" is returned to the client. Note that the
-<VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->add printer program</VAR
-> is executed under the context
-of the connected user, not necessarily a root account.</P
-><P
->There is a complementary <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#DELETEPRINTERCOMMAND"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->delete
-printer command</VAR
-></A
-> for removing entries from the "Printers..."
-folder.</P
-><P
->The following is an example <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#ADDPRINTERCOMMAN"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->add printer command</VAR
-></A
-> script. It adds the appropriate entries to <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/printcap.local</TT
-> (change that to what you need) and returns a line of 'Done' which is needed for the whole process to work.</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->#!/bin/sh
-
-# Script to insert a new printer entry into printcap.local
-#
-# $1, printer name, used as the descriptive name
-# $2, share name, used as the printer name for Linux
-# $3, port name
-# $4, driver name
-# $5, location, used for the device file of the printer
-# $6, win9x location
-
-#
-# Make sure we use the location that RedHat uses for local printer defs
-PRINTCAP=/etc/printcap.local
-DATE=`date +%Y%m%d-%H%M%S`
-LP=lp
-RESTART="service lpd restart"
-
-# Keep a copy
-cp $PRINTCAP $PRINTCAP.$DATE
-# Add the printer to $PRINTCAP
-echo "" &#62;&#62; $PRINTCAP
-echo "$2|$1:\\" &#62;&#62; $PRINTCAP
-echo " :sd=/var/spool/lpd/$2:\\" &#62;&#62; $PRINTCAP
-echo " :mx=0:ml=0:sh:\\" &#62;&#62; $PRINTCAP
-echo " :lp=/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn:" &#62;&#62; $PRINTCAP
-
-touch "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn" &#62;&#62; /tmp/printadd.$$ 2&#62;&#38;1
-chown $LP "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn" &#62;&#62; /tmp/printadd.$$ 2&#62;&#38;1
-
-mkdir /var/spool/lpd/$2
-chmod 700 /var/spool/lpd/$2
-chown $LP /var/spool/lpd/$2
-#echo $1 &#62;&#62; "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn"
-#echo $2 &#62;&#62; "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn"
-#echo $3 &#62;&#62; "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn"
-#echo $4 &#62;&#62; "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn"
-#echo $5 &#62;&#62; "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn"
-#echo $6 &#62;&#62; "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn"
-$RESTART &#62;&#62; "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn"
-# Not sure if this is needed
-touch /usr/local/samba/lib/smb.conf
-#
-# You need to return a value, but I am not sure what it means.
-#
-echo "Done"
-exit 0</PRE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1870"
->13.2.5. Samba and Printer Ports</A
-></H3
-><P
->Windows NT/2000 print servers associate a port with each printer. These normally
-take the form of LPT1:, COM1:, FILE:, etc... Samba must also support the
-concept of ports associated with a printer. By default, only one printer port,
-named "Samba Printer Port", exists on a system. Samba does not really a port in
-order to print, rather it is a requirement of Windows clients. </P
-><P
->Note that Samba does not support the concept of "Printer Pooling" internally
-either. This is when a logical printer is assigned to multiple ports as
-a form of load balancing or fail over.</P
-><P
->If you require that multiple ports be defined for some reason,
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> possesses a <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#ENUMPORTSCOMMAND"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->enumports
-command</VAR
-></A
-> which can be used to define an external program
-that generates a listing of ports on a system.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1878"
->13.3. The Imprints Toolset</A
-></H2
-><P
->The Imprints tool set provides a UNIX equivalent of the
- Windows NT Add Printer Wizard. For complete information, please
- refer to the Imprints web site at <A
-HREF="http://imprints.sourceforge.net/"
-TARGET="_top"
-> http://imprints.sourceforge.net/</A
-> as well as the documentation
- included with the imprints source distribution. This section will
- only provide a brief introduction to the features of Imprints.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1882"
->13.3.1. What is Imprints?</A
-></H3
-><P
->Imprints is a collection of tools for supporting the goals
- of</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Providing a central repository information
- regarding Windows NT and 95/98 printer driver packages</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Providing the tools necessary for creating
- the Imprints printer driver packages.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Providing an installation client which
- will obtain and install printer drivers on remote Samba
- and Windows NT 4 print servers.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1892"
->13.3.2. Creating Printer Driver Packages</A
-></H3
-><P
->The process of creating printer driver packages is beyond
- the scope of this document (refer to Imprints.txt also included
- with the Samba distribution for more information). In short,
- an Imprints driver package is a gzipped tarball containing the
- driver files, related INF files, and a control file needed by the
- installation client.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1895"
->13.3.3. The Imprints server</A
-></H3
-><P
->The Imprints server is really a database server that
- may be queried via standard HTTP mechanisms. Each printer
- entry in the database has an associated URL for the actual
- downloading of the package. Each package is digitally signed
- via GnuPG which can be used to verify that package downloaded
- is actually the one referred in the Imprints database. It is
- <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->not</I
-></SPAN
-> recommended that this security check
- be disabled.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1899"
->13.3.4. The Installation Client</A
-></H3
-><P
->More information regarding the Imprints installation client
- is available in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->Imprints-Client-HOWTO.ps</TT
->
- file included with the imprints source package.</P
-><P
->The Imprints installation client comes in two forms.</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->a set of command line Perl scripts</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->a GTK+ based graphical interface to
- the command line perl scripts</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->The installation client (in both forms) provides a means
- of querying the Imprints database server for a matching
- list of known printer model names as well as a means to
- download and install the drivers on remote Samba and Windows
- NT print servers.</P
-><P
->The basic installation process is in four steps and
- perl code is wrapped around <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbclient</B
->
- and <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->rpcclient</B
->.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->
-foreach (supported architecture for a given driver)
-{
- 1. rpcclient: Get the appropriate upload directory
- on the remote server
- 2. smbclient: Upload the driver files
- 3. rpcclient: Issues an AddPrinterDriver() MS-RPC
-}
-
-4. rpcclient: Issue an AddPrinterEx() MS-RPC to actually
- create the printer</PRE
-></P
-><P
->One of the problems encountered when implementing
- the Imprints tool set was the name space issues between
- various supported client architectures. For example, Windows
- NT includes a driver named "Apple LaserWriter II NTX v51.8"
- and Windows 95 calls its version of this driver "Apple
- LaserWriter II NTX"</P
-><P
->The problem is how to know what client drivers have
- been uploaded for a printer. As astute reader will remember
- that the Windows NT Printer Properties dialog only includes
- space for one printer driver name. A quick look in the
- Windows NT 4.0 system registry at</P
-><P
-><TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\Print\Environment
- </TT
-></P
-><P
->will reveal that Windows NT always uses the NT driver
- name. This is ok as Windows NT always requires that at least
- the Windows NT version of the printer driver is present.
- However, Samba does not have the requirement internally.
- Therefore, how can you use the NT driver name if is has not
- already been installed?</P
-><P
->The way of sidestepping this limitation is to require
- that all Imprints printer driver packages include both the Intel
- Windows NT and 95/98 printer drivers and that NT driver is
- installed first.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1921"
->13.4. Diagnosis</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1923"
->13.4.1. Introduction</A
-></H3
-><P
->This is a short description of how to debug printing problems with
-Samba. This describes how to debug problems with printing from a SMB
-client to a Samba server, not the other way around. For the reverse
-see the examples/printing directory.</P
-><P
->Ok, so you want to print to a Samba server from your PC. The first
-thing you need to understand is that Samba does not actually do any
-printing itself, it just acts as a middleman between your PC client
-and your Unix printing subsystem. Samba receives the file from the PC
-then passes the file to a external "print command". What print command
-you use is up to you.</P
-><P
->The whole things is controlled using options in smb.conf. The most
-relevant options (which you should look up in the smb.conf man page)
-are:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> [global]
- print command - send a file to a spooler
- lpq command - get spool queue status
- lprm command - remove a job
- [printers]
- path = /var/spool/lpd/samba</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The following are nice to know about:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> queuepause command - stop a printer or print queue
- queueresume command - start a printer or print queue</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Example:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> print command = /usr/bin/lpr -r -P%p %s
- lpq command = /usr/bin/lpq -P%p %s
- lprm command = /usr/bin/lprm -P%p %j
- queuepause command = /usr/sbin/lpc -P%p stop
- queuepause command = /usr/sbin/lpc -P%p start</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Samba should set reasonable defaults for these depending on your
-system type, but it isn't clairvoyant. It is not uncommon that you
-have to tweak these for local conditions. The commands should
-always have fully specified pathnames, as the smdb may not have
-the correct PATH values.</P
-><P
->When you send a job to Samba to be printed, it will make a temporary
-copy of it in the directory specified in the [printers] section.
-and it should be periodically cleaned out. The lpr -r option
-requests that the temporary copy be removed after printing; If
-printing fails then you might find leftover files in this directory,
-and it should be periodically cleaned out. Samba used the lpq
-command to determine the "job number" assigned to your print job
-by the spooler.</P
-><P
->The %&#62;letter&#60; are "macros" that get dynamically replaced with appropriate
-values when they are used. The %s gets replaced with the name of the spool
-file that Samba creates and the %p gets replaced with the name of the
-printer. The %j gets replaced with the "job number" which comes from
-the lpq output.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1939"
->13.4.2. Debugging printer problems</A
-></H3
-><P
->One way to debug printing problems is to start by replacing these
-command with shell scripts that record the arguments and the contents
-of the print file. A simple example of this kind of things might
-be:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> print command = /tmp/saveprint %p %s
-
- #!/bin/saveprint
- # we make sure that we are the right user
- /usr/bin/id -p &#62;/tmp/tmp.print
- # we run the command and save the error messages
- # replace the command with the one appropriate for your system
- /usr/bin/lpr -r -P$1 $2 2&#62;&#62;&#38;/tmp/tmp.print</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Then you print a file and try removing it. You may find that the
-print queue needs to be stopped in order to see the queue status
-and remove the job:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->&#13;h4: {42} % echo hi &#62;/tmp/hi
-h4: {43} % smbclient //localhost/lw4
-added interface ip=10.0.0.4 bcast=10.0.0.255 nmask=255.255.255.0
-Password:
-Domain=[ASTART] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.0.7]
-smb: \&#62; print /tmp/hi
-putting file /tmp/hi as hi-17534 (0.0 kb/s) (average 0.0 kb/s)
-smb: \&#62; queue
-1049 3 hi-17534
-smb: \&#62; cancel 1049
-Error cancelling job 1049 : code 0
-smb: \&#62; cancel 1049
-Job 1049 cancelled
-smb: \&#62; queue
-smb: \&#62; exit</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The 'code 0' indicates that the job was removed. The comment
-by the smbclient is a bit misleading on this.
-You can observe the command output and then and look at the
-/tmp/tmp.print file to see what the results are. You can quickly
-find out if the problem is with your printing system. Often people
-have problems with their /etc/printcap file or permissions on
-various print queues.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1948"
->13.4.3. What printers do I have?</A
-></H3
-><P
->You can use the 'testprns' program to check to see if the printer
-name you are using is recognized by Samba. For example, you can
-use:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> testprns printer /etc/printcap</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Samba can get its printcap information from a file or from a program.
-You can try the following to see the format of the extracted
-information:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> testprns -a printer /etc/printcap
-
- testprns -a printer '|/bin/cat printcap'</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1956"
->13.4.4. Setting up printcap and print servers</A
-></H3
-><P
->You may need to set up some printcaps for your Samba system to use.
-It is strongly recommended that you use the facilities provided by
-the print spooler to set up queues and printcap information.</P
-><P
->Samba requires either a printcap or program to deliver printcap
-information. This printcap information has the format:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> name|alias1|alias2...:option=value:...</PRE
-></P
-><P
->For almost all printing systems, the printer 'name' must be composed
-only of alphanumeric or underscore '_' characters. Some systems also
-allow hyphens ('-') as well. An alias is an alternative name for the
-printer, and an alias with a space in it is used as a 'comment'
-about the printer. The printcap format optionally uses a \ at the end of lines
-to extend the printcap to multiple lines.</P
-><P
->Here are some examples of printcap files:</P
-><P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
->pr just printer name</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->pr|alias printer name and alias</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->pr|My Printer printer name, alias used as comment</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->pr:sh:\ Same as pr:sh:cm= testing
- :cm= \
- testing</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->pr:sh Same as pr:sh:cm= testing
- :cm= testing</P
-></LI
-></OL
-></P
-><P
->Samba reads the printcap information when first started. If you make
-changes in the printcap information, then you must do the following:</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
->make sure that the print spooler is aware of these changes.
-The LPRng system uses the 'lpc reread' command to do this.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->make sure that the spool queues, etc., exist and have the
-correct permissions. The LPRng system uses the 'checkpc -f'
-command to do this.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->You now should send a SIGHUP signal to the smbd server to have
-it reread the printcap information.</P
-></LI
-></OL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1984"
->13.4.5. Job sent, no output</A
-></H3
-><P
->This is the most frustrating part of printing. You may have sent the
-job, verified that the job was forwarded, set up a wrapper around
-the command to send the file, but there was no output from the printer.</P
-><P
->First, check to make sure that the job REALLY is getting to the
-right print queue. If you are using a BSD or LPRng print spooler,
-you can temporarily stop the printing of jobs. Jobs can still be
-submitted, but they will not be printed. Use:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> lpc -Pprinter stop</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Now submit a print job and then use 'lpq -Pprinter' to see if the
-job is in the print queue. If it is not in the print queue then
-you will have to find out why it is not being accepted for printing.</P
-><P
->Next, you may want to check to see what the format of the job really
-was. With the assistance of the system administrator you can view
-the submitted jobs files. You may be surprised to find that these
-are not in what you would expect to call a printable format.
-You can use the UNIX 'file' utitily to determine what the job
-format actually is:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> cd /var/spool/lpd/printer # spool directory of print jobs
- ls # find job files
- file dfA001myhost</PRE
-></P
-><P
->You should make sure that your printer supports this format OR that
-your system administrator has installed a 'print filter' that will
-convert the file to a format appropriate for your printer.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN1995"
->13.4.6. Job sent, strange output</A
-></H3
-><P
->Once you have the job printing, you can then start worrying about
-making it print nicely.</P
-><P
->The most common problem is extra pages of output: banner pages
-OR blank pages at the end.</P
-><P
->If you are getting banner pages, check and make sure that the
-printcap option or printer option is configured for no banners.
-If you have a printcap, this is the :sh (suppress header or banner
-page) option. You should have the following in your printer.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> printer: ... :sh</PRE
-></P
-><P
->If you have this option and are still getting banner pages, there
-is a strong chance that your printer is generating them for you
-automatically. You should make sure that banner printing is disabled
-for the printer. This usually requires using the printer setup software
-or procedures supplied by the printer manufacturer.</P
-><P
->If you get an extra page of output, this could be due to problems
-with your job format, or if you are generating PostScript jobs,
-incorrect setting on your printer driver on the MicroSoft client.
-For example, under Win95 there is a option:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> Printers|Printer Name|(Right Click)Properties|Postscript|Advanced|</PRE
-></P
-><P
->that allows you to choose if a Ctrl-D is appended to all jobs.
-This is a very bad thing to do, as most spooling systems will
-automatically add a ^D to the end of the job if it is detected as
-PostScript. The multiple ^D may cause an additional page of output.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2007"
->13.4.7. Raw PostScript printed</A
-></H3
-><P
->This is a problem that is usually caused by either the print spooling
-system putting information at the start of the print job that makes
-the printer think the job is a text file, or your printer simply
-does not support PostScript. You may need to enable 'Automatic
-Format Detection' on your printer.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2010"
->13.4.8. Advanced Printing</A
-></H3
-><P
->Note that you can do some pretty magic things by using your
-imagination with the "print command" option and some shell scripts.
-Doing print accounting is easy by passing the %U option to a print
-command shell script. You could even make the print command detect
-the type of output and its size and send it to an appropriate
-printer.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2013"
->13.4.9. Real debugging</A
-></H3
-><P
->If the above debug tips don't help, then maybe you need to bring in
-the bug guns, system tracing. See Tracing.txt in this directory.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="CUPS-PRINTING"
-></A
->Chapter 14. CUPS Printing Support</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2034"
->14.1. Introduction</A
-></H2
-><P
->The Common Unix Print System (CUPS) has become very popular, but to many it is
-a very mystical tool. There is a great deal of uncertainty regarding CUPS and how
-it works. The result is seen in a large number of posting on the samba mailing lists
-expressing frustration when MS Windows printers appear not to work with a CUPS
-backr-end.</P
-><P
->This is a good time to point out how CUPS can be used and what it does. CUPS is more
-than just a print spooling system - it is a complete printer management system that
-complies with HTTP and IPP protocols. It can be managed remotely via a web browser
-and it can print using http and ipp protocols.</P
-><P
->CUPS allows to creation of RAW printers (ie: NO file format translation) as well as
-SMART printers (ie: CUPS does file format conversion as required for the printer). In
-many ways this gives CUPS similar capabilities to the MS Windows print monitoring
-system. Of course, if you are a CUPS advocate, you would agrue that CUPS is better!
-In any case, let us now move on to explore how one may configure CUPS for interfacing
-with MS Windows print clients via Samba.</P
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://www.cups.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->CUPS</A
-> is a newcomer in the UNIX printing scene,
-which has convinced many people upon first trial already. However, it has quite a few
-new features, which make it different from other, more traditional printing systems.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2041"
->14.2. Configuring <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> for CUPS</A
-></H2
-><P
->Printing with CUPS in the most basic <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->
-setup in Samba-3 only needs two settings: <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->printing = cups</B
-> and
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->printcap = cups</B
->. While CUPS itself doesn't need a printcap
-anymore, the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->cupsd.conf</TT
-> configuration file knows two directives
-(example: <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Printcap /etc/printcap</B
-> and <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->PrintcapFormat
-BSD</B
->), which control if such a file should be created for the
-convenience of third party applications. Make sure it is set! For details see
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->man cupsd.conf</B
-> and other CUPS-related documentation.</P
-><P
->If SAMBA is compiled against libcups, then <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->printcap = cups</B
-> uses the
-CUPS API to list printers, submit jobs, etc. Otherwise it maps to the System V commands
-with an additional <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->-oraw</VAR
-> option for printing. On a Linux system,
-you can use the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->ldd</B
-> command to find out details (ldd may not be
-present on other OS platforms, or its function may be embodied by a different command):</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->transmeta:/home/kurt # ldd `which smbd`
- libssl.so.0.9.6 =&#62; /usr/lib/libssl.so.0.9.6 (0x4002d000)
- libcrypto.so.0.9.6 =&#62; /usr/lib/libcrypto.so.0.9.6 (0x4005a000)
- libcups.so.2 =&#62; /usr/lib/libcups.so.2 (0x40123000)
- libdl.so.2 =&#62; /lib/libdl.so.2 (0x401e8000)
- libnsl.so.1 =&#62; /lib/libnsl.so.1 (0x401ec000)
- libpam.so.0 =&#62; /lib/libpam.so.0 (0x40202000)
- libc.so.6 =&#62; /lib/libc.so.6 (0x4020b000)
- /lib/ld-linux.so.2 =&#62; /lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0x40000000)</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The line "libcups.so.2 =&#62; /usr/lib/libcups.so.2
-(0x40123000)" shows there is CUPS support compiled into this version of
-Samba. If this is the case, and <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->printing = cups</B
-> is set, then any
-otherwise manually set print command in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> is ignored.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2061"
->14.3. CUPS - RAW Print Through Mode</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->When used in raw print through mode is will be necessary to use the printer
-vendor's drivers in each Windows client PC.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->When CUPS printers are configured for RAW print-through mode operation it is the
-responsibility of the Samba client to fully render the print job (file) in a format
-that is suitable for direct delivery to the printer. In this case CUPS will NOT
-do any print file format conversion work.</P
-><P
->The CUPS files that need to be correctly set for RAW mode printers to work are:
-
-<P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-><TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/cups/mime.types</TT
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/cups/mime.convs</TT
-></P
-></LI
-></UL
->
-
-Both contain entries that must be uncommented to allow <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->RAW</I
-></SPAN
-> mode
-operation.</P
-><P
->Firstly, to enable CUPS based printing from Samba the following options must be
-enabled in your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file [globals] section:
-
-<P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->printing = CUPS</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->printcap = CUPS</P
-></LI
-></UL
->
-
-When these parameters are specified the print directives in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> (as well as in
-samba itself) will be ignored because samba will directly interface with CUPS through
-it's application program interface (API) - so long as Samba has been compiled with
-CUPS library (libcups) support. If samba has NOT been compiled with CUPS support then
-printing will use the System V AT&#38;T command set with the <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->-oraw</I
-></SPAN
->
-option automatically passing through.</P
-><P
->Cupsomatic (an enhanced printing utility that is part of some CUPS implementations)
-on the Samba/CUPS server does *not* add any features if a file is really
-printed "raw". However, if you have loaded the driver for the Windows client from
-the CUPS server, using the "cupsaddsmb" utility, and if this driver is one using
-a "Foomatic" PPD, the PJL header in question is already added on the Windows client,
-at the time when the driver initially generated the PostScript data and CUPS in true
-"-oraw" manner doesn't remove this PJL header and passes the file "as is" to its
-printer communication backend.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->NOTE: editing in the "mime.convs" and the "mime.types" file does not *enforce*
-"raw" printing, it only *allows* it.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->Print files that arrive from MS Windows printing are "auto-typed" by CUPS. This aids
-the process of determining proper treatment while in the print queue system.
-
-<P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> Files generated by PCL drivers and directed at PCK printers get auto-typed as
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->application/octet-stream</TT
->. Unknown file format types also
- get auto-typed with this tag.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Files generated by a Postscript driver and directed at a Postscript printer
- are auto-typed depending on the auto-detected most suitable MIME type as:
-
- <P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->* application/postscript</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->* application/vnd.cups-postscript</P
-></LI
-></UL
->
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-></P
-><P
->"application/postscript" first goes thru the "pstops" filter (where the page counting
-and accounting takes place). The outcome will be of MIME type
-"application/vnd.cups-postscript". The pstopsfilter reads and uses information from
-the PPD and inserts user-provided options into the PostScript file. As a consequence,
-the filtered file could possibly have an unwanted PJL header.</P
-><P
->"application/postscript" will be all files with a ".ps", ".ai", ".eps" suffix or which
-have as their first character string one of "%!" or "&#62;04&#60;%".</P
-><P
->"application/vnd.cups-postscript" will files which contain the string
-"LANGUAGE=POSTSCRIPT" (or similar variations with different capitalization) in the
-first 512 bytes, and also contain the "PJL super escape code" in the first 128 bytes
-("&#62;1B&#60;%-12345X"). Very likely, most PostScript files generated on Windows using a CUPS
-or other PPD, will have to be auto-typed as "vnd.cups-postscript". A file produced
-with a "Generic PostScript driver" will just be tagged "application/postscript".</P
-><P
->Once the file is in "application/vnd.cups-postscript" format, either "pstoraster"
-or "cupsomatic" will take over (depending on the printer configuration, as
-determined by the PPD in use).</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->A printer queue with *no* PPD associated to it is a "raw" printer and all files
-will go directly there as received by the spooler. The exeptions are file types
-"application/octet-stream" which need "passthrough feature" enabled.
-"Raw" queues don't do any filtering at all, they hand the file directly to the
-CUPS backend. This backend is responsible for the sending of the data to the device
-(as in the "device URI" notation as lpd://, socket://, smb://, ipp://, http://,
-parallel:/, serial:/, usb:/ etc.)</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->"cupsomatic"/Foomatic are *not* native CUPS drivers and they don't ship with CUPS.
-They are a Third Party add-on, developed at Linuxprinting.org. As such, they are
-a brilliant hack to make all models (driven by Ghostscript drivers/filters in
-traditional spoolers) also work via CUPS, with the same (good or bad!) quality
-as in these other spoolers. "cupsomatic" is only a vehicle to execute a ghostscript
-commandline at that stage in the CUPS filtering chain, where "normally" the native
-CUPS "pstoraster" filter would kick in. cupsomatic by-passes pstoraster, "kidnaps"
-the printfile from CUPS away and re-directs it to go through Ghostscipt. CUPS accepts this,
-because the associated CUPS-O-Matic-/Foomatic-PPD specifies:</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> *cupsFilter: "application/vnd.cups-postscript 0 cupsomatic"</PRE
-><P
->This line persuades CUPS to hand the file to cupsomatic, once it has successfully
-converted it to the MIME type "application/vnd.cups-postscript". This conversion will not
-happen for Jobs arriving from Windows which are auto-typed "application/octet-stream",
-with the according changes in "/etc/cups/mime.types" in place.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->CUPS is widely configurable and flexible, even regarding its filtering mechanism.
-Another workaround in some situations would be to have
-in "/etc/cups/mime.types" entries as follows:</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> application/postscript application/vnd.cups-raw 0 -
- application/vnd.cups-postscript application/vnd.cups-raw 0 -</PRE
-><P
->This would prevent all Postscript files from being filtered (rather, they will go
-thru the virtual "nullfilter" denoted with "-"). This could only be useful for
-PS printers. If you want to print PS code on non-PS printers an entry as follows
-could be useful:</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> */* application/vnd.cups-raw 0 -</PRE
-><P
->and would effectively send *all* files to the backend without further processing.</P
-><P
->Lastly, you could have the following entry:</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> application/vnd.cups-postscript application/vnd.cups-raw 0 my_PJL_stripping_filter</PRE
-><P
->You will need to write a "my_PJL_stripping_filter" (could be a shellscript) that
-parses the PostScript and removes the unwanted PJL. This would need to conform to
-CUPS filter design (mainly, receive and pass the parameters printername, job-id,
-username, jobtitle, copies, print options and possibly the filename). It would
-be installed as world executable into "/usr/lib/cups/filters/" and will be called
-by CUPS if it encounters a MIME type "application/vnd.cups-postscript".</P
-><P
->CUPS can handle "-o job-hold-until=indefinite". This keeps the job in the queue
-"on hold". It will only be printed upon manual release by the printer operator.
-This is a requirement in many "central reproduction departments", where a few
-operators manage the jobs of hundreds of users on some big machine, where no
-user is allowed to have direct access. (The operators often need to load the
-proper paper type before running the 10.000 page job requested by marketing
-for the mailing, etc.).</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2118"
->14.4. CUPS as a network PostScript RIP -- CUPS drivers working on server, Adobe
-PostScript driver with CUPS-PPDs downloaded to clients</A
-></H2
-><P
->CUPS is perfectly able to use PPD files (PostScript
-Printer Descriptions). PPDs can control all print device options. They
-are usually provided by the manufacturer -- if you own a PostSript printer,
-that is. PPD files are always a component of PostScript printer drivers on MS
-Windows or Apple Mac OS systems. They are ASCII files containing
-user-selectable print options, mapped to appropriate PostScript, PCL or PJL
-commands for the target printer. Printer driver GUI dialogs translate these
-options "on-the-fly" into buttons and drop-down lists for the user to
-select.</P
-><P
->CUPS can load, without any conversions, the PPD file from
-any Windows (NT is recommended) PostScript driver and handle the options.
-There is a web browser interface to the print options (select
-http://localhost:631/printers/ and click on one "Configure Printer" button
-to see it), a commandline interface (see <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->man lpoptions</B
-> or
-try if you have <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->lphelp</B
-> on your system) plus some different GUI frontends on Linux
-UNIX, which can present PPD options to the users. PPD options are normally
-meant to become evaluated by the PostScript RIP on the real PostScript
-printer.</P
-><P
->CUPS doesn't stop at "real" PostScript printers in its
-usage of PPDs. The CUPS developers have extended the PPD concept, to also
-describe available device and driver options for non-PostScript printers
-through CUPS-PPDs.</P
-><P
->This is logical, as CUPS includes a fully featured
-PostScript interpreter (RIP). This RIP is based on Ghostscript. It can
-process all received PostScript (and additionally many other file formats)
-from clients. All CUPS-PPDs geared to non-PostScript printers contain an
-additional line, starting with the keyword <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->*cupsFilter</VAR
->.
-This line
-tells the CUPS print system which printer-specific filter to use for the
-interpretation of the accompanying PostScript. Thus CUPS lets all its
-printers appear as PostScript devices to its clients, because it can act as a
-PostScript RIP for those printers, processing the received PostScript code
-into a proper raster print format.</P
-><P
->CUPS-PPDs can also be used on Windows-Clients, on top of a
-PostScript driver (recommended is the Adobe one).</P
-><P
->This feature enables CUPS to do a few tricks no other
-spooler can do:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->act as a networked PostScript RIP (Raster Image Processor), handling
- printfiles from all client platforms in a uniform way;</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->act as a central accounting and billing server, as all files are passed
- through the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->pstops</B
-> Filter and are therefor logged in
- the CUPS <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->page&lowbar;log</TT
->. - <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->NOTE: </I
-></SPAN
->this
- can not happen with "raw" print jobs, which always remain unfiltered
- per definition;</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->enable clients to consolidate on a single PostScript driver, even for
- many different target printers.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2139"
->14.5. Windows Terminal Servers (WTS) as CUPS clients</A
-></H2
-><P
->This setup may be of special interest to people
-experiencing major problems in WTS environments. WTS need often a multitude
-of non-PostScript drivers installed to run their clients' variety of
-different printer models. This often imposes the price of much increased
-instability. In many cases, in an attempt to overcome this problem, site
-administrators have resorted to restrict the allowed drivers installed on
-their WTS to one generic PCL- and one PostScript driver. This however
-restricts the clients in the amount of printer options available for them --
-often they can't get out more then simplex prints from one standard paper
-tray, while their devices could do much better, if driven by a different
-driver!</P
-><P
->Using an Adobe PostScript driver, enabled with a CUPS-PPD,
-seems to be a very elegant way to overcome all these shortcomings. The
-PostScript driver is not known to cause major stability problems on WTS (even
-if used with many different PPDs). The clients will be able to (again) chose
-paper trays, duplex printing and other settings. However, there is a certain
-price for this too: a CUPS server acting as a PostScript RIP for its clients
-requires more CPU and RAM than just to act as a "raw spooling" device. Plus,
-this setup is not yet widely tested, although the first feedbacks look very
-promising...</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2143"
->14.6. Setting up CUPS for driver download</A
-></H2
-><P
->The <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->cupsadsmb</B
-> utility (shipped with all current
-CUPS versions) makes the sharing of any (or all) installed CUPS printers very
-easy. Prior to using it, you need the following settings in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->[global]
- load printers = yes
- printing = cups
- printcap name = cups
-
- [printers]
- comment = All Printers
- path = /var/spool/samba
- browseable = no
- public = yes
- guest ok = yes
- writable = no
- printable = yes
- printer admin = root
-
- [print$]
- comment = Printer Drivers
- path = /etc/samba/drivers
- browseable = yes
- guest ok = no
- read only = yes
- write list = root
- </PRE
-></P
-><P
->For licensing reasons the necessary files of the Adobe
-Postscript driver can not be distributed with either Samba or CUPS. You need
-to download them yourself from the Adobe website. Once extracted, create a
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->drivers</TT
-> directory in the CUPS data directory (usually
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/share/cups/</TT
->). Copy the Adobe files using
-UPPERCASE filenames, to this directory as follows:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> ADFONTS.MFM
- ADOBEPS4.DRV
- ADOBEPS4.HLP
- ADOBEPS5.DLL
- ADOBEPSU.DLL
- ADOBEPSU.HLP
- DEFPRTR2.PPD
- ICONLIB.DLL
- </PRE
-></P
-><P
->Users of the ESP Print Pro software are able to install
-their "Samba Drivers" package for this purpose with no problem.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2156"
->14.7. Sources of CUPS drivers / PPDs</A
-></H2
-><P
->On the internet you can find now many thousand CUPS-PPD
-files (with their companion filters), in many national languages,
-supporting more than 1.000 non-PostScript models.</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://wwwl.easysw.com/printpro/"
-TARGET="_top"
->ESP PrintPro
- (http://wwwl.easysw.com/printpro/)</A
->
- (commercial, non-Free) is packaged with more than 3.000 PPDs, ready for
- successful usage "out of the box" on Linux, IBM-AIX, HP-UX, Sun-Solaris,
- SGI-IRIX, Compaq Tru64, Digital Unix and some more commercial Unices (it
- is written by the CUPS developers themselves and its sales help finance
- the further development of CUPS, as they feed their creators)</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->the <A
-HREF="http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net/"
-TARGET="_top"
->Gimp-Print-Project
- (http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net/)</A
->
- (GPL, Free Software) provides around 120 PPDs (supporting nearly 300
- printers, many driven to photo quality output), to be used alongside the
- Gimp-Print CUPS filters;</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://www.turboprint.com/"
-TARGET="_top"
->TurboPrint
- (http://www.turboprint.com/)</A
->
- (Shareware, non-Freee) supports roughly the same amount of printers in
- excellent quality;</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://www-124.ibm.com/developerworks/oss/linux/projects/omni/"
-TARGET="_top"
->OMNI
- (http://www-124.ibm.com/developerworks/oss/linux/projects/omni/)</A
->
- (LPGL, Free) is a package made by IBM, now containing support for more
- than 400 printers, stemming from the inheritance of IBM OS/2 KnowHow
- ported over to Linux (CUPS support is in a Beta-stage at present);</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://hpinkjet.sourceforge.net/"
-TARGET="_top"
->HPIJS
- (http://hpinkjet.sourceforge.net/)</A
->
- (BSD-style licnes, Free) supports around 120 of HP's own printers and is
- also providing excellent print quality now;</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://www.linuxprinting.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->Foomatic/cupsomatic (http://www.linuxprinting.org/)</A
->
- (LPGL, Free) from Linuxprinting.org are providing PPDs for practically every
- Ghostscript filter known to the world, now usable with CUPS.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->NOTE: </I
-></SPAN
->the cupsomatic trick from Linuxprinting.org is
-working different from the other drivers. While the other drivers take the
-generic CUPS raster (produced by CUPS' own pstoraster PostScript RIP) as
-their input, cupsomatic "kidnaps" the PostScript inside CUPS, before
-RIP-ping, deviates it to an external Ghostscript installation (which now
-becomes the RIP) and gives it back to a CUPS backend once Ghostscript is
-finished. -- CUPS versions from 1.1.15 and later will provide their pstoraster
-PostScript RIP function again inside a system-wide Ghostscript
-installation rather than in "their own" pstoraster filter. (This
-CUPS-enabling Ghostscript version may be installed either as a
-patch to GNU or AFPL Ghostscript, or as a complete ESP Ghostscript package).
-However, this will not change the cupsomatic approach of guiding the printjob
-along a different path through the filtering system than the standard CUPS
-way...</P
-><P
->Once you installed a printer inside CUPS with one of the
-recommended methods (the lpadmin command, the web browser interface or one of
-the available GUI wizards), you can use <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->cupsaddsmb</B
-> to share the
-printer via Samba. <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->cupsaddsmb</B
-> prepares the driver files for
-comfortable client download and installation upon their first contact with
-this printer share.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2183"
->14.7.1. <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->cupsaddsmb</B
-></A
-></H3
-><P
->The <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->cupsaddsmb</B
-> command copies the needed files
-for convenient Windows client installations from the previously prepared CUPS
-data directory to your [print$] share. Additionally, the PPD
-associated with this printer is copied from <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/cups/ppd/</TT
-> to
-[print$].</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->cupsaddsmb -U root infotec_IS2027</B
->
-Password for root required to access localhost via SAMBA: <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->[type in password 'secret']</KBD
-></PRE
-></P
-><P
->To share all printers and drivers, use the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->-a</VAR
->
-parameter instead of a printer name.</P
-><P
->Probably you want to see what's going on. Use the
-<VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->-v</VAR
-> parameter to get a more verbose output:</P
-><P
->Probably you want to see what's going on. Use the
-<VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->-v</VAR
-> parameter to get a more verbose output:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->Note: The following line shave been wrapped so that information is not lost.
-
-<SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-> cupsaddsmb -v -U root infotec_IS2027
- Password for root required to access localhost via SAMBA:
- Running command: smbclient //localhost/print\$ -N -U'root%secret' -c 'mkdir W32X86;put
- /var/spool/cups/tmp/3cd1cc66376c0 W32X86/infotec_IS2027.PPD;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/
- ADOBEPS5.DLL W32X86/ADOBEPS5.DLL;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPSU.DLLr
- W32X86/ADOBEPSU.DLL;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPSU.HLP W32X86/ADOBEPSU.HLP'
- added interface ip=10.160.16.45 bcast=10.160.31.255 nmask=255.255.240.0
- added interface ip=192.168.182.1 bcast=192.168.182.255 nmask=255.255.255.0
- added interface ip=172.16.200.1 bcast=172.16.200.255 nmask=255.255.255.0
- Domain=[TUX-NET] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.3a.200204262025cvs]
- NT_STATUS_OBJECT_NAME_COLLISION making remote directory \W32X86
- putting file /var/spool/cups/tmp/3cd1cc66376c0 as \W32X86/infotec_IS2027.PPD (17394.6 kb/s)
- (average 17395.2 kb/s)
- putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPS5.DLL as \W32X86/ADOBEPS5.DLL (10877.4 kb/s)
- (average 11343.0 kb/s)
- putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPSU.DLL as \W32X86/ADOBEPSU.DLL (5095.2 kb/s)
- (average 9260.4 kb/s)
- putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPSU.HLP as \W32X86/ADOBEPSU.HLP (8828.7 kb/s)
- (average 9247.1 kb/s)
-
- Running command: smbclient //localhost/print\$ -N -U'root%secret' -c 'mkdir WIN40;put
- /var/spool/cups/tmp/3cd1cc66376c0 WIN40/infotec_IS2027.PPD;put
- /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADFONTS.MFM WIN40/ADFONTS.MFM;put
- /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPS4.DRV WIN40/ADOBEPS4.DRV;put
- /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPS4.HLP WIN40/ADOBEPS4.HLP;put
- /usr/share/cups/drivers/DEFPRTR2.PPD WIN40/DEFPRTR2.PPD;put
- /usr/share/cups/drivers/ICONLIB.DLL WIN40/ICONLIB.DLL;put
- /usr/share/cups/drivers/PSMON.DLL WIN40/PSMON.DLL;'
- added interface ip=10.160.16.45 bcast=10.160.31.255 nmask=255.255.240.0
- added interface ip=192.168.182.1 bcast=192.168.182.255 nmask=255.255.255.0
- added interface ip=172.16.200.1 bcast=172.16.200.255 nmask=255.255.255.0
- Domain=[TUX-NET] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.3a.200204262025cvs]
- NT_STATUS_OBJECT_NAME_COLLISION making remote directory \WIN40
- putting file /var/spool/cups/tmp/3cd1cc66376c0 as \WIN40/infotec_IS2027.PPD (26091.5 kb/s)
- (average 26092.8 kb/s)
- putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADFONTS.MFM as \WIN40/ADFONTS.MFM (11241.6 kb/s)
- (average 11812.9 kb/s)
- putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPS4.DRV as \WIN40/ADOBEPS4.DRV (16640.6 kb/s)
- (average 14679.3 kb/s)
- putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPS4.HLP as \WIN40/ADOBEPS4.HLP (11285.6 kb/s)
- (average 14281.5 kb/s)
- putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/DEFPRTR2.PPD as \WIN40/DEFPRTR2.PPD (823.5 kb/s)
- (average 12944.0 kb/s)
- putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ICONLIB.DLL as \WIN40/ICONLIB.DLL (19226.2 kb/s)
- (average 13169.7 kb/s)
- putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/PSMON.DLL as \WIN40/PSMON.DLL (18666.1 kb/s)
- (average 13266.7 kb/s)
-
- Running command: rpcclient localhost -N -U'root%secret' -c 'adddriver "Windows NT x86"
- "infotec_IS2027:ADOBEPS5.DLL:infotec_IS2027.PPD:ADOBEPSU.DLL:ADOBEPSU.HLP:NULL:RAW:NULL"'
- cmd = adddriver "Windows NT x86" "infotec_IS2027:ADOBEPS5.DLL:infotec_IS2027.PPD:ADOBEPSU.DLL:
- ADOBEPSU.HLP:NULL:RAW:NULL"
- Printer Driver infotec_IS2027 successfully installed.
-
- Running command: rpcclient localhost -N -U'root%secret' -c 'adddriver "Windows 4.0"
- "infotec_IS2027:ADOBEPS4.DRV:infotec_IS2027.PPD:NULL:ADOBEPS4.HLP:PSMON.DLL:RAW:
- ADFONTS.MFM,DEFPRTR2.PPD,ICONLIB.DLL"'
- cmd = adddriver "Windows 4.0" "infotec_IS2027:ADOBEPS4.DRV:infotec_IS2027.PPD:NULL:
- ADOBEPS4.HLP:PSMON.DLL:RAW:ADFONTS.MFM,DEFPRTR2.PPD,ICONLIB.DLL"
- Printer Driver infotec_IS2027 successfully installed.
-
- Running command: rpcclient localhost -N -U'root%secret'
- -c 'setdriver infotec_IS2027 infotec_IS2027'
- cmd = setdriver infotec_IS2027 infotec_IS2027
- Succesfully set infotec_IS2027 to driver infotec_IS2027.
-
- <SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-></PRE
-></P
-><P
->If you look closely, you'll discover your root password was transfered unencrypted over
-the wire, so beware! Also, if you look further her, you'll discover error messages like
-<CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->NT_STATUS_OBJECT_NAME_COLLISION</CODE
-> in between. They occur, because
-the directories <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->WIN40</TT
-> and <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->W32X86</TT
-> already
-existed in the [print$] driver download share (from a previous driver
-installation). They are harmless here.</P
-><P
->Now your printer is prepared for the clients to use. From
-a client, browse to the CUPS/Samba server, open the "Printers"
-share, right-click on this printer and select "Install..." or
-"Connect..." (depending on the Windows version you use). Now their
-should be a new printer in your client's local "Printers" folder,
-named (in my case) "infotec_IS2027 on kdebitshop"</P
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->NOTE: </I
-></SPAN
->
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->cupsaddsmb</B
-> will only reliably work i
-with CUPS version 1.1.15 or higher
-and Samba from 2.2.4. If it doesn't work, or if the automatic printer
-driver download to the clients doesn't succeed, you can still manually
-install the CUPS printer PPD on top of the Adobe PostScript driver on
-clients and then point the client's printer queue to the Samba printer
-share for connection, should you desire to use the CUPS networked
-PostScript RIP functions.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2212"
->14.8. The CUPS Filter Chains</A
-></H2
-><P
->The following diagrams reveal how CUPS handles print jobs.</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->#########################################################################
-#
-# CUPS in and of itself has this (general) filter chain (CAPITAL
-# letters are FILE-FORMATS or MIME types, other are filters (this is
-# true for pre-1.1.15 of pre-4.3 versions of CUPS and ESP PrintPro):
-#
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->SOMETHNG</VAR
->-FILEFORMAT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
->tops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/POSTSCRIPT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# pstops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-POSTSCRIPT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# pstoraster # as shipped with CUPS, independent from any Ghostscipt
-# | # installation on the system
-# | (= "postscipt interpreter")
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-RASTER
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
-> (f.e. Gimp-Print filters may be plugged in here)
-# | (= "raster driver")
-# |
-# V
-# SOMETHING-DEVICE-SPECIFIC
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# backend
-#
-#
-# ESP PrintPro has some enhanced "rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
->" filters as compared to
-# CUPS, and also a somewhat improved "pstoraster" filter.
-#
-# NOTE: Gimp-Print and some other 3rd-Party-Filters (like TurboPrint) to
-# CUPS and ESP PrintPro plug-in where rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
-> is noted.
-#
-#########################################################################</PRE
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->#########################################################################
-#
-# This is how "cupsomatic" comes into play:
-# =========================================
-#
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->SOMETHNG</VAR
->-FILEFORMAT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
->tops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/POSTSCRIPT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# pstops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-POSTSCRIPT ----------------+
-# | |
-# | V
-# V cupsomatic
-# pstoraster (constructs complicated
-# | (= "postscipt interpreter") Ghostscript commandline
-# | to let the file be
-# V processed by a
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-RASTER "-sDEVICE=<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->s.th.</VAR
->"
-# | call...)
-# | |
-# V |
-# rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
-> V
-# | (= "raster driver") +-------------------------+
-# | | Ghostscript at work.... |
-# V | |
-# SOMETHING-DEVICE-SPECIFIC *-------------------------+
-# | |
-# | |
-# V |
-# backend &#62;------------------------------------+
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# THE PRINTER
-#
-#
-# Note, that cupsomatic "kidnaps" the printfile after the
-# "APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-POSTSCRPT" stage and deviates it through
-# the CUPS-external, systemwide Ghostscript installation, bypassing the
-# "pstoraster" filter (therefor also bypassing the CUPS-raster-drivers
-# "rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
->", and hands the rasterized file directly to the CUPS
-# backend...
-#
-# cupsomatic is not made by the CUPS developers. It is an independent
-# contribution to printing development, made by people from
-# Linuxprinting.org. (see also http://www.cups.org/cups-help.html)
-#
-# NOTE: Gimp-Print and some other 3rd-Party-Filters (like TurboPrint) to
-# CUPS and ESP PrintPro plug-in where rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
-> is noted.
-#
-#########################################################################</PRE
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->#########################################################################
-#
-# And this is how it works for ESP PrintPro from 4.3:
-# ===================================================
-#
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->SOMETHNG</VAR
->-FILEFORMAT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
->tops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/POSTSCRIPT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# pstops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-POSTSCRIPT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# gsrip
-# | (= "postscipt interpreter")
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-RASTER
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
-> (f.e. Gimp-Print filters may be plugged in here)
-# | (= "raster driver")
-# |
-# V
-# SOMETHING-DEVICE-SPECIFIC
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# backend
-#
-# NOTE: Gimp-Print and some other 3rd-Party-Filters (like TurboPrint) to
-# CUPS and ESP PrintPro plug-in where rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
-> is noted.
-#
-#########################################################################</PRE
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->#########################################################################
-#
-# This is how "cupsomatic" would come into play with ESP PrintPro:
-# ================================================================
-#
-#
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->SOMETHNG</VAR
->-FILEFORMAT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
->tops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/POSTSCRIPT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# pstops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-POSTSCRIPT ----------------+
-# | |
-# | V
-# V cupsomatic
-# gsrip (constructs complicated
-# | (= "postscipt interpreter") Ghostscript commandline
-# | to let the file be
-# V processed by a
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-RASTER "-sDEVICE=<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->s.th.</VAR
->"
-# | call...)
-# | |
-# V |
-# rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
-> V
-# | (= "raster driver") +-------------------------+
-# | | Ghostscript at work.... |
-# V | |
-# SOMETHING-DEVICE-SPECIFIC *-------------------------+
-# | |
-# | |
-# V |
-# backend &#62;------------------------------------+
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# THE PRINTER
-#
-# NOTE: Gimp-Print and some other 3rd-Party-Filters (like TurboPrint) to
-# CUPS and ESP PrintPro plug-in where rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
-> is noted.
-#
-#########################################################################</PRE
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->#########################################################################
-#
-# And this is how it works for CUPS from 1.1.15:
-# ==============================================
-#
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->SOMETHNG</VAR
->-FILEFORMAT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
->tops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/POSTSCRIPT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# pstops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-POSTSCRIPT-----+
-# |
-# +------------------v------------------------------+
-# | Ghostscript |
-# | at work... |
-# | (with |
-# | "-sDEVICE=cups") |
-# | |
-# | (= "postscipt interpreter") |
-# | |
-# +------------------v------------------------------+
-# |
-# |
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-RASTER &#62;-------+
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
->
-# | (= "raster driver")
-# |
-# V
-# SOMETHING-DEVICE-SPECIFIC
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# backend
-#
-#
-# NOTE: since version 1.1.15 CUPS "outsourced" the pstoraster process to
-# Ghostscript. GNU Ghostscript needs to be patched to handle the
-# CUPS requirement; ESP Ghostscript has this builtin. In any case,
-# "gs -h" needs to show up a "cups" device. pstoraster is now a
-# calling an appropriate "gs -sDEVICE=cups..." commandline to do
-# the job. It will output "application/vnd.cup-raster", which will
-# be finally processed by a CUPS raster driver "rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
->"
-# Note the difference to "cupsomatic", which will *not* output
-# CUPS-raster, but a final version of the printfile, ready to be
-# sent to the printer. cupsomatic also doesn't use the "cups"
-# devicemode in Ghostscript, but one of the classical devicemodes....
-#
-# NOTE: Gimp-Print and some other 3rd-Party-Filters (like TurboPrint) to
-# CUPS and ESP PrintPro plug-in where rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
-> is noted.
-#
-#########################################################################</PRE
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->#########################################################################
-#
-# And this is how it works for CUPS from 1.1.15, with cupsomatic included:
-# ========================================================================
-#
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->SOMETHNG</VAR
->-FILEFORMAT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
->tops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/POSTSCRIPT
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# pstops
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-POSTSCRIPT-----+
-# |
-# +------------------v------------------------------+
-# | Ghostscript . Ghostscript at work.... |
-# | at work... . (with "-sDEVICE= |
-# | (with . <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->s.th.</VAR
->" |
-# | "-sDEVICE=cups") . |
-# | . |
-# | (CUPS standard) . (cupsomatic) |
-# | . |
-# | (= "postscript interpreter") |
-# | . |
-# +------------------v--------------v---------------+
-# | |
-# | |
-# APPLICATION/VND.CUPS-RASTER &#62;-------+ |
-# | |
-# | |
-# V |
-# rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
-> |
-# | (= "raster driver") |
-# | |
-# V |
-# SOMETHING-DEVICE-SPECIFIC &#62;------------------------+
-# |
-# |
-# V
-# backend
-#
-#
-# NOTE: Gimp-Print and some other 3rd-Party-Filters (like TurboPrint) to
-# CUPS and ESP PrintPro plug-in where rasterto<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
-> is noted.
-#
-##########################################################################</PRE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2251"
->14.9. CUPS Print Drivers and Devices</A
-></H2
-><P
->CUPS ships with good support for HP LaserJet type printers. You can install
-the driver as follows:
-
-<P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> lpadmin -p laserjet4plus -v parallel:/dev/lp0 -E -m laserjet.ppd
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
->
-
-(The "-m" switch will retrieve the "laserjet.ppd" from the standard repository
-for not-yet-installed-PPDs, which CUPS typically stores in
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/share/cups/model</TT
->. Alternatively, you may use
-"-P /absolute/filesystem/path/to/where/there/is/PPD/your.ppd").</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2258"
->14.9.1. Further printing steps</A
-></H3
-><P
->Always also consult the database on linuxprinting.org for all recommendations
-about which driver is best used for each printer:</P
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://www.linuxprinting.org/printer_list.cgi"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.linuxprinting.org/printer_list.cgi</A
-></P
-><P
->There select your model and click on "Show". You'll arrive at a page listing
-all drivers working with your model. There will always be *one*
-<SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->recommended</I
-></SPAN
-> one. Try this one first. In your case
-("HP LaserJet 4 Plus"), you'll arrive here:</P
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://www.linuxprinting.org/show_printer.cgi?recnum=75104"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.linuxprinting.org/show_printer.cgi?recnum=75104</A
-></P
-><P
->The recommended driver is "ljet4". It has a link to the page for the ljet4
-driver too:</P
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://www.linuxprinting.org/show_driver.cgi?driver=ljet4"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.linuxprinting.org/show_driver.cgi?driver=ljet4</A
-></P
-><P
->On the driver's page, you'll find important and detailed info about how to use
-that driver within the various available spoolers. You can generate a PPD for
-CUPS. The PPD contains all the info about how to use your model and the driver;
-this is, once installed, working transparently for the user -- you'll only
-need to choose resolution, paper size etc. from the web-based menu or from
-the print dialog GUI or from the commandline...</P
-><P
->On the driver's page, choose to use the "PPD-O-Matic" online PPD generator
-program. Select your model and click "Generate PPD file". When you safe the
-appearing ASCII text file, don't use "cut'n'past" (as it could possiblly corrupt
-line endings and tabs), but use "Save as..." in your browser's menu. Save it
-at "/some/path/on/your/filesystem/somewhere/my-name-for-my-printer.ppd"</P
-><P
->Then install the printer:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> "lpadmin -p laserjet4plus -v parallel:/dev/lp0 -E \
- -P /some/path/on/your/filesystem/somewhere/my-name-for-my-printer.ppd"</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Note, that for all the "Foomatic-PPDs" from Linuxprinting.org, you also need
-a special "CUPS filter" named "cupsomatic". Get the latest version of
-"cupsomatic" from:</P
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://www.linuxprinting.org/cupsomatic"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.linuxprinting.org/cupsomatic</A
-></P
-><P
->This needs to be copied to <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/lib/cups/filter/cupsomatic</TT
->
-and be made world executable. This filter is needed to read and act upon the
-specially encoded Foomatic comments, embedded in the printfile, which in turn
-are used to construct (transparently for you, the user) the complicated
-ghostscript command line needed for your printer/driver combo.</P
-><P
->You can have a look at all the options for the Ghostscript commandline supported
-by your printer and the ljet4 driver by going to the section "Execution details",
-selecting your model (Laserjet 4 Plus) and clicking on "Show execution details".
-This will bring up this web page:</P
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://www.linuxprinting.org/execution.cgi?driver=ljet4&printer=75104&.submit=Show+execution+details"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.linuxprinting.org/execution.cgi?driver=ljet4&#38;printer=75104&#38;.submit=Show+execution+details</A
-></P
-><P
->The ingenious thing is that the database is kept current. If there
-is a bug fix and an improvement somewhere in the database, you will
-always get the most current and stable and feature-rich driver by following
-the steps described above.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Till Kamppeter from MandrakeSoft is doing an excellent job here that too few
-people are aware of. (So if you use it often, please send him a note showing
-your appreciation).</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->The latest and greatest improvement now is support for "custom page sizes"
-for all those printers which support it.</P
-><P
->"cupsomatic" is documented here:</P
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://www.linuxprinting.org/cups-doc.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.linuxprinting.org/cups-doc.html</A
-></P
-><P
->More printing tutorial info may be found here:</P
-><P
-><A
-HREF="http://www.linuxprinting.org/kpfeifle/LinuxKongress2002/Tutorial/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.linuxprinting.org/kpfeifle/LinuxKongress2002/Tutorial/</A
-></P
-><P
->Note, that *all* the Foomatic drivers listed on Linuxprinting.org (now
-approaching the "all-time high" number of 1.000 for the supported models)
-are using a special filtering chain involving Ghostscript, as described
-in this document.</P
-><P
->Summary - You need:</P
-><P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->A "foomatic+<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->something</VAR
->" PPD is not enough to print with CUPS (but it is *one* important component)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->The "cupsomatic" filter script (Perl) in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/lib/cups/filters/</TT
-></TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Perl to make cupsomatic run</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Ghostscript (because it is called and controlled by the PPD/cupsomatic combo in a way to fit your printermodel/driver combo.</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Ghostscript *must*, depending on the driver/model, contain support for a certain "device" (as shown by "gs -h")</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></P
-><P
->In the case of the "hpijs" driver, you need a Ghostscript version, which
-has "ijs" amongst its supported devices in "gs -h". In the case of
-"hpijs+foomatic", a valid ghostscript commandline would be reading like this:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> gs -q -dBATCH -dPARANOIDSAFER -dQUIET -dNOPAUSE -sDEVICE=ijs \
- -sIjsServer=hpijs<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->PageSize</VAR
-> -dDuplex=<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->Duplex</VAR
-> <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->Model</VAR
-> \
- -r<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->Resolution</VAR
->,PS:MediaPosition=<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->InputSlot</VAR
-> -dIjsUseOutputFD \
- -sOutputFile=- -</PRE
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Note, that with CUPS and the "hpijs+foomatic" PPD (plus Perl and cupsomatic)
-you don't need to remember this. You can choose the available print options
-thru a GUI print command (like "glp" from ESP's commercially supported
-PrintPro software, or KDE's "kprinter", or GNOME's "gtklp" or the independent
-"xpp") or the CUPS web interface via human-readable drop-down selection
-menus.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->If you use "ESP Ghostscript" (also under the GPL, provided by Easy Software
-Products, the makers of CUPS, downloadable from
-<A
-HREF="http://www.cups.org/software.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.cups.org/software.html</A
->,
-co-maintained by the developers of linuxprinting.org), you are guaranteed to
-have in use the most uptodate, bug-fixed, enhanced and stable version of a Free
-Ghostscript. It contains support for ~300 devices, whereas plain vanilla
-GNU Ghostscript 7.05 only has ~200.</P
-><P
->If you print only one CUPS test page, from the web interface and when you try to
-print a windows test page, it acts like the job was never sent:
-
-<P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->Can you print "standard" jobs from the CUPS machine?</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Are the jobs from Windows visible in the Web interface on CUPS (http://localhost:631/)?</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Most important:</I
-></SPAN
-> What kind of printer driver are you using on the Windows clients?</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
->
-
-You can try to get a more detailed debugging info by setting "LogLevel debug" in
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/cups/cupsd.conf</TT
->, re-start cupsd and investigate <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/var/log/cups/error_log</TT
->
-for the whereabouts of your Windows-originating printjobs:</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->what does the "auto-typing" line say? which is the "MIME type" CUPS thinks is arriving from the Windows clients?</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->are there "filter" available for this MIME type?</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->are there "filter rules" defined in "/etc/cups/mime.convs" for this MIME type?</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2328"
->14.10. Limiting the number of pages users can print</A
-></H2
-><P
->The feature you want is dependent on the real print subsystem you're using.
-Samba's part is always to receive the job files from the clients (filtered
-*or* unfiltered) and hand it over to this printing subsystem.</P
-><P
->Of course one could "hack" things with one's own scripts.</P
-><P
->But there is CUPS (Common Unix Printing System). CUPS supports "quotas".
-Quotas can be based on sizes of jobs or on the number of pages or both,
-and are spanning any time period you want.</P
-><P
->This is an example command how root would set a print quota in CUPS,
-assuming an existing printer named "quotaprinter":</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> lpadmin -p quotaprinter -o job-quota-period=604800 -o job-k-limit=1024 \
- -o job-page-limit=100</PRE
-><P
->This would limit every single user to print 100 pages or 1024 KB of
-data (whichever comes first) within the last 604.800 seconds ( = 1 week).</P
-><P
->For CUPS to count correctly, the printfile needs to pass the CUPS "pstops" filter,
-otherwise it uses a "dummy" count of "1". Some printfiles don't pass it
-(eg: image files) but then those are mostly 1 page jobs anyway. This also means,
-proprietary drivers for the target printer running on the client computers and
-CUPS/Samba then spooling these files as "raw" (i.e. leaving them untouched, not
-filtering them), will be counted as "1-pagers" too!</P
-><P
->You need to send PostScript from the clients (i.e. run a PostScript driver there)
-for having the chance to get accounting done. If the printer is a non-PostScript model,
-you need to let CUPS do the job to convert the file to a print-ready format for the
-target printer. This will be working for currently ~1.000 different printer models, see</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> http://www.linuxprinting.org/printer_list.cgi</PRE
-><P
->Before CUPS-1.1.16 your only option was to use the Adobe PostScript
-Driver on the Windows clients. The output of this driver was not always
-passed thru the "pstops" filter on the CUPS/Samba side, and therefor was
-not counted correctly (the reason is that it often --- depending on the
-"PPD" being used --- did write a "PJL"-header in front of the real
-PostScript which made CUPS to skip the pstops and go directy to
-the "pstoraster" stage).</P
-><P
->From CUPS-1.1.16 onward you can use the "CUPS PostScript Driver
-for Windows NT/2K/XP clients" (it is tagged in the download area of
-http://www.cups.org/ as the "cups-samba-1.1.16.tar.gz" package).
-It is *not* working for Win9x/ME clients. But it:</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->it guarantees to not write an PJL-header</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->it guarantees to still read and support all PJL-options named in the driver PPD with its own means</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->it guarantees the file going thru the "pstops" filter on the CUPS/Samba server</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->it guarantees to page-count correctly the printfile</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
->You can read more about the setup of this combination in the
-manpage for "cupsaddsmb" (only present with CUPS installed, only
-current with CUPS 1.1.16).</P
-><P
->These are the items CUPS logs in the "page_log" for every single *page* of a job:</P
-><P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->Printer name</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->User name</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Job ID</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Time of printing</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->the page number</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->the number of copies</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->a billing info string (optional)</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></P
-><P
->Here is an extract of my CUPS server's page_log file to illustrate
-the format and included items:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="COMPUTEROUTPUT"
-> infotec_IS2027 kurt 40 [22/Nov/2002:13:18:03 +0100] 1 2 #marketing
- infotec_IS2027 kurt 40 [22/Nov/2002:13:18:03 +0100] 2 2 #marketing
- infotec_IS2027 kurt 40 [22/Nov/2002:13:18:03 +0100] 3 2 #marketing
- infotec_IS2027 kurt 40 [22/Nov/2002:13:18:03 +0100] 4 2 #marketing
- infotec_IS2027 kurt 40 [22/Nov/2002:13:18:03 +0100] 5 2 #marketing
- infotec_IS2027 kurt 40 [22/Nov/2002:13:18:03 +0100] 6 2 #marketing</SAMP
-></P
-><P
->This was Job ID "40", printed on "infotec_IS2027" by user "kurt", a 6-page job
-printed in 2 copies and billed to "#marketing"...</P
-><P
->What flaws or shortcomings are there?</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->the ones named above</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-> CUPS really counts the job pages being *processsed in software*
- (going thru the "RIP") rather than the physical sheets successfully
- leaving the printing device -- if there is a jam while printing
- the 5th sheet out of 1000 and the job is aborted by the printer,
- the "page count" will still show the figure of 1000 for that job
- </TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-> all quotas are the same for all users (no flexibility to give the
- boss a higher quota than the clerk) no support for groups
- </TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-> no means to read out the current balance or "used-up" number of current quota
- </TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-> a user having used up 99 sheets of 100 quota will still be able to send and print a 1.000 sheet job
- </TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-> a user being denied a job because of a filled-up quota doesn't get a meaningful
- error message from CUPS other than "client-error-not-possible".
- </TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
->But this is the best system out there currently. And there are
-huge improvements under development:</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->page counting will go into the "backends" (these talk
- directly to the printer and will increase the count in sync with the
- actual printing process -- a jam at the 5th sheet will lead to a stop in the counting)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->quotas will be handled more flexibly</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->probably there will be support for users to inquire their "accounts" in advance</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->probably there will be support for some other tools around this topic</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
->Other than the current stage of the CUPS development, I don't
-know any other ready-to-use tool which you could consider.</P
-><P
->You can download the driver files from
-<A
-HREF="http://www.cups.org/software.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.cups.org/software.html</A
->.
-It is a separate package from the CUPS base software files, tagged as "CUPS 1.1.16
-Windows NT/2k/XP Printer Driver for SAMBA (tar.gz, 192k)". The filename to
-download is "cups-samba-1.1.16.tar.gz". Upon untar-/unzip-ping it will reveal
-the files:</P
-><P
-> <SAMP
-CLASS="COMPUTEROUTPUT"
-> cups-samba.install
- cups-samba.license
- cups-samba.readme
- cups-samba.remove
- cups-samba.ss
- </SAMP
->
- </P
-><P
->These have been packaged with the ESP meta packager software "EPM". The
-*.install and *.remove files are simple shell script, which untars the
-*.ss (which is nothing else than a tar-archive) and puts its contents
-into <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/share/cups/drivers/</TT
->. Its contents are 3 files:</P
-><P
-> <SAMP
-CLASS="COMPUTEROUTPUT"
-> cupsdrvr.dll
- cupsui.dll
- cups.hlp
- </SAMP
->
- </P
-><DIV
-CLASS="CAUTION"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="CAUTION"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/caution.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Caution"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Due to a bug one CUPS release puts the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->cups.hlp</TT
->
-into <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/share/drivers/</TT
-> instead of
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/share/cups/drivers/</TT
->. To work around this, copy/move
-the file after running the "./cups-samba.install" script manually to the right place:</P
-><P
-> <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
-> cp /usr/share/drivers/cups.hlp /usr/share/cups/drivers/
- </KBD
->
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->This new CUPS PostScript driver is currently binary-only, but free
-no source code is provided (yet). The reason is this: it has
-been developed with the help of the Microsoft Driver Developer Kit (DDK)
-and compiled with Microsoft Visual Studio 6. It is not clear to the driver
-developers if they are allowed to distribute the whole of the source code
-as Free Software. However, they will likely release the "diff" in source
-code under the GPL, so anybody with a license of Visual Studio and a DDK
-will be able to compile for him/herself.</P
-><P
->Once you have run the install script (and possibly manually moved the
-"cups.hlp" file to "/usr/share/cups/drivers/"), the driver is ready to be
-put into Samba's [print$] share (which often maps to "/etc/samba/drivers/"
-and contains a subdir tree with WIN40 and W32X86 branches), by running
-"cupsaddsmb" (see also "man cupsaddsmb" for CUPS 1.1.16). [Don't forget to
-put root into the smbpasswd file by running "smbpasswd" should you run
-this whole procedure for the first time.] Once the driver files are in the
-[print$] share, they are ready to be downloaded and installed by the
-Win NT/2k/XP clients.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> Win 9x/ME clients won't work with this driver. For these you'd
- still need to use the ADOBE*.* drivers as previously.
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> It is not harming if you've still the ADOBE*.* driver files from
- previous installations in the "/usr/share/cups/drivers/" directory.
- The new cupsaddsmb (from 1.1.16) will automatically use the
- "newest" installed driver (which here then is the CUPS drivers).
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> Should your Win clients have had the old ADOBE*.* files and the
- Adobe PostScript drivers installed, the download and installation
- of the new CUPS PostScript driver for Windows NT/2k/XP will fail
- at first.
- </P
-><P
-> It is not enough to "delete" the printer (as the driver files
- will still be kept by the clients and re-used if you try to
- re-install the printer). To really get rid of the Adobe driver
- files on the clients, open the "Printers" folder (possibly via
- "Start --&#62; Settings --&#62; Control Panel --&#62; Printers"), right-click
- onto the folder background and select "Server Properties". A
- new dialog opens; select the "Drivers" tab; on the list select
- the driver you want to delete and click on the "Delete" button.
- (This will only work if there is no single printer left which
- uses that particular driver -- you need to "delete" all printers
- using this driver in the "Printers" folder first.)
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> Once you have successfully downloaded the CUPS PostScript driver
- to a client, you can easily switch all printers to this one
- by proceeding as described elsewhere in the "Samba HOWTO
- Collection" to change a driver for an existing printer.
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->What are the benefits with the "CUPS PostScript driver for Windows NT/2k/XP"
-as compared to the Adobe drivers?</P
-><P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> no hassle with the Adobe EULA
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> no hassle with the question "where do I get the ADOBE*.* driver files from?"
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> the Adobe drivers (depending on the printer PPD associated with them)
- often put a PJL header in front of the core PostScript part of the print
- file (thus the file starts with "<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->1B</VAR
->%-12345X" or "<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->escape</VAR
->%-12345X"
- instead of "%!PS"). This leads to the CUPS daemon autotyping the
- arriving file as a print-ready file, not requiring a pass thru the
- "pstops" filter (to speak more technical, it is not regarded as the
- generic MIME type "application/postscript", but as the more special
- MIME type "application/cups.vnd-postscript"), which therefore also
- leads to the page accounting in "/var/log/cups/page_log" not receiving
- the exact mumber of pages; instead the dummy page number of "1" is
- logged in a standard setup)
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> the Adobe driver has more options to "mis-configure" the PostScript
- generated by it (like setting it inadvertedly to "Optimize for Speed",
- instead of "Optimize for Portability", which could lead to CUPS being
- unable to process it)
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> the CUPS PostScript driver output sent by Windows clients to the CUPS
- server will be guaranteed to be auto-typed as generic MIME type
- "application/postscript", thusly passing thru the CUPS "pstops" filter
- and logging the correct number of pages in the page_log for accounting
- and quota purposes
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> the CUPS PostScript driver supports the sending of additional print
- options by the Win NT/2k/XP clients, such as naming the CUPS standard
- banner pages (or the custom ones, should they be installed at the time
- of driver download), using the CUPS "page-label" option, setting a
- job-priority and setting the scheduled time of printing (with the option
- to support additional useful IPP job attributes in the future).
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> the CUPS PostScript driver supports the inclusion of the new
- "*cupsJobTicket" comments at the beginnig of the PostScript file (which
- could be used in the future for all sort of beneficial extensions on
- the CUPS side, but which will not disturb any other application as those
- will regard it as a comment and simply ignore it).
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> the CUPS PostScript driver will be the heart of the fully fledged CUPS
- IPP client for Windows NT/2k/XP to be released soon (probably alongside
- the first Beta release for CUPS 1.2).
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2424"
->14.11. Advanced Postscript Printing from MS Windows</A
-></H2
-><P
->Let the Windows Clients use a PostScript driver to deliver poistscript to
-the samba print server (just like any Linux or Unix Client would also use
-PostScript to send to the server)</P
-><P
->Make the Unix printing subsystem to which Samba sends the job convert the
-incoming PostScript files to the native print format of the target printers
-(would be PCL if you have an HP printer)</P
-><P
->Now if you are afraid that this would just mean using a *Generic* PostScript
-driver for the clients that has no Simplex/Duplex selection, and no paper tray
-choice, but you need them to be able to set up print jobs, with all the bells
-and whistles of your printers:-</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->Not possible with traditional spooling systems</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-> But perfectly supported by CUPS (which uses "PPD" files to
- describe how to control the print options for PostScript and
- non-PostScript devices alike...
- </TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
->CUPS PPDs are working perfectly on Windows clients who use Adobe PostScript
-drivers (or the new CUPS PostScript driver for Windows NT/2K/XP). Clients can use
-them to setup the job to their liking and CUPS will use the received job options
-to make the (PCL-, ESC/P- or PostScript-) printer behave as required.</P
-><P
->If you want to have the additional benefit of page count logging and accounting
-then the CUPS PostScript driver is the best choice (better than the Adobe one).</P
-><P
->If you want to make the drivers downloadable for the clients then "cupsaddsmb" is
-your friend. It will setup the [print$] share on the Samba host to be ready to serve
-the clients for a "point and print" driver installation.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="WARNING"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="WARNING"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/warning.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Warning"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->What strings are attached?</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->There are some. But, given the sheer CPU power you can buy nowadays,
-these can be overcome easily. The strings:</P
-><P
->Well, if the CUPS/Samba side will have to print to many printers serving many users,
-you probably will need to set up a second server (which can do automatic load balancing
-with the first one, plus a degree of fail-over mechanism). Converting the incoming
-PostScript jobs, "interpreting" them for non-PostScript printers, amounts to the work
-of a "RIP" (Raster Image Processor) done in software. This requires more CPU and RAM
-than for the mere "raw spooling" task your current setup is solving. It all depends
-on the avarage and peak printing load the server should be able to handle.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2439"
->14.12. Auto-Deletion of CUPS spool files</A
-></H2
-><P
->Samba print files pass thru two "spool" directories. One the incoming directory
-managed by Samba, (set eg: in the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->path = /var/spool/samba</B
-> directive in the [printers]
-section of <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->). Second is the spool directory of your UNIX print subsystem.
-For CUPS it is normally "/var/spool/cups/", as set by the cupsd.conf directive
-"RequestRoot /var/spool/cups".</P
-><P
->I am not sure, which one of your directories keeps the files. From what you say,
-it is most likely the Samba part.</P
-><P
->For the CUPS part, you may want to consult:</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->http://localhost:631/sam.html#PreserveJobFiles</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->http://localhost:631/sam.html#PreserveJobHistory</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->http://localhost:631/sam.html#MaxJobs</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
->There are the settings described for your CUPS daemon, which could lead to completed
-job files not being deleted.</P
-><P
->"PreserveJobHistory Yes" -- keeps some details of jobs in
-cupsd's mind (well it keeps the "c12345", "c12346" etc. files
-in the CUPS spool directory, which do a similar job as the
-old-fashioned BSD-LPD control files). This is set to "Yes"
-as a default.</P
-><P
->"PreserveJobFiles Yes" -- keeps the job files themselves in
-cupsd's mind (well it keeps the "d12345", "d12346" etc. files
-in the CUPS spool directory...). This is set to "No" as the
-CUPS default.</P
-><P
->"MaxJobs 500" -- this directive controls the maximum number
-of jobs that are kept in memory. Once the number of jobs
-reaches the limit, the oldest completed job is automatically
-purged from the system to make room for the new one. If all
-of the known jobs are still pending or active then the new
-job will be rejected. Setting the maximum to 0 disables this
-functionality. The default setting is 0.</P
-><P
->(There are also additional settings for "MaxJobsPerUser" and
-"MaxJobsPerPrinter"...)</P
-><P
->For everything to work as announced, you need to have three things:</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
-> a Samba-<SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbd</SPAN
-> which is compiled against "libcups" (Check on Linux by running <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->ldd `which smbd`</KBD
->)
- </TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-> a Samba-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> setting of <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->printing = cups</B
->
- </TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-> another Samba-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> setting of <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->printcap = cups</B
->
- </TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Note, that in this case all other manually set printing-related
-commands (like "print command", "lpq command", "lprm command",
-"lppause command" or "lpresume command") are ignored and they
-should normally have no influence what-so-ever on your printing.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->If you want to do things manually, replace the "printing = cups"
-by "printing = bsd". Then your manually set commands may work
-(haven't tested this), and a "print command = lp -d %P %s; rm %s"
-may do what you need.</P
-><P
->You forgot to mention the CUPS version you're using. If you did
-set things up as described in the man pages, then the Samba
-spool files should be deleted. Otherwise it may be a bug. On
-the CUPS side, you can control the behaviour as described
-above.</P
-><P
->If you have more problems, post the output of these commands:</P
-><P
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
-> grep -v ^# /etc/cups/cupsd.conf | grep -v ^$
- grep -v ^# /etc/samba/smb.conf | grep -v ^$ | grep -v "^;"</KBD
-></P
-><P
->(adapt paths as needed). These commands sanitize the files
-and cut out the empty lines and lines with comments, providing
-the "naked settings" in a compact way.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="WINBIND"
-></A
->Chapter 15. Unified Logons between Windows NT and UNIX using Winbind</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2515"
->15.1. Abstract</A
-></H2
-><P
->Integration of UNIX and Microsoft Windows NT through
- a unified logon has been considered a "holy grail" in heterogeneous
- computing environments for a long time. We present
- <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->winbind</I
-></SPAN
->, a component of the Samba suite
- of programs as a solution to the unified logon problem. Winbind
- uses a UNIX implementation
- of Microsoft RPC calls, Pluggable Authentication Modules, and the Name
- Service Switch to allow Windows NT domain users to appear and operate
- as UNIX users on a UNIX machine. This paper describes the winbind
- system, explaining the functionality it provides, how it is configured,
- and how it works internally.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2519"
->15.2. Introduction</A
-></H2
-><P
->It is well known that UNIX and Microsoft Windows NT have
- different models for representing user and group information and
- use different technologies for implementing them. This fact has
- made it difficult to integrate the two systems in a satisfactory
- manner.</P
-><P
->One common solution in use today has been to create
- identically named user accounts on both the UNIX and Windows systems
- and use the Samba suite of programs to provide file and print services
- between the two. This solution is far from perfect however, as
- adding and deleting users on both sets of machines becomes a chore
- and two sets of passwords are required both of which
- can lead to synchronization problems between the UNIX and Windows
- systems and confusion for users.</P
-><P
->We divide the unified logon problem for UNIX machines into
- three smaller problems:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Obtaining Windows NT user and group information
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Authenticating Windows NT users
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Password changing for Windows NT users
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Ideally, a prospective solution to the unified logon problem
- would satisfy all the above components without duplication of
- information on the UNIX machines and without creating additional
- tasks for the system administrator when maintaining users and
- groups on either system. The winbind system provides a simple
- and elegant solution to all three components of the unified logon
- problem.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2532"
->15.3. What Winbind Provides</A
-></H2
-><P
->Winbind unifies UNIX and Windows NT account management by
- allowing a UNIX box to become a full member of a NT domain. Once
- this is done the UNIX box will see NT users and groups as if
- they were native UNIX users and groups, allowing the NT domain
- to be used in much the same manner that NIS+ is used within
- UNIX-only environments.</P
-><P
->The end result is that whenever any
- program on the UNIX machine asks the operating system to lookup
- a user or group name, the query will be resolved by asking the
- NT domain controller for the specified domain to do the lookup.
- Because Winbind hooks into the operating system at a low level
- (via the NSS name resolution modules in the C library) this
- redirection to the NT domain controller is completely
- transparent.</P
-><P
->Users on the UNIX machine can then use NT user and group
- names as they would use "native" UNIX names. They can chown files
- so that they are owned by NT domain users or even login to the
- UNIX machine and run a UNIX X-Window session as a domain user.</P
-><P
->The only obvious indication that Winbind is being used is
- that user and group names take the form DOMAIN\user and
- DOMAIN\group. This is necessary as it allows Winbind to determine
- that redirection to a domain controller is wanted for a particular
- lookup and which trusted domain is being referenced.</P
-><P
->Additionally, Winbind provides an authentication service
- that hooks into the Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) system
- to provide authentication via a NT domain to any PAM enabled
- applications. This capability solves the problem of synchronizing
- passwords between systems since all passwords are stored in a single
- location (on the domain controller).</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2539"
->15.3.1. Target Uses</A
-></H3
-><P
->Winbind is targeted at organizations that have an
- existing NT based domain infrastructure into which they wish
- to put UNIX workstations or servers. Winbind will allow these
- organizations to deploy UNIX workstations without having to
- maintain a separate account infrastructure. This greatly
- simplifies the administrative overhead of deploying UNIX
- workstations into a NT based organization.</P
-><P
->Another interesting way in which we expect Winbind to
- be used is as a central part of UNIX based appliances. Appliances
- that provide file and print services to Microsoft based networks
- will be able to use Winbind to provide seamless integration of
- the appliance into the domain.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2543"
->15.4. How Winbind Works</A
-></H2
-><P
->The winbind system is designed around a client/server
- architecture. A long running <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->winbindd</B
-> daemon
- listens on a UNIX domain socket waiting for requests
- to arrive. These requests are generated by the NSS and PAM
- clients and processed sequentially.</P
-><P
->The technologies used to implement winbind are described
- in detail below.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2548"
->15.4.1. Microsoft Remote Procedure Calls</A
-></H3
-><P
->Over the last few years, efforts have been underway
- by various Samba Team members to decode various aspects of
- the Microsoft Remote Procedure Call (MSRPC) system. This
- system is used for most network related operations between
- Windows NT machines including remote management, user authentication
- and print spooling. Although initially this work was done
- to aid the implementation of Primary Domain Controller (PDC)
- functionality in Samba, it has also yielded a body of code which
- can be used for other purposes.</P
-><P
->Winbind uses various MSRPC calls to enumerate domain users
- and groups and to obtain detailed information about individual
- users or groups. Other MSRPC calls can be used to authenticate
- NT domain users and to change user passwords. By directly querying
- a Windows PDC for user and group information, winbind maps the
- NT account information onto UNIX user and group names.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2552"
->15.4.2. Microsoft Active Directory Services</A
-></H3
-><P
-> Since late 2001, Samba has gained the ability to
- interact with Microsoft Windows 2000 using its 'Native
- Mode' protocols, rather than the NT4 RPC services.
- Using LDAP and Kerberos, a domain member running
- winbind can enumerate users and groups in exactly the
- same way as a Win2k client would, and in so doing
- provide a much more efficient and
- effective winbind implementation.
- </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2555"
->15.4.3. Name Service Switch</A
-></H3
-><P
->The Name Service Switch, or NSS, is a feature that is
- present in many UNIX operating systems. It allows system
- information such as hostnames, mail aliases and user information
- to be resolved from different sources. For example, a standalone
- UNIX workstation may resolve system information from a series of
- flat files stored on the local filesystem. A networked workstation
- may first attempt to resolve system information from local files,
- and then consult a NIS database for user information or a DNS server
- for hostname information.</P
-><P
->The NSS application programming interface allows winbind
- to present itself as a source of system information when
- resolving UNIX usernames and groups. Winbind uses this interface,
- and information obtained from a Windows NT server using MSRPC
- calls to provide a new source of account enumeration. Using standard
- UNIX library calls, one can enumerate the users and groups on
- a UNIX machine running winbind and see all users and groups in
- a NT domain plus any trusted domain as though they were local
- users and groups.</P
-><P
->The primary control file for NSS is
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/nsswitch.conf</TT
->.
- When a UNIX application makes a request to do a lookup
- the C library looks in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/nsswitch.conf</TT
->
- for a line which matches the service type being requested, for
- example the "passwd" service type is used when user or group names
- are looked up. This config line species which implementations
- of that service should be tried and in what order. If the passwd
- config line is:</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->passwd: files example</B
-></P
-><P
->then the C library will first load a module called
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/lib/libnss_files.so</TT
-> followed by
- the module <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/lib/libnss_example.so</TT
->. The
- C library will dynamically load each of these modules in turn
- and call resolver functions within the modules to try to resolve
- the request. Once the request is resolved the C library returns the
- result to the application.</P
-><P
->This NSS interface provides a very easy way for Winbind
- to hook into the operating system. All that needs to be done
- is to put <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->libnss_winbind.so</TT
-> in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/lib/</TT
->
- then add "winbind" into <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/nsswitch.conf</TT
-> at
- the appropriate place. The C library will then call Winbind to
- resolve user and group names.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2571"
->15.4.4. Pluggable Authentication Modules</A
-></H3
-><P
->Pluggable Authentication Modules, also known as PAM,
- is a system for abstracting authentication and authorization
- technologies. With a PAM module it is possible to specify different
- authentication methods for different system applications without
- having to recompile these applications. PAM is also useful
- for implementing a particular policy for authorization. For example,
- a system administrator may only allow console logins from users
- stored in the local password file but only allow users resolved from
- a NIS database to log in over the network.</P
-><P
->Winbind uses the authentication management and password
- management PAM interface to integrate Windows NT users into a
- UNIX system. This allows Windows NT users to log in to a UNIX
- machine and be authenticated against a suitable Primary Domain
- Controller. These users can also change their passwords and have
- this change take effect directly on the Primary Domain Controller.
- </P
-><P
->PAM is configured by providing control files in the directory
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.d/</TT
-> for each of the services that
- require authentication. When an authentication request is made
- by an application the PAM code in the C library looks up this
- control file to determine what modules to load to do the
- authentication check and in what order. This interface makes adding
- a new authentication service for Winbind very easy, all that needs
- to be done is that the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam_winbind.so</TT
-> module
- is copied to <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/lib/security/</TT
-> and the PAM
- control files for relevant services are updated to allow
- authentication via winbind. See the PAM documentation
- for more details.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2579"
->15.4.5. User and Group ID Allocation</A
-></H3
-><P
->When a user or group is created under Windows NT
- is it allocated a numerical relative identifier (RID). This is
- slightly different to UNIX which has a range of numbers that are
- used to identify users, and the same range in which to identify
- groups. It is winbind's job to convert RIDs to UNIX id numbers and
- vice versa. When winbind is configured it is given part of the UNIX
- user id space and a part of the UNIX group id space in which to
- store Windows NT users and groups. If a Windows NT user is
- resolved for the first time, it is allocated the next UNIX id from
- the range. The same process applies for Windows NT groups. Over
- time, winbind will have mapped all Windows NT users and groups
- to UNIX user ids and group ids.</P
-><P
->The results of this mapping are stored persistently in
- an ID mapping database held in a tdb database). This ensures that
- RIDs are mapped to UNIX IDs in a consistent way.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2583"
->15.4.6. Result Caching</A
-></H3
-><P
->An active system can generate a lot of user and group
- name lookups. To reduce the network cost of these lookups winbind
- uses a caching scheme based on the SAM sequence number supplied
- by NT domain controllers. User or group information returned
- by a PDC is cached by winbind along with a sequence number also
- returned by the PDC. This sequence number is incremented by
- Windows NT whenever any user or group information is modified. If
- a cached entry has expired, the sequence number is requested from
- the PDC and compared against the sequence number of the cached entry.
- If the sequence numbers do not match, then the cached information
- is discarded and up to date information is requested directly
- from the PDC.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2586"
->15.5. Installation and Configuration</A
-></H2
-><P
->Many thanks to John Trostel <A
-HREF="mailto:jtrostel@snapserver.com"
-TARGET="_top"
->jtrostel@snapserver.com</A
->
-for providing the HOWTO for this section.</P
-><P
->This HOWTO describes how to get winbind services up and running
-to control access and authenticate users on your Linux box using
-the winbind services which come with SAMBA 2.2.2.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2591"
->15.5.1. Introduction</A
-></H3
-><P
->This HOWTO describes the procedures used to get winbind up and
-running on my RedHat 7.1 system. Winbind is capable of providing access
-and authentication control for Windows Domain users through an NT
-or Win2K PDC for 'regular' services, such as telnet a nd ftp, as
-well for SAMBA services.</P
-><P
->This HOWTO has been written from a 'RedHat-centric' perspective, so if
-you are using another distribution, you may have to modify the instructions
-somewhat to fit the way your distribution works.</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Why should I to this?</I
-></SPAN
->
- </P
-><P
->This allows the SAMBA administrator to rely on the
- authentication mechanisms on the NT/Win2K PDC for the authentication
- of domain members. NT/Win2K users no longer need to have separate
- accounts on the SAMBA server.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Who should be reading this document?</I
-></SPAN
->
- </P
-><P
-> This HOWTO is designed for system administrators. If you are
- implementing SAMBA on a file server and wish to (fairly easily)
- integrate existing NT/Win2K users from your PDC onto the
- SAMBA server, this HOWTO is for you. That said, I am no NT or PAM
- expert, so you may find a better or easier way to accomplish
- these tasks.
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2604"
->15.5.2. Requirements</A
-></H3
-><P
->If you have a samba configuration file that you are currently
-using... <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->BACK IT UP!</I
-></SPAN
-> If your system already uses PAM,
-<SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->back up the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.d</TT
-> directory
-contents!</I
-></SPAN
-> If you haven't already made a boot disk,
-<SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->MAKE ONE NOW!</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
->Messing with the pam configuration files can make it nearly impossible
-to log in to yourmachine. That's why you want to be able to boot back
-into your machine in single user mode and restore your
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.d</TT
-> back to the original state they were in if
-you get frustrated with the way things are going. ;-)</P
-><P
->The latest version of SAMBA (version 3.0 as of this writing), now
-includes a functioning winbindd daemon. Please refer to the
-<A
-HREF="http://samba.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->main SAMBA web page</A
-> or,
-better yet, your closest SAMBA mirror site for instructions on
-downloading the source code.</P
-><P
->To allow Domain users the ability to access SAMBA shares and
-files, as well as potentially other services provided by your
-SAMBA machine, PAM (pluggable authentication modules) must
-be setup properly on your machine. In order to compile the
-winbind modules, you should have at least the pam libraries resident
-on your system. For recent RedHat systems (7.1, for instance), that
-means <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam-0.74-22</TT
->. For best results, it is helpful to also
-install the development packages in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam-devel-0.74-22</TT
->.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2618"
->15.5.3. Testing Things Out</A
-></H3
-><P
->Before starting, it is probably best to kill off all the SAMBA
-related daemons running on your server. Kill off all <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbd</B
->,
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->nmbd</B
->, and <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->winbindd</B
-> processes that may
-be running. To use PAM, you will want to make sure that you have the
-standard PAM package (for RedHat) which supplies the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.d</TT
->
-directory structure, including the pam modules are used by pam-aware
-services, several pam libraries, and the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/doc</TT
->
-and <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/man</TT
-> entries for pam. Winbind built better
-in SAMBA if the pam-devel package was also installed. This package includes
-the header files needed to compile pam-aware applications. For instance,
-my RedHat system has both <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam-0.74-22</TT
-> and
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam-devel-0.74-22</TT
-> RPMs installed.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2629"
->15.5.3.1. Configure and compile SAMBA</A
-></H4
-><P
->The configuration and compilation of SAMBA is pretty straightforward.
-The first three steps may not be necessary depending upon
-whether or not you have previously built the Samba binaries.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->autoconf</B
->
-<SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->make clean</B
->
-<SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->rm config.cache</B
->
-<SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->./configure</B
->
-<SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->make</B
->
-<SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->make install</B
-></PRE
-></P
-><P
->This will, by default, install SAMBA in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/local/samba</TT
->.
-See the main SAMBA documentation if you want to install SAMBA somewhere else.
-It will also build the winbindd executable and libraries. </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2648"
->15.5.3.2. Configure <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->nsswitch.conf</TT
-> and the
-winbind libraries</A
-></H4
-><P
->The libraries needed to run the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->winbindd</B
-> daemon
-through nsswitch need to be copied to their proper locations, so</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->cp ../samba/source/nsswitch/libnss_winbind.so /lib</B
-></P
-><P
->I also found it necessary to make the following symbolic link:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->ln -s /lib/libnss_winbind.so /lib/libnss_winbind.so.2</B
-></P
-><P
->And, in the case of Sun solaris:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->ln -s /usr/lib/libnss_winbind.so /usr/lib/libnss_winbind.so.1</B
->
-<SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->ln -s /usr/lib/libnss_winbind.so /usr/lib/nss_winbind.so.1</B
->
-<SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->ln -s /usr/lib/libnss_winbind.so /usr/lib/nss_winbind.so.2</B
-></P
-><P
->Now, as root you need to edit <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/nsswitch.conf</TT
-> to
-allow user and group entries to be visible from the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->winbindd</B
->
-daemon. My <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/nsswitch.conf</TT
-> file look like
-this after editing:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> passwd: files winbind
- shadow: files
- group: files winbind</PRE
-></P
-><P
->
-The libraries needed by the winbind daemon will be automatically
-entered into the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->ldconfig</B
-> cache the next time
-your system reboots, but it
-is faster (and you don't need to reboot) if you do it manually:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->/sbin/ldconfig -v | grep winbind</B
-></P
-><P
->This makes <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->libnss_winbind</TT
-> available to winbindd
-and echos back a check to you.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2681"
->15.5.3.3. Configure smb.conf</A
-></H4
-><P
->Several parameters are needed in the smb.conf file to control
-the behavior of <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->winbindd</B
->. Configure
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> These are described in more detail in
-the <A
-HREF="winbindd.8.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->winbindd(8)</A
-> man page. My
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file was modified to
-include the following entries in the [global] section:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->[global]
- &#60;...&#62;
- # separate domain and username with '+', like DOMAIN+username
- <A
-HREF="winbindd.8.html#WINBINDSEPARATOR"
-TARGET="_top"
->winbind separator</A
-> = +
- # use uids from 10000 to 20000 for domain users
- <A
-HREF="winbindd.8.html#WINBINDUID"
-TARGET="_top"
->winbind uid</A
-> = 10000-20000
- # use gids from 10000 to 20000 for domain groups
- <A
-HREF="winbindd.8.html#WINBINDGID"
-TARGET="_top"
->winbind gid</A
-> = 10000-20000
- # allow enumeration of winbind users and groups
- <A
-HREF="winbindd.8.html#WINBINDENUMUSERS"
-TARGET="_top"
->winbind enum users</A
-> = yes
- <A
-HREF="winbindd.8.html#WINBINDENUMGROUP"
-TARGET="_top"
->winbind enum groups</A
-> = yes
- # give winbind users a real shell (only needed if they have telnet access)
- <A
-HREF="winbindd.8.html#TEMPLATEHOMEDIR"
-TARGET="_top"
->template homedir</A
-> = /home/winnt/%D/%U
- <A
-HREF="winbindd.8.html#TEMPLATESHELL"
-TARGET="_top"
->template shell</A
-> = /bin/bash</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2697"
->15.5.3.4. Join the SAMBA server to the PDC domain</A
-></H4
-><P
->Enter the following command to make the SAMBA server join the
-PDC domain, where <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->DOMAIN</VAR
-> is the name of
-your Windows domain and <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->Administrator</VAR
-> is
-a domain user who has administrative privileges in the domain.</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->/usr/local/samba/bin/net join -S PDC -U Administrator</B
-></P
-><P
->The proper response to the command should be: "Joined the domain
-<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->DOMAIN</VAR
->" where <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->DOMAIN</VAR
->
-is your DOMAIN name.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2708"
->15.5.3.5. Start up the winbindd daemon and test it!</A
-></H4
-><P
->Eventually, you will want to modify your smb startup script to
-automatically invoke the winbindd daemon when the other parts of
-SAMBA start, but it is possible to test out just the winbind
-portion first. To start up winbind services, enter the following
-command as root:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->/usr/local/samba/bin/winbindd</B
-></P
-><P
->Winbindd can now also run in 'dual daemon mode'. This will make it
-run as 2 processes. The first will answer all requests from the cache,
-thus making responses to clients faster. The other will
-update the cache for the query that the first has just responded.
-Advantage of this is that responses stay accurate and are faster.
-You can enable dual daemon mode by adding '-B' to the commandline:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->/usr/local/samba/bin/winbindd -B</B
-></P
-><P
->I'm always paranoid and like to make sure the daemon
-is really running...</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->ps -ae | grep winbindd</B
-></P
-><P
->This command should produce output like this, if the daemon is running</P
-><P
->3025 ? 00:00:00 winbindd</P
-><P
->Now... for the real test, try to get some information about the
-users on your PDC</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->/usr/local/samba/bin/wbinfo -u</B
-></P
-><P
->
-This should echo back a list of users on your Windows users on
-your PDC. For example, I get the following response:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->CEO+Administrator
-CEO+burdell
-CEO+Guest
-CEO+jt-ad
-CEO+krbtgt
-CEO+TsInternetUser</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Obviously, I have named my domain 'CEO' and my <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->winbind
-separator</VAR
-> is '+'.</P
-><P
->You can do the same sort of thing to get group information from
-the PDC:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->/usr/local/samba/bin/wbinfo -g</B
->
-CEO+Domain Admins
-CEO+Domain Users
-CEO+Domain Guests
-CEO+Domain Computers
-CEO+Domain Controllers
-CEO+Cert Publishers
-CEO+Schema Admins
-CEO+Enterprise Admins
-CEO+Group Policy Creator Owners</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The function 'getent' can now be used to get unified
-lists of both local and PDC users and groups.
-Try the following command:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->getent passwd</B
-></P
-><P
->You should get a list that looks like your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
->
-list followed by the domain users with their new uids, gids, home
-directories and default shells.</P
-><P
->The same thing can be done for groups with the command</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->getent group</B
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2748"
->15.5.3.6. Fix the init.d startup scripts</A
-></H4
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT4"
-><H5
-CLASS="SECT4"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2750"
->15.5.3.6.1. Linux</A
-></H5
-><P
->The <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->winbindd</B
-> daemon needs to start up after the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbd</B
-> and <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->nmbd</B
-> daemons are running.
-To accomplish this task, you need to modify the startup scripts of your system. They are located at <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/init.d/smb</TT
-> in RedHat and
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/init.d/samba</TT
-> in Debian.
-script to add commands to invoke this daemon in the proper sequence. My
-startup script starts up <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbd</B
->,
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->nmbd</B
->, and <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->winbindd</B
-> from the
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/local/samba/bin</TT
-> directory directly. The 'start'
-function in the script looks like this:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->start() {
- KIND="SMB"
- echo -n $"Starting $KIND services: "
- daemon /usr/local/samba/bin/smbd $SMBDOPTIONS
- RETVAL=$?
- echo
- KIND="NMB"
- echo -n $"Starting $KIND services: "
- daemon /usr/local/samba/bin/nmbd $NMBDOPTIONS
- RETVAL2=$?
- echo
- KIND="Winbind"
- echo -n $"Starting $KIND services: "
- daemon /usr/local/samba/bin/winbindd
- RETVAL3=$?
- echo
- [ $RETVAL -eq 0 -a $RETVAL2 -eq 0 -a $RETVAL3 -eq 0 ] &#38;&#38; touch /var/lock/subsys/smb || \
- RETVAL=1
- return $RETVAL
-}</PRE
-></P
-><P
->If you would like to run winbindd in dual daemon mode, replace
-the line
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> daemon /usr/local/samba/bin/winbindd</PRE
->
-
-in the example above with:
-
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> daemon /usr/local/samba/bin/winbindd -B</PRE
->.</P
-><P
->The 'stop' function has a corresponding entry to shut down the
-services and looks like this:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->stop() {
- KIND="SMB"
- echo -n $"Shutting down $KIND services: "
- killproc smbd
- RETVAL=$?
- echo
- KIND="NMB"
- echo -n $"Shutting down $KIND services: "
- killproc nmbd
- RETVAL2=$?
- echo
- KIND="Winbind"
- echo -n $"Shutting down $KIND services: "
- killproc winbindd
- RETVAL3=$?
- [ $RETVAL -eq 0 -a $RETVAL2 -eq 0 -a $RETVAL3 -eq 0 ] &#38;&#38; rm -f /var/lock/subsys/smb
- echo ""
- return $RETVAL
-}</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT4"
-><HR><H5
-CLASS="SECT4"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2770"
->15.5.3.6.2. Solaris</A
-></H5
-><P
->On solaris, you need to modify the
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/init.d/samba.server</TT
-> startup script. It usually
-only starts smbd and nmbd but should now start winbindd too. If you
-have samba installed in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/local/samba/bin</TT
->,
-the file could contains something like this:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->##
-## samba.server
-##
-
-if [ ! -d /usr/bin ]
-then # /usr not mounted
- exit
-fi
-
-killproc() { # kill the named process(es)
- pid=`/usr/bin/ps -e |
- /usr/bin/grep -w $1 |
- /usr/bin/sed -e 's/^ *//' -e 's/ .*//'`
- [ "$pid" != "" ] &#38;&#38; kill $pid
-}
-
-# Start/stop processes required for samba server
-
-case "$1" in
-
-'start')
-#
-# Edit these lines to suit your installation (paths, workgroup, host)
-#
-echo Starting SMBD
- /usr/local/samba/bin/smbd -D -s \
- /usr/local/samba/smb.conf
-
-echo Starting NMBD
- /usr/local/samba/bin/nmbd -D -l \
- /usr/local/samba/var/log -s /usr/local/samba/smb.conf
-
-echo Starting Winbind Daemon
- /usr/local/samba/bin/winbindd
- ;;
-
-'stop')
- killproc nmbd
- killproc smbd
- killproc winbindd
- ;;
-
-*)
- echo "Usage: /etc/init.d/samba.server { start | stop }"
- ;;
-esac</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Again, if you would like to run samba in dual daemon mode, replace
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> /usr/local/samba/bin/winbindd</PRE
->
-
-in the script above with:
-
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> /usr/local/samba/bin/winbindd -B</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT4"
-><HR><H5
-CLASS="SECT4"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2780"
->15.5.3.6.3. Restarting</A
-></H5
-><P
->If you restart the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbd</B
->, <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->nmbd</B
->,
-and <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->winbindd</B
-> daemons at this point, you
-should be able to connect to the samba server as a domain member just as
-if you were a local user.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2786"
->15.5.3.7. Configure Winbind and PAM</A
-></H4
-><P
->If you have made it this far, you know that winbindd and samba are working
-together. If you want to use winbind to provide authentication for other
-services, keep reading. The pam configuration files need to be altered in
-this step. (Did you remember to make backups of your original
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.d</TT
-> files? If not, do it now.)</P
-><P
->You will need a pam module to use winbindd with these other services. This
-module will be compiled in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->../source/nsswitch</TT
-> directory
-by invoking the command</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->make nsswitch/pam_winbind.so</B
-></P
-><P
->from the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->../source</TT
-> directory. The
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam_winbind.so</TT
-> file should be copied to the location of
-your other pam security modules. On my RedHat system, this was the
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/lib/security</TT
-> directory. On Solaris, the pam security
-modules reside in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/lib/security</TT
->.</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root#</SAMP
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->cp ../samba/source/nsswitch/pam_winbind.so /lib/security</B
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT4"
-><HR><H5
-CLASS="SECT4"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2803"
->15.5.3.7.1. Linux/FreeBSD-specific PAM configuration</A
-></H5
-><P
->The <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.d/samba</TT
-> file does not need to be changed. I
-just left this fileas it was:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->auth required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth
-account required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The other services that I modified to allow the use of winbind
-as an authentication service were the normal login on the console (or a terminal
-session), telnet logins, and ftp service. In order to enable these
-services, you may first need to change the entries in
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/xinetd.d</TT
-> (or <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/inetd.conf</TT
->).
-RedHat 7.1 uses the new xinetd.d structure, in this case you need
-to change the lines in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/xinetd.d/telnet</TT
->
-and <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/xinetd.d/wu-ftp</TT
-> from </P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->enable = no</PRE
-></P
-><P
->to</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->enable = yes</PRE
-></P
-><P
->
-For ftp services to work properly, you will also need to either
-have individual directories for the domain users already present on
-the server, or change the home directory template to a general
-directory for all domain users. These can be easily set using
-the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> global entry
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->template homedir</B
->.</P
-><P
->The <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.d/ftp</TT
-> file can be changed
-to allow winbind ftp access in a manner similar to the
-samba file. My <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.d/ftp</TT
-> file was
-changed to look like this:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->auth required /lib/security/pam_listfile.so item=user sense=deny file=/etc/ftpusers onerr=succeed
-auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-auth required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth
-auth required /lib/security/pam_shells.so
-account sufficient /lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-account required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth
-session required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.d/login</TT
-> file can be changed nearly the
-same way. It now looks like this:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->auth required /lib/security/pam_securetty.so
-auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_unix.so use_first_pass
-auth required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth
-auth required /lib/security/pam_nologin.so
-account sufficient /lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-account required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth
-password required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth
-session required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth
-session optional /lib/security/pam_console.so</PRE
-></P
-><P
->In this case, I added the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_winbind.so</B
->
-lines as before, but also added the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->required pam_securetty.so</B
->
-above it, to disallow root logins over the network. I also added a
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->sufficient /lib/security/pam_unix.so use_first_pass</B
->
-line after the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->winbind.so</B
-> line to get rid of annoying
-double prompts for passwords.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT4"
-><HR><H5
-CLASS="SECT4"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2836"
->15.5.3.7.2. Solaris-specific configuration</A
-></H5
-><P
->The /etc/pam.conf needs to be changed. I changed this file so that my Domain
-users can logon both locally as well as telnet.The following are the changes
-that I made.You can customize the pam.conf file as per your requirements,but
-be sure of those changes because in the worst case it will leave your system
-nearly impossible to boot.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->#
-#ident "@(#)pam.conf 1.14 99/09/16 SMI"
-#
-# Copyright (c) 1996-1999, Sun Microsystems, Inc.
-# All Rights Reserved.
-#
-# PAM configuration
-#
-# Authentication management
-#
-login auth required /usr/lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-login auth required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so.1 try_first_pass
-login auth required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_dial_auth.so.1 try_first_pass
-#
-rlogin auth sufficient /usr/lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-rlogin auth sufficient /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_rhosts_auth.so.1
-rlogin auth required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so.1 try_first_pass
-#
-dtlogin auth sufficient /usr/lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-dtlogin auth required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so.1 try_first_pass
-#
-rsh auth required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_rhosts_auth.so.1
-other auth sufficient /usr/lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-other auth required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so.1 try_first_pass
-#
-# Account management
-#
-login account sufficient /usr/lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-login account requisite /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_roles.so.1
-login account required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so.1
-#
-dtlogin account sufficient /usr/lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-dtlogin account requisite /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_roles.so.1
-dtlogin account required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so.1
-#
-other account sufficient /usr/lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-other account requisite /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_roles.so.1
-other account required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so.1
-#
-# Session management
-#
-other session required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so.1
-#
-# Password management
-#
-#other password sufficient /usr/lib/security/pam_winbind.so
-other password required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so.1
-dtsession auth required /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so.1
-#
-# Support for Kerberos V5 authentication (uncomment to use Kerberos)
-#
-#rlogin auth optional /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_krb5.so.1 try_first_pass
-#login auth optional /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_krb5.so.1 try_first_pass
-#dtlogin auth optional /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_krb5.so.1 try_first_pass
-#other auth optional /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_krb5.so.1 try_first_pass
-#dtlogin account optional /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_krb5.so.1
-#other account optional /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_krb5.so.1
-#other session optional /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_krb5.so.1
-#other password optional /usr/lib/security/$ISA/pam_krb5.so.1 try_first_pass</PRE
-></P
-><P
->I also added a try_first_pass line after the winbind.so line to get rid of
-annoying double prompts for passwords.</P
-><P
->Now restart your Samba and try connecting through your application that you
-configured in the pam.conf.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2843"
->15.6. Limitations</A
-></H2
-><P
->Winbind has a number of limitations in its current
- released version that we hope to overcome in future
- releases:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Winbind is currently only available for
- the Linux, Solaris and IRIX operating systems, although ports to other operating
- systems are certainly possible. For such ports to be feasible,
- we require the C library of the target operating system to
- support the Name Service Switch and Pluggable Authentication
- Modules systems. This is becoming more common as NSS and
- PAM gain support among UNIX vendors.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->The mappings of Windows NT RIDs to UNIX ids
- is not made algorithmically and depends on the order in which
- unmapped users or groups are seen by winbind. It may be difficult
- to recover the mappings of rid to UNIX id mapping if the file
- containing this information is corrupted or destroyed.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Currently the winbind PAM module does not take
- into account possible workstation and logon time restrictions
- that may be been set for Windows NT users, this is
- instead up to the PDC to enforce.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2853"
->15.7. Conclusion</A
-></H2
-><P
->The winbind system, through the use of the Name Service
- Switch, Pluggable Authentication Modules, and appropriate
- Microsoft RPC calls have allowed us to provide seamless
- integration of Microsoft Windows NT domain users on a
- UNIX system. The result is a great reduction in the administrative
- cost of running a mixed UNIX and NT network.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="ADVANCEDNETWORKMANAGEMENT"
-></A
->Chapter 16. Advanced Network Manangement</H1
-><P
->This section attempts to document peripheral issues that are of great importance to network
-administrators who want to improve network resource access control, to automate the user
-environment, and to make their lives a little easier.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2869"
->16.1. Configuring Samba Share Access Controls</A
-></H2
-><P
->This section deals with how to configure Samba per share access control restrictions.
-By default samba sets no restrictions on the share itself. Restrictions on the share itself
-can be set on MS Windows NT4/200x/XP shares. This can be a very effective way to limit who can
-connect to a share. In the absence of specific restrictions the default setting is to allow
-the global user <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Everyone</I
-></SPAN
-> Full Control (ie: Full control, Change and Read).</P
-><P
->At this time Samba does NOT provide a tool for configuring access control setting on the Share
-itself. Samba does have the capacity to store and act on access control settings, but the only
-way to create those settings is to use either the NT4 Server Manager or the Windows 200x MMC for
-Computer Management.</P
-><P
->Samba stores the per share access control settings in a file called <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->share_info.tdb</TT
->.
-The location of this file on your system will depend on how samba was compiled. The default location
-for samba's tdb files is under <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/local/samba/var</TT
->. If the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->tdbdump</TT
->
-utility has been compiled and installed on your system then you can examine the contents of this file
-by: <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->tdbdump share_info.tdb</KBD
->.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2879"
->16.1.1. Share Permissions Management</A
-></H3
-><P
->The best tool for the task is platform dependant. Choose the best tool for your environmemt.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2882"
->16.1.1.1. Windows NT4 Workstation/Server</A
-></H4
-><P
->The tool you need to use to manage share permissions on a Samba server is the NT Server Manager.
-Server Manager is shipped with Windows NT4 Server products but not with Windows NT4 Workstation.
-You can obtain the NT Server Manager for MS Windows NT4 Workstation from Microsoft - see details below.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="PROCEDURE"
-><P
-><B
->Instructions</B
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
->Launch the NT4 Server Manager, click on the Samba server you want to administer, then from the menu
-select Computer, then click on the Shared Directories entry.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Now click on the share that you wish to manage, then click on the Properties tab, next click on
- the Permissions tab. Now you can Add or change access control settings as you wish.</P
-></LI
-></OL
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2891"
->16.1.1.2. Windows 200x/XP</A
-></H4
-><P
->On MS Windows NT4/200x/XP system access control lists on the share itself are set using native
-tools, usually from filemanager. For example, in Windows 200x: right click on the shared folder,
-then select 'Sharing', then click on 'Permissions'. The default Windows NT4/200x permission allows
-<SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Everyone</I
-></SPAN
-> Full Control on the Share.</P
-><P
->MS Windows 200x and later all comes with a tool called the 'Computer Management' snap-in for the
-Microsoft Management Console (MMC). This tool is located by clicking on <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->Control Panel -&#62;
-Administrative Tools -&#62; Computer Management</TT
->.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="PROCEDURE"
-><P
-><B
->Instructions</B
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> After launching the MMC with the Computer Management snap-in, click on the menu item 'Action',
- select 'Connect to another computer'. If you are not logged onto a domain you will be prompted
- to enter a domain login user identifier and a password. This will authenticate you to the domain.
- If you where already logged in with administrative privilidge this step is not offered.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->If the Samba server is not shown in the Select Computer box, then type in the name of the target
-Samba server in the field 'Name:'. Now click on the [+] next to 'System Tools', then on the [+]
-next to 'Shared Folders' in the left panel.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Now in the right panel, double-click on the share you wish to set access control permissions on.
-Then click on the tab 'Share Permissions'. It is now possible to add access control entities
-to the shared folder. Do NOT forget to set what type of access (full control, change, read) you
-wish to assign for each entry.</P
-></LI
-></OL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="WARNING"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="WARNING"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/warning.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Warning"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Be careful. If you take away all permissions from the Everyone user without removing this user
-then effectively no user will be able to access the share. This is a result of what is known as
-ACL precidence. ie: Everyone with NO ACCESS means that MaryK who is part of the group Everyone
-will have no access even if this user is given explicit full control access.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2907"
->16.2. Remote Server Administration</A
-></H2
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->How do I get 'User Manager' and 'Server Manager'?</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
->Since I don't need to buy an NT4 Server, how do I get the 'User Manager for Domains',
-the 'Server Manager'?</P
-><P
->Microsoft distributes a version of these tools called nexus for installation on Windows 9x / Me
-systems. The tools set includes:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Server Manager</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->User Manager for Domains</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Event Viewer</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Click here to download the archived file <A
-HREF="ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/Softlib/MSLFILES/NEXUS.EXE"
-TARGET="_top"
->ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/Softlib/MSLFILES/NEXUS.EXE</A
-></P
-><P
->The Windows NT 4.0 version of the 'User Manager for
-Domains' and 'Server Manager' are available from Microsoft via ftp
-from <A
-HREF="ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/Softlib/MSLFILES/SRVTOOLS.EXE"
-TARGET="_top"
->ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/Softlib/MSLFILES/SRVTOOLS.EXE</A
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2924"
->16.3. Network Logon Script Magic</A
-></H2
-><P
->This section needs work. Volunteer contributions most welcome. Please send your patches or updates
-to <A
-HREF="mailto:jht@samba.org"
-TARGET="_top"
->John Terpstra</A
->.</P
-><P
->There are several opportunities for creating a custom network startup configuration environment.</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->No Logon Script</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Simple universal Logon Script that applies to all users</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Use of a conditional Logon Script that applies per user or per group attirbutes</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Use of Samba's Preexec and Postexec functions on access to the NETLOGON share to create
- a custom Logon Script and then execute it.</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->User of a tool such as KixStart</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
->The Samba source code tree includes two logon script generation/execution tools. See <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->examples</TT
-> directory <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->genlogon</TT
-> and <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->ntlogon</TT
-> subdirectories.</P
-><P
->The following listings are from the genlogon directory.</P
-><P
->This is the genlogon.pl file:
-
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> #!/usr/bin/perl
- #
- # genlogon.pl
- #
- # Perl script to generate user logon scripts on the fly, when users
- # connect from a Windows client. This script should be called from smb.conf
- # with the %U, %G and %L parameters. I.e:
- #
- # root preexec = genlogon.pl %U %G %L
- #
- # The script generated will perform
- # the following:
- #
- # 1. Log the user connection to /var/log/samba/netlogon.log
- # 2. Set the PC's time to the Linux server time (which is maintained
- # daily to the National Institute of Standard's Atomic clock on the
- # internet.
- # 3. Connect the user's home drive to H: (H for Home).
- # 4. Connect common drives that everyone uses.
- # 5. Connect group-specific drives for certain user groups.
- # 6. Connect user-specific drives for certain users.
- # 7. Connect network printers.
-
- # Log client connection
- #($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday,$isdst) = localtime(time);
- ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday,$isdst) = localtime(time);
- open LOG, "&#62;&#62;/var/log/samba/netlogon.log";
- print LOG "$mon/$mday/$year $hour:$min:$sec - User $ARGV[0] logged into $ARGV[1]\n";
- close LOG;
-
- # Start generating logon script
- open LOGON, "&#62;/shared/netlogon/$ARGV[0].bat";
- print LOGON "\@ECHO OFF\r\n";
-
- # Connect shares just use by Software Development group
- if ($ARGV[1] eq "SOFTDEV" || $ARGV[0] eq "softdev")
- {
- print LOGON "NET USE M: \\\\$ARGV[2]\\SOURCE\r\n";
- }
-
- # Connect shares just use by Technical Support staff
- if ($ARGV[1] eq "SUPPORT" || $ARGV[0] eq "support")
- {
- print LOGON "NET USE S: \\\\$ARGV[2]\\SUPPORT\r\n";
- }
-
- # Connect shares just used by Administration staff
- If ($ARGV[1] eq "ADMIN" || $ARGV[0] eq "admin")
- {
- print LOGON "NET USE L: \\\\$ARGV[2]\\ADMIN\r\n";
- print LOGON "NET USE K: \\\\$ARGV[2]\\MKTING\r\n";
- }
-
- # Now connect Printers. We handle just two or three users a little
- # differently, because they are the exceptions that have desktop
- # printers on LPT1: - all other user's go to the LaserJet on the
- # server.
- if ($ARGV[0] eq 'jim'
- || $ARGV[0] eq 'yvonne')
- {
- print LOGON "NET USE LPT2: \\\\$ARGV[2]\\LJET3\r\n";
- print LOGON "NET USE LPT3: \\\\$ARGV[2]\\FAXQ\r\n";
- }
- else
- {
- print LOGON "NET USE LPT1: \\\\$ARGV[2]\\LJET3\r\n";
- print LOGON "NET USE LPT3: \\\\$ARGV[2]\\FAXQ\r\n";
- }
-
- # All done! Close the output file.
- close LOGON;</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Those wishing to use more elaborate or capable logon processing system should check out the following sites:</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->http://www.craigelachie.org/rhacer/ntlogon</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->http://www.kixtart.org</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="POLICYMGMT"
-></A
->Chapter 17. System and Account Policies</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2958"
->17.1. Creating and Managing System Policies</A
-></H2
-><P
->Under MS Windows platforms, particularly those following the release of MS Windows
-NT4 and MS Windows 95) it is possible to create a type of file that would be placed
-in the NETLOGON share of a domain controller. As the client logs onto the network
-this file is read and the contents initiate changes to the registry of the client
-machine. This file allows changes to be made to those parts of the registry that
-affect users, groups of users, or machines.</P
-><P
->For MS Windows 9x/Me this file must be called <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->Config.POL</TT
-> and may
-be generated using a tool called <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->poledit.exe</TT
->, better known as the
-Policy Editor. The policy editor was provided on the Windows 98 installation CD, but
-dissappeared again with the introduction of MS Windows Me (Millenium Edition). From
-comments from MS Windows network administrators it would appear that this tool became
-a part of the MS Windows Me Resource Kit.</P
-><P
->MS Windows NT4 Server products include the <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->System Policy Editor</I
-></SPAN
->
-under the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->Start -&#62; Programs -&#62; Administrative Tools</TT
-> menu item.
-For MS Windows NT4 and later clients this file must be called <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->NTConfig.POL</TT
->.</P
-><P
->New with the introduction of MS Windows 2000 was the Microsoft Management Console
-or MMC. This tool is the new wave in the ever changing landscape of Microsoft
-methods for management of network access and security. Every new Microsoft product
-or technology seems to obsolete the old rules and to introduce newer and more
-complex tools and methods. To Microsoft's credit though, the MMC does appear to
-be a step forward, but improved functionality comes at a great price.</P
-><P
->Before embarking on the configuration of network and system policies it is highly
-advisable to read the documentation available from Microsoft's web site regarding
-<A
-HREF="http://www.microsoft.com/ntserver/management/deployment/planguide/prof_policies.asp"
-TARGET="_top"
->Implementing Profiles and Policies in Windows NT 4.0 from http://www.microsoft.com/ntserver/management/deployment/planguide/prof_policies.asp</A
-> available from Microsoft.
-There are a large number of documents in addition to this old one that should also
-be read and understood. Try searching on the Microsoft web site for "Group Policies".</P
-><P
->What follows is a very brief discussion with some helpful notes. The information provided
-here is incomplete - you are warned.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2972"
->17.1.1. Windows 9x/Me Policies</A
-></H3
-><P
->You need the Win98 Group Policy Editor to set Group Profiles up under Windows 9x/Me.
-It can be found on the Original full product Win98 installation CD under
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->tools/reskit/netadmin/poledit</TT
->. Install this using the
-Add/Remove Programs facility and then click on the 'Have Disk' tab.</P
-><P
->Use the Group Policy Editor to create a policy file that specifies the location of
-user profiles and/or the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->My Documents</TT
-> etc. stuff. Then
-save these settings in a file called <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->Config.POL</TT
-> that needs to
-be placed in the root of the [NETLOGON] share. If Win98 is configured to log onto
-the Samba Domain, it will automatically read this file and update the Win9x/Me registry
-of the machine as it logs on.</P
-><P
->Further details are covered in the Win98 Resource Kit documentation.</P
-><P
->If you do not take the right steps, then every so often Win9x/Me will check the
-integrity of the registry and will restore it's settings from the back-up
-copy of the registry it stores on each Win9x/Me machine. Hence, you will
-occasionally notice things changing back to the original settings.</P
-><P
->Install the group policy handler for Win9x to pick up group policies. Look on the
-Win98 CD in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->\tools\reskit\netadmin\poledit</TT
->.
-Install group policies on a Win9x client by double-clicking
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->grouppol.inf</TT
->. Log off and on again a couple of times and see
-if Win98 picks up group policies. Unfortunately this needs to be done on every
-Win9x/Me machine that uses group policies.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2984"
->17.1.2. Windows NT4 Style Policy Files</A
-></H3
-><P
->To create or edit <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->ntconfig.pol</TT
-> you must use the NT Server
-Policy Editor, <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->poledit.exe</B
-> which is included with NT4 Server
-but <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->not NT Workstation</I
-></SPAN
->. There is a Policy Editor on a NT4
-Workstation but it is not suitable for creating <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Domain Policies</I
-></SPAN
->.
-Further, although the Windows 95 Policy Editor can be installed on an NT4
-Workstation/Server, it will not work with NT clients. However, the files from
-the NT Server will run happily enough on an NT4 Workstation.</P
-><P
->You need <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->poledit.exe, common.adm</TT
-> and <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->winnt.adm</TT
->.
-It is convenient to put the two *.adm files in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->c:\winnt\inf</TT
->
-directory which is where the binary will look for them unless told otherwise. Note also that that
-directory is normally 'hidden'.</P
-><P
->The Windows NT policy editor is also included with the Service Pack 3 (and
-later) for Windows NT 4.0. Extract the files using <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->servicepackname /x</B
->,
-i.e. that's <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Nt4sp6ai.exe /x</B
-> for service pack 6a. The policy editor,
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->poledit.exe</B
-> and the associated template files (*.adm) should
-be extracted as well. It is also possible to downloaded the policy template
-files for Office97 and get a copy of the policy editor. Another possible
-location is with the Zero Administration Kit available for download from Microsoft.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN2999"
->17.1.2.1. Registry Tattoos</A
-></H4
-><P
-> With NT4 style registry based policy changes, a large number of settings are not
- automatically reversed as the user logs off. Since the settings that were in the
- NTConfig.POL file were applied to the client machine registry and that apply to the
- hive key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE are permanent until explicitly reversed. This is known
- as tattooing. It can have serious consequences down-stream and the administrator must
- be extremely careful not to lock out the ability to manage the machine at a later date.
- </P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3002"
->17.1.3. MS Windows 200x / XP Professional Policies</A
-></H3
-><P
->Windows NT4 System policies allows setting of registry parameters specific to
-users, groups and computers (client workstations) that are members of the NT4
-style domain. Such policy file will work with MS Windows 2000 / XP clients also.</P
-><P
->New to MS Windows 2000 Microsoft introduced a new style of group policy that confers
-a superset of capabilities compared with NT4 style policies. Obviously, the tool used
-to create them is different, and the mechanism for implementing them is much changed.</P
-><P
->The older NT4 style registry based policies are known as <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Administrative Templates</I
-></SPAN
->
-in MS Windows 2000/XP Group Policy Objects (GPOs). The later includes ability to set various security
-configurations, enforce Internet Explorer browser settings, change and redirect aspects of the
-users' desktop (including: the location of <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->My Documents</I
-></SPAN
-> files (directory), as
-well as intrinsics of where menu items will appear in the Start menu). An additional new
-feature is the ability to make available particular software Windows applications to particular
-users and/or groups.</P
-><P
->Remember: NT4 policy files are named <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->NTConfig.POL</TT
-> and are stored in the root
-of the NETLOGON share on the domain controllers. A Windows NT4 user enters a username, a password
-and selects the domain name to which the logon will attempt to take place. During the logon
-process the client machine reads the NTConfig.POL file from the NETLOGON share on the authenticating
-server, modifies the local registry values according to the settings in this file.</P
-><P
->Windows 2K GPOs are very feature rich. They are NOT stored in the NETLOGON share, rather part of
-a Windows 200x policy file is stored in the Active Directory itself and the other part is stored
-in a shared (and replicated) volume called the SYSVOL folder. This folder is present on all Active
-Directory domain controllers. The part that is stored in the Active Directory itself is called the
-group policy container (GPC), and the part that is stored in the replicated share called SYSVOL is
-known as the group policy template (GPT).</P
-><P
->With NT4 clients the policy file is read and executed upon only aas each user log onto the network.
-MS Windows 200x policies are much more complex - GPOs are processed and applied at client machine
-startup (machine specific part) and when the user logs onto the network the user specific part
-is applied. In MS Windows 200x style policy management each machine and/or user may be subject
-to any number of concurently applicable (and applied) policy sets (GPOs). Active Directory allows
-the administrator to also set filters over the policy settings. No such equivalent capability
-exists with NT4 style policy files.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3013"
->17.1.3.1. Administration of Win2K / XP Policies</A
-></H4
-><DIV
-CLASS="PROCEDURE"
-><P
-><B
->Instructions</B
-></P
-><P
->Instead of using the tool called "The System Policy Editor", commonly called Poledit (from the
-executable name poledit.exe), GPOs are created and managed using a Microsoft Management Console
-(MMC) snap-in as follows:</P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
->Go to the Windows 200x / XP menu <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->Start-&#62;Programs-&#62;Administrative Tools</TT
->
- and select the MMC snap-in called "Active Directory Users and Computers"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Select the domain or organizational unit (OU) that you wish to manage, then right click
-to open the context menu for that object, select the properties item.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Now left click on the Group Policy tab, then left click on the New tab. Type a name
-for the new policy you will create.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Now left click on the Edit tab to commence the steps needed to create the GPO.</P
-></LI
-></OL
-></DIV
-><P
->All policy configuration options are controlled through the use of policy administrative
-templates. These files have a .adm extension, both in NT4 as well as in Windows 200x / XP.
-Beware however, since the .adm files are NOT interchangible across NT4 and Windows 200x.
-The later introduces many new features as well as extended definition capabilities. It is
-well beyond the scope of this documentation to explain how to program .adm files, for that
-the adminsitrator is referred to the Microsoft Windows Resource Kit for your particular
-version of MS Windows.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->The MS Windows 2000 Resource Kit contains a tool called gpolmig.exe. This tool can be used
-to migrate an NT4 NTConfig.POL file into a Windows 200x style GPO. Be VERY careful how you
-use this powerful tool. Please refer to the resource kit manuals for specific usage information.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3030"
->17.2. Managing Account/User Policies</A
-></H2
-><P
->Policies can define a specific user's settings or the settings for a group of users. The resulting
-policy file contains the registry settings for all users, groups, and computers that will be using
-the policy file. Separate policy files for each user, group, or computer are not not necessary.</P
-><P
->If you create a policy that will be automatically downloaded from validating domain controllers,
-you should name the file NTconfig.POL. As system administrator, you have the option of renaming the
-policy file and, by modifying the Windows NT-based workstation, directing the computer to update
-the policy from a manual path. You can do this by either manually changing the registry or by using
-the System Policy Editor. This path can even be a local path such that each machine has its own policy file,
-but if a change is necessary to all machines, this change must be made individually to each workstation.</P
-><P
->When a Windows NT4/200x/XP machine logs onto the network the NETLOGON share on the authenticating domain
-controller for the presence of the NTConfig.POL file. If one exists it is downloaded, parsed and then
-applied to the user's part of the registry.</P
-><P
->MS Windows 200x/XP clients that log onto an MS Windows Active Directory security domain may additionally,
-acquire policy settings through Group Policy Objects (GPOs) that are defined and stored in Active Directory
-itself. The key benefit of using AS GPOs is that they impose no registry <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->tatooing</I
-></SPAN
-> effect.
-This has considerable advanage compared with the use of NTConfig.POL (NT4) style policy updates.</P
-><P
->Inaddition to user access controls that may be imposed or applied via system and/or group policies
-in a manner that works in conjunction with user profiles, the user management environment under
-MS Windows NT4/200x/XP allows per domain as well as per user account restrictions to be applied.
-Common restrictions that are frequently used includes:</P
-><P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->Logon Hours</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Password Aging</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Permitted Logon from certain machines only</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Account type (Local or Global)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->User Rights</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3045"
->17.2.1. With Windows NT4/200x</A
-></H3
-><P
->The tools that may be used to configure these types of controls from the MS Windows environment are:
-The NT4 User Manager for domains, the NT4 System and Group Policy Editor, the registry editor (regedt32.exe).
-Under MS Windows 200x/XP this is done using the Microsoft Managment Console (MMC) with approapriate
-"snap-ins", the registry editor, and potentially also the NT4 System and Group Policy Editor.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3048"
->17.2.2. With a Samba PDC</A
-></H3
-><P
->With a Samba Domain Controller, the new tools for managing of user account and policy information includes:
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smbpasswd, pdbedit, smbgroupedit, net, rpcclient.</TT
->. The administrator should read the
-man pages for these tools and become familiar with their use.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3052"
->17.3. System Startup and Logon Processing Overview</A
-></H2
-><P
->The following attempts to document the order of processing of system and user policies following a system
-reboot and as part of the user logon:</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> Network starts, then Remote Procedure Call System Service (RPCSS) and Multiple Universal Naming
- Convention Provider (MUP) start
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Where Active Directory is involved, an ordered list of Group Policy Objects (GPOs) is downloaded
- and applied. The list may include GPOs that:
-<P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->Apply to the location of machines in a Directory</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Apply only when settings have changed</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Depend on configuration of scope of applicability: local, site, domain, organizational unit, etc.</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
->
- No desktop user interface is presented until the above have been processed.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Execution of start-up scripts (hidden and synchronous by defaut).
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> A keyboard action to affect start of logon (Ctrl-Alt-Del).
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> User credentials are validated, User profile is loaded (depends on policy settings).
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> An ordered list of User GPOs is obtained. The list contents depends on what is configured in respsect of:
-
-<P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->Is user a domain member, thus subject to particular policies</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Loopback enablement, and the state of the loopback policy (Merge or Replace)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Location of the Active Directory itself</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Has the list of GPOs changed. No processing is needed if not changed.</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
->
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> User Policies are applied from Active Directory. Note: There are several types.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Logon scripts are run. New to Win2K and Active Directory, logon scripts may be obtained based on Group
- Policy objects (hidden and executed synchronously). NT4 style logon scripts are then run in a normal
- window.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> The User Interface as determined from the GPOs is presented. Note: In a Samba domain (like and NT4
- Domain) machine (system) policies are applied at start-up, User policies are applied at logon.
- </P
-></LI
-></OL
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="PROFILEMGMT"
-></A
->Chapter 18. Desktop Profile Management</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3095"
->18.1. Roaming Profiles</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="WARNING"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="WARNING"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/warning.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Warning"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Roaming profiles support is different for Win9x / Me and Windows NT4/200x.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->Before discussing how to configure roaming profiles, it is useful to see how
-Windows 9x / Me and Windows NT4/200x clients implement these features.</P
-><P
->Windows 9x / Me clients send a NetUserGetInfo request to the server to get the user's
-profiles location. However, the response does not have room for a separate
-profiles location field, only the user's home share. This means that Win9X/Me
-profiles are restricted to being stored in the user's home directory.</P
-><P
->Windows NT4/200x clients send a NetSAMLogon RPC request, which contains many fields,
-including a separate field for the location of the user's profiles.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3102"
->18.1.1. Samba Configuration for Profile Handling</A
-></H3
-><P
->This section documents how to configure Samba for MS Windows client profile support.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3105"
->18.1.1.1. NT4/200x User Profiles</A
-></H4
-><P
->To support Windowns NT4/200x clients, in the [global] section of smb.conf set the
-following (for example):</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> logon path = \\profileserver\profileshare\profilepath\%U\moreprofilepath</PRE
->
-
- This is typically implemented like:
-
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> logon path = \\%L\Profiles\%u</PRE
->
-where %L translates to the name of the Samba server and %u translates to the user name</P
-><P
->The default for this option is \\%N\%U\profile, namely \\sambaserver\username\profile.
-The \\N%\%U service is created automatically by the [homes] service. If you are using
-a samba server for the profiles, you _must_ make the share specified in the logon path
-browseable. Please refer to the man page for smb.conf in respect of the different
-symantics of %L and %N, as well as %U and %u.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->MS Windows NT/2K clients at times do not disconnect a connection to a server
-between logons. It is recommended to NOT use the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->homes</B
->
-meta-service name as part of the profile share path.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3115"
->18.1.1.2. Windows 9x / Me User Profiles</A
-></H4
-><P
->To support Windows 9x / Me clients, you must use the "logon home" parameter. Samba has
-now been fixed so that <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->net use /home</KBD
-> now works as well, and it, too, relies
-on the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->logon home</B
-> parameter.</P
-><P
->By using the logon home parameter, you are restricted to putting Win9x / Me
-profiles in the user's home directory. But wait! There is a trick you
-can use. If you set the following in the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->[global]</B
-> section of your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> logon home = \\%L\%U\.profiles</PRE
-></P
-><P
->then your Windows 9x / Me clients will dutifully put their clients in a subdirectory
-of your home directory called <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->.profiles</TT
-> (thus making them hidden).</P
-><P
->Not only that, but <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->net use/home</KBD
-> will also work, because of a feature in
-Windows 9x / Me. It removes any directory stuff off the end of the home directory area
-and only uses the server and share portion. That is, it looks like you
-specified \\%L\%U for <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->logon home</B
->.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3130"
->18.1.1.3. Mixed Windows 9x / Me and Windows NT4/200x User Profiles</A
-></H4
-><P
->You can support profiles for both Win9X and WinNT clients by setting both the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->logon home</B
-> and <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->logon path</B
-> parameters. For example:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> logon home = \\%L\%u\.profiles
- logon path = \\%L\profiles\%u</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3137"
->18.1.2. Windows Client Profile Configuration Information</A
-></H3
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3139"
->18.1.2.1. Windows 9x / Me Profile Setup</A
-></H4
-><P
->When a user first logs in on Windows 9X, the file user.DAT is created,
-as are folders "Start Menu", "Desktop", "Programs" and "Nethood".
-These directories and their contents will be merged with the local
-versions stored in c:\windows\profiles\username on subsequent logins,
-taking the most recent from each. You will need to use the [global]
-options "preserve case = yes", "short preserve case = yes" and
-"case sensitive = no" in order to maintain capital letters in shortcuts
-in any of the profile folders.</P
-><P
->The user.DAT file contains all the user's preferences. If you wish to
-enforce a set of preferences, rename their user.DAT file to user.MAN,
-and deny them write access to this file.</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> On the Windows 9x / Me machine, go to Control Panel -&#62; Passwords and
- select the User Profiles tab. Select the required level of
- roaming preferences. Press OK, but do _not_ allow the computer
- to reboot.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> On the Windows 9x / Me machine, go to Control Panel -&#62; Network -&#62;
- Client for Microsoft Networks -&#62; Preferences. Select 'Log on to
- NT Domain'. Then, ensure that the Primary Logon is 'Client for
- Microsoft Networks'. Press OK, and this time allow the computer
- to reboot.
- </P
-></LI
-></OL
-><P
->Under Windows 9x / Me Profiles are downloaded from the Primary Logon.
-If you have the Primary Logon as 'Client for Novell Networks', then
-the profiles and logon script will be downloaded from your Novell
-Server. If you have the Primary Logon as 'Windows Logon', then the
-profiles will be loaded from the local machine - a bit against the
-concept of roaming profiles, it would seem!</P
-><P
->You will now find that the Microsoft Networks Login box contains
-[user, password, domain] instead of just [user, password]. Type in
-the samba server's domain name (or any other domain known to exist,
-but bear in mind that the user will be authenticated against this
-domain and profiles downloaded from it, if that domain logon server
-supports it), user name and user's password.</P
-><P
->Once the user has been successfully validated, the Windows 9x / Me machine
-will inform you that 'The user has not logged on before' and asks you
-if you wish to save the user's preferences? Select 'yes'.</P
-><P
->Once the Windows 9x / Me client comes up with the desktop, you should be able
-to examine the contents of the directory specified in the "logon path"
-on the samba server and verify that the "Desktop", "Start Menu",
-"Programs" and "Nethood" folders have been created.</P
-><P
->These folders will be cached locally on the client, and updated when
-the user logs off (if you haven't made them read-only by then).
-You will find that if the user creates further folders or short-cuts,
-that the client will merge the profile contents downloaded with the
-contents of the profile directory already on the local client, taking
-the newest folders and short-cuts from each set.</P
-><P
->If you have made the folders / files read-only on the samba server,
-then you will get errors from the Windows 9x / Me machine on logon and logout, as
-it attempts to merge the local and the remote profile. Basically, if
-you have any errors reported by the Windows 9x / Me machine, check the Unix file
-permissions and ownership rights on the profile directory contents,
-on the samba server.</P
-><P
->If you have problems creating user profiles, you can reset the user's
-local desktop cache, as shown below. When this user then next logs in,
-they will be told that they are logging in "for the first time".</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> instead of logging in under the [user, password, domain] dialog,
- press escape.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> run the regedit.exe program, and look in:
- </P
-><P
-> HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Windows\CurrentVersion\ProfileList
- </P
-><P
-> you will find an entry, for each user, of ProfilePath. Note the
- contents of this key (likely to be c:\windows\profiles\username),
- then delete the key ProfilePath for the required user.
-
- [Exit the registry editor].
-
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->WARNING</I
-></SPAN
-> - before deleting the contents of the
- directory listed in the ProfilePath (this is likely to be
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->c:\windows\profiles\username)</TT
->, ask them if they
- have any important files stored on their desktop or in their start menu.
- Delete the contents of the directory ProfilePath (making a backup if any
- of the files are needed).
- </P
-><P
-> This will have the effect of removing the local (read-only hidden
- system file) user.DAT in their profile directory, as well as the
- local "desktop", "nethood", "start menu" and "programs" folders.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> search for the user's .PWL password-caching file in the c:\windows
- directory, and delete it.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> log off the windows 9x / Me client.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> check the contents of the profile path (see "logon path" described
- above), and delete the user.DAT or user.MAN file for the user,
- making a backup if required.
- </P
-></LI
-></OL
-><P
->If all else fails, increase samba's debug log levels to between 3 and 10,
-and / or run a packet trace program such as ethereal or netmon.exe, and
-look for error messages.</P
-><P
->If you have access to an Windows NT4/200x server, then first set up roaming profiles
-and / or netlogons on the Windows NT4/200x server. Make a packet trace, or examine
-the example packet traces provided with Windows NT4/200x server, and see what the
-differences are with the equivalent samba trace.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3175"
->18.1.2.2. Windows NT4 Workstation</A
-></H4
-><P
->When a user first logs in to a Windows NT Workstation, the profile
-NTuser.DAT is created. The profile location can be now specified
-through the "logon path" parameter.</P
-><P
->There is a parameter that is now available for use with NT Profiles:
-"logon drive". This should be set to <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->H:</TT
-> or any other drive, and
-should be used in conjunction with the new "logon home" parameter.</P
-><P
->The entry for the NT4 profile is a _directory_ not a file. The NT
-help on profiles mentions that a directory is also created with a .PDS
-extension. The user, while logging in, must have write permission to
-create the full profile path (and the folder with the .PDS extension
-for those situations where it might be created.)</P
-><P
->In the profile directory, Windows NT4 creates more folders than Windows 9x / Me.
-It creates "Application Data" and others, as well as "Desktop", "Nethood",
-"Start Menu" and "Programs". The profile itself is stored in a file
-NTuser.DAT. Nothing appears to be stored in the .PDS directory, and
-its purpose is currently unknown.</P
-><P
->You can use the System Control Panel to copy a local profile onto
-a samba server (see NT Help on profiles: it is also capable of firing
-up the correct location in the System Control Panel for you). The
-NT Help file also mentions that renaming NTuser.DAT to NTuser.MAN
-turns a profile into a mandatory one.</P
-><P
->The case of the profile is significant. The file must be called
-NTuser.DAT or, for a mandatory profile, NTuser.MAN.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3184"
->18.1.2.3. Windows 2000/XP Professional</A
-></H4
-><P
->You must first convert the profile from a local profile to a domain
-profile on the MS Windows workstation as follows:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> Log on as the LOCAL workstation administrator.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Right click on the 'My Computer' Icon, select 'Properties'
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Click on the 'User Profiles' tab
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Select the profile you wish to convert (click on it once)
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Click on the button 'Copy To'
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> In the "Permitted to use" box, click on the 'Change' button.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Click on the 'Look in" area that lists the machine name, when you click
- here it will open up a selection box. Click on the domain to which the
- profile must be accessible.
- </P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="90%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->You will need to log on if a logon box opens up. Eg: In the connect
- as: MIDEARTH\root, password: mypassword.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> To make the profile capable of being used by anyone select 'Everyone'
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Click OK. The Selection box will close.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Now click on the 'Ok' button to create the profile in the path you
- nominated.
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Done. You now have a profile that can be editted using the samba-3.0.0
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->profiles</TT
-> tool.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Under NT/2K the use of mandotory profiles forces the use of MS Exchange
-storage of mail data. That keeps desktop profiles usable.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->This is a security check new to Windows XP (or maybe only
-Windows XP service pack 1). It can be disabled via a group policy in
-Active Directory. The policy is:</P
-><P
->"Computer Configuration\Administrative Templates\System\User
-Profiles\Do not check for user ownership of Roaming Profile Folders"</P
-><P
->...and it should be set to "Enabled".
-Does the new version of samba have an Active Directory analogue? If so,
-then you may be able to set the policy through this.</P
-><P
->If you cannot set group policies in samba, then you may be able to set
-the policy locally on each machine. If you want to try this, then do
-the following (N.B. I don't know for sure that this will work in the
-same way as a domain group policy):</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->On the XP workstation log in with an Administrator account.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Click: "Start", "Run"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Type: "mmc"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Click: "OK"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->A Microsoft Management Console should appear.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Click: File, "Add/Remove Snap-in...", "Add"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Double-Click: "Group Policy"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Click: "Finish", "Close"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Click: "OK"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->In the "Console Root" window:</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Expand: "Local Computer Policy", "Computer Configuration",</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->"Administrative Templates", "System", "User Profiles"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Double-Click: "Do not check for user ownership of Roaming Profile</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Folders"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Select: "Enabled"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Click: OK"</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Close the whole console. You do not need to save the settings (this
- refers to the console settings rather than the policies you have
- changed).</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Reboot</P
-></LI
-></UL
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3257"
->18.1.3. Sharing Profiles between W9x/Me and NT4/200x/XP workstations</A
-></H3
-><P
->Sharing of desktop profiles between Windows versions is NOT recommended.
-Desktop profiles are an evolving phenomenon and profiles for later versions
-of MS Windows clients add features that may interfere with earlier versions
-of MS Windows clients. Probably the more salient reason to NOT mix profiles
-is that when logging off an earlier version of MS Windows the older format
-of profile contents may overwrite information that belongs to the newer
-version resulting in loss of profile information content when that user logs
-on again with the newer version of MS Windows.</P
-><P
->If you then want to share the same Start Menu / Desktop with W9x/Me, you will
-need to specify a common location for the profiles. The smb.conf parameters
-that need to be common are <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->logon path</I
-></SPAN
-> and
-<SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->logon home</I
-></SPAN
->.</P
-><P
->If you have this set up correctly, you will find separate user.DAT and
-NTuser.DAT files in the same profile directory.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3264"
->18.1.4. Profile Migration from Windows NT4/200x Server to Samba</A
-></H3
-><P
->There is nothing to stop you specifying any path that you like for the
-location of users' profiles. Therefore, you could specify that the
-profile be stored on a samba server, or any other SMB server, as long as
-that SMB server supports encrypted passwords.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3267"
->18.1.4.1. Windows NT4 Profile Management Tools</A
-></H4
-><P
->Unfortunately, the Resource Kit information is specific to the version of MS Windows
-NT4/200x. The correct resource kit is required for each platform.</P
-><P
->Here is a quick guide:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->On your NT4 Domain Controller, right click on 'My Computer', then
-select the tab labelled 'User Profiles'.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Select a user profile you want to migrate and click on it.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="90%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->I am using the term "migrate" lossely. You can copy a profile to
-create a group profile. You can give the user 'Everyone' rights to the
-profile you copy this to. That is what you need to do, since your samba
-domain is not a member of a trust relationship with your NT4 PDC.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Click the 'Copy To' button.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->In the box labelled 'Copy Profile to' add your new path, eg:
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->c:\temp\foobar</TT
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Click on the button labelled 'Change' in the "Permitted to use" box.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Click on the group 'Everyone' and then click OK. This closes the
- 'chose user' box.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Now click OK.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Follow the above for every profile you need to migrate.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3290"
->18.1.4.2. Side bar Notes</A
-></H4
-><P
->You should obtain the SID of your NT4 domain. You can use smbpasswd to do
-this. Read the man page.</P
-><P
->With Samba-3.0.0 alpha code you can import all you NT4 domain accounts
-using the net samsync method. This way you can retain your profile
-settings as well as all your users.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3294"
->18.1.4.3. moveuser.exe</A
-></H4
-><P
->The W2K professional resource kit has moveuser.exe. moveuser.exe changes
-the security of a profile from one user to another. This allows the account
-domain to change, and/or the user name to change.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3297"
->18.1.4.4. Get SID</A
-></H4
-><P
->You can identify the SID by using GetSID.exe from the Windows NT Server 4.0
-Resource Kit.</P
-><P
->Windows NT 4.0 stores the local profile information in the registry under
-the following key:
-HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\ProfileList</P
-><P
->Under the ProfileList key, there will be subkeys named with the SIDs of the
-users who have logged on to this computer. (To find the profile information
-for the user whose locally cached profile you want to move, find the SID for
-the user with the GetSID.exe utility.) Inside of the appropriate user's
-subkey, you will see a string value named ProfileImagePath.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3302"
->18.2. Mandatory profiles</A
-></H2
-><P
->A Mandatory Profile is a profile that the user does NOT have the ability to overwrite.
-During the user's session it may be possible to change the desktop environment, but
-as the user logs out all changes made will be lost. If it is desired to NOT allow the
-user any ability to change the desktop environment then this must be done through
-policy settings. See previous chapter.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Under NO circumstances should the profile directory (or it's contents) be made read-only
-as this may render the profile un-usable.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->For MS Windows NT4/200x/XP the above method can be used to create mandatory profiles
-also. To convert a group profile into a mandatory profile simply locate the NTUser.DAT
-file in the copied profile and rename it to NTUser.MAN.</P
-><P
->For MS Windows 9x / Me it is the User.DAT file that must be renamed to User.MAN to
-affect a mandatory profile.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3309"
->18.3. Creating/Managing Group Profiles</A
-></H2
-><P
->Most organisations are arranged into departments. There is a nice benenfit in
-this fact since usually most users in a department will require the same desktop
-applications and the same desktop layout. MS Windows NT4/200x/XP will allow the
-use of Group Profiles. A Group Profile is a profile that is created firstly using
-a template (example) user. Then using the profile migration tool (see above) the
-profile is assigned access rights for the user group that needs to be given access
-to the group profile.</P
-><P
->The next step is rather important. PLEASE NOTE: Instead of assigning a group profile
-to users (ie: Using User Manager) on a "per user" basis, the group itself is assigned
-the now modified profile.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> Be careful with group profiles, if the user who is a member of a group also
- has a personal profile, then the result will be a fusion (merge) of the two.
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3315"
->18.4. Default Profile for Windows Users</A
-></H2
-><P
->MS Windows 9x / Me and NT4/200x/XP will use a default profile for any user for whom
-a profile does not already exist. Armed with a knowledge of where the default profile
-is located on the Windows workstation, and knowing which registry keys affect the path
-from which the default profile is created, it is possible to modify the default profile
-to one that has been optimised for the site. This has significant administrative
-advantages.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3318"
->18.4.1. MS Windows 9x/Me</A
-></H3
-><P
->To enable default per use profiles in Windows 9x / Me you can either use the Windows 98 System
-Policy Editor or change the registry directly.</P
-><P
->To enable default per user profiles in Windows 9x / Me, launch the System Policy Editor, then
-select File -&#62; Open Registry, then click on the Local Computer icon, click on Windows 98 System,
-select User Profiles, click on the enable box. Do not forget to save the registry changes.</P
-><P
->To modify the registry directly, launch the Registry Editor (regedit.exe), select the hive
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Network\Logon</TT
->. Now add a DWORD type key with the name
-"User Profiles", to enable user profiles set the value to 1, to disable user profiles set it to 0.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3324"
->18.4.1.1. How User Profiles Are Handled in Windows 9x / Me?</A
-></H4
-><P
->When a user logs on to a Windows 9x / Me machine, the local profile path,
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\ProfileList</TT
->, is checked
-for an existing entry for that user:</P
-><P
->If the user has an entry in this registry location, Windows 9x / Me checks for a locally cached
-version of the user profile. Windows 9x / Me also checks the user's home directory (or other
-specified directory if the location has been modified) on the server for the User Profile.
-If a profile exists in both locations, the newer of the two is used. If the User Profile exists
-on the server, but does not exist on the local machine, the profile on the server is downloaded
-and used. If the User Profile only exists on the local machine, that copy is used.</P
-><P
->If a User Profile is not found in either location, the Default User Profile from the Windows 9x / Me
-machine is used and is copied to a newly created folder for the logged on user. At log off, any
-changes that the user made are written to the user's local profile. If the user has a roaming
-profile, the changes are written to the user's profile on the server.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3330"
->18.4.2. MS Windows NT4 Workstation</A
-></H3
-><P
->On MS Windows NT4 the default user profile is obtained from the location
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->%SystemRoot%\Profiles</TT
-> which in a default installation will translate to
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->C:\WinNT\Profiles</TT
->. Under this directory on a clean install there will be
-three (3) directories: <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->Administrator, All Users, Default User</TT
->.</P
-><P
->The <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->All Users</TT
-> directory contains menu settings that are common across all
-system users. The <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->Default User</TT
-> directory contains menu entries that are
-customisable per user depending on the profile settings chosen/created.</P
-><P
->When a new user first logs onto an MS Windows NT4 machine a new profile is created from:</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->All Users settings</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Default User settings (contains the default NTUser.DAT file)</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
->When a user logs onto an MS Windows NT4 machine that is a member of a Microsoft security domain
-the following steps are followed in respect of profile handling:</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> The users' account information which is obtained during the logon process contains
- the location of the users' desktop profile. The profile path may be local to the
- machine or it may be located on a network share. If there exists a profile at the location
- of the path from the user account, then this profile is copied to the location
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->%SystemRoot%\Profiles\%USERNAME%</TT
->. This profile then inherits the
- settings in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->All Users</TT
-> profile in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->%SystemRoot%\Profiles</TT
->
- location.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> If the user account has a profile path, but at it's location a profile does not exist,
- then a new profile is created in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->%SystemRoot%\Profiles\%USERNAME%</TT
->
- directory from reading the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->Default User</TT
-> profile.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> If the NETLOGON share on the authenticating server (logon server) contains a policy file
- (<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->NTConfig.POL</TT
->) then it's contents are applied to the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->NTUser.DAT</TT
->
- which is applied to the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->HKEY_CURRENT_USER</TT
-> part of the registry.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> When the user logs out, if the profile is set to be a roaming profile it will be written
- out to the location of the profile. The <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->NTuser.DAT</TT
-> file is then
- re-created from the contents of the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->HKEY_CURRENT_USER</TT
-> contents.
- Thus, should there not exist in the NETLOGON share an <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->NTConfig.POL</TT
-> at the
- next logon, the effect of the provious <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->NTConfig.POL</TT
-> will still be held
- in the profile. The effect of this is known as <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->tatooing</I
-></SPAN
->.
- </P
-></LI
-></OL
-><P
->MS Windows NT4 profiles may be <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Local</I
-></SPAN
-> or <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Roaming</I
-></SPAN
->. A Local profile
-will stored in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->%SystemRoot%\Profiles\%USERNAME%</TT
-> location. A roaming profile will
-also remain stored in the same way, unless the following registry key is created:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\winlogon\
- "DeleteRoamingCache"=dword:00000001</PRE
->
-
-In which case, the local copy (in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->%SystemRoot%\Profiles\%USERNAME%</TT
->) will be
-deleted on logout.</P
-><P
->Under MS Windows NT4 default locations for common resources (like <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->My Documents</TT
->
-may be redirected to a network share by modifying the following registry keys. These changes may be affected
-via use of the System Policy Editor (to do so may require that you create your owns template extension
-for the policy editor to allow this to be done through the GUI. Another way to do this is by way of first
-creating a default user profile, then while logged in as that user, run regedt32 to edit the key settings.</P
-><P
->The Registry Hive key that affects the behaviour of folders that are part of the default user profile
-are controlled by entries on Windows NT4 is:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> HKEY_CURRENT_USER
- \Software
- \Microsoft
- \Windows
- \CurrentVersion
- \Explorer
- \User Shell Folders\</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The above hive key contains a list of automatically managed folders. The default entries are:</P
-><P
-> <PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> Name Default Value
- -------------- -----------------------------------------
- AppData %USERPROFILE%\Application Data
- Desktop %USERPROFILE%\Desktop
- Favorites %USERPROFILE%\Favorites
- NetHood %USERPROFILE%\NetHood
- PrintHood %USERPROFILE%\PrintHood
- Programs %USERPROFILE%\Start Menu\Programs
- Recent %USERPROFILE%\Recent
- SendTo %USERPROFILE%\SendTo
- Start Menu %USERPROFILE%\Start Menu
- Startup %USERPROFILE%\Start Menu\Programs\Startup
- </PRE
->
- </P
-><P
->The registry key that contains the location of the default profile settings is:
-
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE
- \SOFTWARE
- \Microsoft
- \Windows
- \CurrentVersion
- \Explorer
- \User Shell Folders</PRE
->
-
-The default entries are:
-
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> Common Desktop %SystemRoot%\Profiles\All Users\Desktop
- Common Programs %SystemRoot%\Profiles\All Users\Programs
- Common Start Menu %SystemRoot%\Profiles\All Users\Start Menu
- Common Startu p %SystemRoot%\Profiles\All Users\Start Menu\Progams\Startup</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3384"
->18.4.3. MS Windows 200x/XP</A
-></H3
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> MS Windows XP Home Edition does use default per user profiles, but can not participate
- in domain security, can not log onto an NT/ADS style domain, and thus can obtain the profile
- only from itself. While there are benefits in doing this the beauty of those MS Windows
- clients that CAN participate in domain logon processes allows the administrator to create
- a global default profile and to enforce it through the use of Group Policy Objects (GPOs).
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->When a new user first logs onto MS Windows 200x/XP machine the default profile is obtained from
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->C:\Documents and Settings\Default User</TT
->. The administrator can modify (or change
-the contents of this location and MS Windows 200x/XP will gladly user it. This is far from the optimum
-arrangement since it will involve copying a new default profile to every MS Windows 200x/XP client
-workstation. </P
-><P
->When MS Windows 200x/XP participate in a domain security context, and if the default user
-profile is not found, then the client will search for a default profile in the NETLOGON share
-of the authenticating server. ie: In MS Windows parlance:
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->%LOGONSERVER%\NETLOGON\Default User</TT
-> and if one exits there it will copy this
-to the workstation to the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->C:\Documents and Settings\</TT
-> under the Windows
-login name of the user.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> This path translates, in Samba parlance, to the smb.conf [NETLOGON] share. The directory
- should be created at the root of this share and msut be called <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->Default Profile</TT
->.
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->If a default profile does not exist in this location then MS Windows 200x/XP will use the local
-default profile.</P
-><P
->On loging out, the users' desktop profile will be stored to the location specified in the registry
-settings that pertain to the user. If no specific policies have been created, or passed to the client
-during the login process (as Samba does automatically), then the user's profile will be written to
-the local machine only under the path <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->C:\Documents and Settings\%USERNAME%</TT
->.</P
-><P
->Those wishing to modify the default behaviour can do so through up to three methods:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> Modify the registry keys on the local machine manually and place the new default profile in the
- NETLOGON share root - NOT recommended as it is maintenance intensive.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Create an NT4 style NTConfig.POL file that specified this behaviour and locate this file
- in the root of the NETLOGON share along with the new default profile.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Create a GPO that enforces this through Active Directory, and place the new default profile
- in the NETLOGON share.
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->The Registry Hive key that affects the behaviour of folders that are part of the default user profile
-are controlled by entries on Windows 200x/XP is:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> HKEY_CURRENT_USER
- \Software
- \Microsoft
- \Windows
- \CurrentVersion
- \Explorer
- \User Shell Folders\</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The above hive key contains a list of automatically managed folders. The default entries are:</P
-><P
-> <PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> Name Default Value
- -------------- -----------------------------------------
- AppData %USERPROFILE%\Application Data
- Cache %USERPROFILE%\Local Settings\Temporary Internet Files
- Cookies %USERPROFILE%\Cookies
- Desktop %USERPROFILE%\Desktop
- Favorites %USERPROFILE%\Favorites
- History %USERPROFILE%\Local Settings\History
- Local AppData %USERPROFILE%\Local Settings\Application Data
- Local Settings %USERPROFILE%\Local Settings
- My Pictures %USERPROFILE%\My Documents\My Pictures
- NetHood %USERPROFILE%\NetHood
- Personal %USERPROFILE%\My Documents
- PrintHood %USERPROFILE%\PrintHood
- Programs %USERPROFILE%\Start Menu\Programs
- Recent %USERPROFILE%\Recent
- SendTo %USERPROFILE%\SendTo
- Start Menu %USERPROFILE%\Start Menu
- Startup %USERPROFILE%\Start Menu\Programs\Startup
- Templates %USERPROFILE%\Templates
- </PRE
->
- </P
-><P
->There is also an entry called "Default" that has no value set. The default entry is of type REG_SZ, all
-the others are of type REG_EXPAND_SZ.</P
-><P
->It makes a huge difference to the speed of handling roaming user profiles if all the folders are
-stored on a dedicated location on a network server. This means that it will NOT be necessary to
-write Outlook PST file over the network for every login and logout.</P
-><P
->To set this to a network location you could use the following examples:
-
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> %LOGONSERVER%\%USERNAME%\Default Folders</PRE
->
-
-This would store the folders in the user's home directory under a directory called "Default Folders"
-
-You could also use:
-
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> \\SambaServer\FolderShare\%USERNAME%</PRE
->
-
-in which case the default folders will be stored in the server named <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->SambaServer</I
-></SPAN
->
-in the share called <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->FolderShare</I
-></SPAN
-> under a directory that has the name of the MS Windows
-user as seen by the Linux/Unix file system.</P
-><P
->Please note that once you have created a default profile share, you MUST migrate a user's profile
-(default or custom) to it.</P
-><P
->MS Windows 200x/XP profiles may be <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Local</I
-></SPAN
-> or <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Roaming</I
-></SPAN
->.
-A roaming profile will be cached locally unless the following registry key is created:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\winlogon\
- "DeleteRoamingCache"=dword:00000001</PRE
->
-
-In which case, the local cache copy will be deleted on logout.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="INTERDOMAINTRUSTS"
-></A
->Chapter 19. Interdomain Trust Relationships</H1
-><P
->Samba-3 supports NT4 style domain trust relationships. This is feature that many sites
-will want to use if they migrate to Samba-3 from and NT4 style domain and do NOT want to
-adopt Active Directory or an LDAP based authentication back end. This section explains
-some background information regarding trust relationships and how to create them. It is now
-possible for Samba-3 to NT4 trust (and vice versa), as well as Samba3 to Samba3 trusts.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3446"
->19.1. Trust Relationship Background</A
-></H2
-><P
->MS Windows NT3.x/4.0 type security domains employ a non-hierarchical security structure.
-The limitations of this architecture as it affects the scalability of MS Windows networking
-in large organisations is well known. Additionally, the flat-name space that results from
-this design significantly impacts the delegation of administrative responsibilities in
-large and diverse organisations.</P
-><P
->Microsoft developed Active Directory Service (ADS), based on Kerberos and LDAP, as a means
-of circumventing the limitations of the older technologies. Not every organisation is ready
-or willing to embrace ADS. For small companies the older NT4 style domain security paradigm
-is quite adequate, there thus remains an entrenched user base for whom there is no direct
-desire to go through a disruptive change to adopt ADS.</P
-><P
->Microsoft introduced with MS Windows NT the ability to allow differing security domains
-to affect a mechanism so that users from one domain may be given access rights and privileges
-in another domain. The language that describes this capability is couched in terms of
-<SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Trusts</I
-></SPAN
->. Specifically, one domain will <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->trust</I
-></SPAN
-> the users
-from another domain. The domain from which users are available to another security domain is
-said to be a trusted domain. The domain in which those users have assigned rights and privileges
-is the trusting domain. With NT3.x/4.0 all trust relationships are always in one direction only,
-thus if users in both domains are to have privileges and rights in each others' domain, then it is
-necessary to establish two (2) relationships, one in each direction.</P
-><P
->In an NT4 style MS security domain, all trusts are non-transitive. This means that if there
-are three (3) domains (let's call them RED, WHITE, and BLUE) where RED and WHITE have a trust
-relationship, and WHITE and BLUE have a trust relationship, then it holds that there is no
-implied trust between the RED and BLUE domains. ie: Relationships are explicit and not
-transitive.</P
-><P
->New to MS Windows 2000 ADS security contexts is the fact that trust relationships are two-way
-by default. Also, all inter-ADS domain trusts are transitive. In the case of the RED, WHITE and BLUE
-domains above, with Windows 2000 and ADS the RED and BLUE domains CAN trust each other. This is
-an inherent feature of ADS domains. Samba-3 implements MS Windows NT4
-style Interdomain trusts and interoperates with MS Windows 200x ADS
-security domains in similar manner to MS Windows NT4 style domains.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3455"
->19.2. Native MS Windows NT4 Trusts Configuration</A
-></H2
-><P
->There are two steps to creating an interdomain trust relationship.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3458"
->19.2.1. NT4 as the Trusting Domain (ie. creating the trusted account)</A
-></H3
-><P
->For MS Windows NT4, all domain trust relationships are configured using the Domain User Manager.
-To affect a two way trust relationship it is necessary for each domain administrator to make
-available (for use by an external domain) it's security resources. This is done from the Domain
-User Manager Policies entry on the menu bar. From the Policy menu, select Trust Relationships, then
-next to the lower box that is labelled "Permitted to Trust this Domain" are two buttons, "Add" and
-"Remove". The "Add" button will open a panel in which needs to be entered the remote domain that
-will be able to assign user rights to your domain. In addition it is necessary to enter a password
-that is specific to this trust relationship. The password needs to be
-typed twice (for standard confirmation).</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3461"
->19.2.2. NT4 as the Trusted Domain (ie. creating trusted account's password)</A
-></H3
-><P
->A trust relationship will work only when the other (trusting) domain makes the appropriate connections
-with the trusted domain. To consumate the trust relationship the administrator will launch the
-Domain User Manager, from the menu select Policies, then select Trust Relationships, then click on the
-"Add" button that is next to the box that is labelled "Trusted Domains". A panel will open in
-which must be entered the name of the remote domain as well as the password assigned to that trust.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3464"
->19.3. Configuring Samba NT-style Domain Trusts</A
-></H2
-><P
->This description is meant to be a fairly short introduction about how to set up a Samba server so
-that it could participate in interdomain trust relationships. Trust relationship support in Samba
-is in its early stage, so lot of things don't work yet.</P
-><P
->Each of the procedures described below is treated as they were performed with Windows NT4 Server on
-one end. The remote end could just as well be another Samba-3 domain. It can be clearly seen, after
-reading this document, that combining Samba-specific parts of what's written below leads to trust
-between domains in purely Samba environment.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3468"
->19.3.1. Samba-3 as the Trusting Domain</A
-></H3
-><P
->In order to set Samba PDC to be trusted party of the relationship first you need
-to create special account for the domain that will be the trusting party. To do that,
-you can use the 'smbpasswd' utility. Creating the trusted domain account is very
-similiar to creating a trusted machine account. Suppose, your domain is
-called SAMBA, and the remote domain is called RUMBA. The first step
-will be to issue this command from your favourite shell:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="SCREEN"
-> &nbsp;<SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->deity#</SAMP
-> <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbpasswd -a -i rumba</KBD
->
- &nbsp; New SMB password: XXXXXXXX
- &nbsp; Retype SMB password: XXXXXXXX
- &nbsp; Added user rumba$</PRE
->
-
-where <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->-a</VAR
-> means to add a new account into the
-passdb database and <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->-i</VAR
-> means: ''create this
-account with the InterDomain trust flag''</P
-><P
->The account name will be 'rumba$' (the name of the remote domain)</P
-><P
->After issuing this command you'll be asked to enter the password for
-the account. You can use any password you want, but be aware that Windows NT will
-not change this password until 7 days following account creation.
-After the command returns successfully, you can look at the entry for new account
-(in the way depending on your configuration) and see that account's name is
-really RUMBA$ and it has 'I' flag in the flags field. Now you're ready to confirm
-the trust by establishing it from Windows NT Server.</P
-><P
->Open 'User Manager for Domains' and from menu 'Policies' select 'Trust Relationships...'.
-Right beside 'Trusted domains' list box press 'Add...' button. You will be prompted for
-the trusted domain name and the relationship password. Type in SAMBA, as this is
-your domain name, and the password used at the time of account creation.
-Press OK and, if everything went without incident, you will see 'Trusted domain relationship
-successfully established' message.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3480"
->19.3.2. Samba-3 as the Trusted Domain</A
-></H3
-><P
->This time activities are somewhat reversed. Again, we'll assume that your domain
-controlled by the Samba PDC is called SAMBA and NT-controlled domain is called RUMBA.</P
-><P
->The very first thing requirement is to add an account for the SAMBA domain on RUMBA's PDC.</P
-><P
->Launch the Domain User Manager, then from the menu select 'Policies', 'Trust Relationships'.
-Now, next to 'Trusted Domains' box press the 'Add' button, and type in the name of the trusted
-domain (SAMBA) and password securing the relationship.</P
-><P
->The password can be arbitrarily chosen. It is easy to change it the password
-from Samba server whenever you want. After confirming the password your account is
-ready for use. Now it's Samba's turn.</P
-><P
->Using your favourite shell while being logged in as root, issue this command:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->deity# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->net rpc trustdom establish rumba</KBD
-></P
-><P
->You will be prompted for the password you just typed on your Windows NT4 Server box.
-Don not worry if you see an error message that mentions a returned code of
-<SPAN
-CLASS="ERRORNAME"
->NT_STATUS_NOLOGON_INTERDOMAIN_TRUST_ACCOUNT</SPAN
->. It means the
-password you gave is correct and the NT4 Server says the account is
-ready for interdomain connection and not for ordinary
-connection. After that, be patient it can take a while (especially
-in large networks), you should see the 'Success' message. Congratulations! Your trust
-relationship has just been established.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Note that you have to run this command as root because you must have write access to
-the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->secrets.tdb</TT
-> file.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="PAM"
-></A
->Chapter 20. PAM Configuration for Centrally Managed Authentication</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3507"
->20.1. Samba and PAM</A
-></H2
-><P
->A number of Unix systems (eg: Sun Solaris), as well as the
-xxxxBSD family and Linux, now utilize the Pluggable Authentication
-Modules (PAM) facility to provide all authentication,
-authorization and resource control services. Prior to the
-introduction of PAM, a decision to use an alternative to
-the system password database (<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
->)
-would require the provision of alternatives for all programs that provide
-security services. Such a choice would involve provision of
-alternatives to such programs as: <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->login</B
->,
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->passwd</B
->, <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->chown</B
->, etc.</P
-><P
->PAM provides a mechanism that disconnects these security programs
-from the underlying authentication/authorization infrastructure.
-PAM is configured either through one file <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.conf</TT
-> (Solaris),
-or by editing individual files that are located in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.d</TT
->.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> If the PAM authentication module (loadable link library file) is located in the
- default location then it is not necessary to specify the path. In the case of
- Linux, the default location is <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/lib/security</TT
->. If the module
- is located other than default then the path may be specified as:
-
- <PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> auth required /other_path/pam_strange_module.so
- </PRE
->
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->The following is an example <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/pam.d/login</TT
-> configuration file.
-This example had all options been uncommented is probably not usable
-as it stacks many conditions before allowing successful completion
-of the login process. Essentially all conditions can be disabled
-by commenting them out except the calls to <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam_pwdb.so</TT
->.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> #%PAM-1.0
- # The PAM configuration file for the `login' service
- #
- auth required pam_securetty.so
- auth required pam_nologin.so
- # auth required pam_dialup.so
- # auth optional pam_mail.so
- auth required pam_pwdb.so shadow md5
- # account requisite pam_time.so
- account required pam_pwdb.so
- session required pam_pwdb.so
- # session optional pam_lastlog.so
- # password required pam_cracklib.so retry=3
- password required pam_pwdb.so shadow md5</PRE
-></P
-><P
->PAM allows use of replacable modules. Those available on a
-sample system include:</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->$</SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->/bin/ls /lib/security</KBD
->
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> pam_access.so pam_ftp.so pam_limits.so
- pam_ncp_auth.so pam_rhosts_auth.so pam_stress.so
- pam_cracklib.so pam_group.so pam_listfile.so
- pam_nologin.so pam_rootok.so pam_tally.so
- pam_deny.so pam_issue.so pam_mail.so
- pam_permit.so pam_securetty.so pam_time.so
- pam_dialup.so pam_lastlog.so pam_mkhomedir.so
- pam_pwdb.so pam_shells.so pam_unix.so
- pam_env.so pam_ldap.so pam_motd.so
- pam_radius.so pam_smbpass.so pam_unix_acct.so
- pam_wheel.so pam_unix_auth.so pam_unix_passwd.so
- pam_userdb.so pam_warn.so pam_unix_session.so</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The following example for the login program replaces the use of
-the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam_pwdb.so</TT
-> module which uses the system
-password database (<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/passwd</TT
->,
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/shadow</TT
->, <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/group</TT
->) with
-the module <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam_smbpass.so</TT
-> which uses the Samba
-database which contains the Microsoft MD4 encrypted password
-hashes. This database is stored in either
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/local/samba/private/smbpasswd</TT
->,
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/samba/smbpasswd</TT
->, or in
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/samba.d/smbpasswd</TT
->, depending on the
-Samba implementation for your Unix/Linux system. The
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam_smbpass.so</TT
-> module is provided by
-Samba version 2.2.1 or later. It can be compiled by specifying the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->--with-pam_smbpass</B
-> options when running Samba's
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->configure</TT
-> script. For more information
-on the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam_smbpass</TT
-> module, see the documentation
-in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->source/pam_smbpass</TT
-> directory of the Samba
-source distribution.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> #%PAM-1.0
- # The PAM configuration file for the `login' service
- #
- auth required pam_smbpass.so nodelay
- account required pam_smbpass.so nodelay
- session required pam_smbpass.so nodelay
- password required pam_smbpass.so nodelay</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The following is the PAM configuration file for a particular
-Linux system. The default condition uses <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam_pwdb.so</TT
->.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> #%PAM-1.0
- # The PAM configuration file for the `samba' service
- #
- auth required pam_pwdb.so nullok nodelay shadow audit
- account required pam_pwdb.so audit nodelay
- session required pam_pwdb.so nodelay
- password required pam_pwdb.so shadow md5</PRE
-></P
-><P
->In the following example the decision has been made to use the
-smbpasswd database even for basic samba authentication. Such a
-decision could also be made for the passwd program and would
-thus allow the smbpasswd passwords to be changed using the passwd
-program.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> #%PAM-1.0
- # The PAM configuration file for the `samba' service
- #
- auth required pam_smbpass.so nodelay
- account required pam_pwdb.so audit nodelay
- session required pam_pwdb.so nodelay
- password required pam_smbpass.so nodelay smbconf=/etc/samba.d/smb.conf</PRE
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->PAM allows stacking of authentication mechanisms. It is
-also possible to pass information obtained within one PAM module through
-to the next module in the PAM stack. Please refer to the documentation for
-your particular system implementation for details regarding the specific
-capabilities of PAM in this environment. Some Linux implmentations also
-provide the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam_stack.so</TT
-> module that allows all
-authentication to be configured in a single central file. The
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam_stack.so</TT
-> method has some very devoted followers
-on the basis that it allows for easier administration. As with all issues in
-life though, every decision makes trade-offs, so you may want examine the
-PAM documentation for further helpful information.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3558"
->20.2. Distributed Authentication</A
-></H2
-><P
->The astute administrator will realize from this that the
-combination of <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->pam_smbpass.so</TT
->,
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->winbindd</B
->, and a distributed
-passdb backend, such as ldap, will allow the establishment of a
-centrally managed, distributed
-user/password database that can also be used by all
-PAM (eg: Linux) aware programs and applications. This arrangement
-can have particularly potent advantages compared with the
-use of Microsoft Active Directory Service (ADS) in so far as
-reduction of wide area network authentication traffic.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3563"
->20.3. PAM Configuration in smb.conf</A
-></H2
-><P
->There is an option in smb.conf called <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#OBEYPAMRESTRICTIONS"
-TARGET="_top"
->obey pam restrictions</A
->.
-The following is from the on-line help for this option in SWAT;</P
-><P
->When Samba is configured to enable PAM support (i.e.
-<CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->--with-pam</CODE
->), this parameter will
-control whether or not Samba should obey PAM's account
-and session management directives. The default behavior
-is to use PAM for clear text authentication only and to
-ignore any account or session management. Note that Samba always
-ignores PAM for authentication in the case of
-<A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#ENCRYPTPASSWORDS"
-TARGET="_top"
->encrypt passwords = yes</A
->.
-The reason is that PAM modules cannot support the challenge/response
-authentication mechanism needed in the presence of SMB
-password encryption. </P
-><P
->Default: <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->obey pam restrictions = no</B
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="VFS"
-></A
->Chapter 21. Stackable VFS modules</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3600"
->21.1. Introduction and configuration</A
-></H2
-><P
->Since samba 3.0, samba supports stackable VFS(Virtual File System) modules.
-Samba passes each request to access the unix file system thru the loaded VFS modules.
-This chapter covers all the modules that come with the samba source and references to
-some external modules.</P
-><P
->You may have problems to compile these modules, as shared libraries are
-compiled and linked in different ways on different systems.
-They currently have been tested against GNU/linux and IRIX.</P
-><P
->To use the VFS modules, create a share similar to the one below. The
-important parameter is the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->vfs object</B
-> parameter which must point to
-the exact pathname of the shared library objects. For example, to log all access
-to files and use a recycle bin:
-
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> [audit]
- comment = Audited /data directory
- path = /data
- vfs object = /path/to/audit.so /path/to/recycle.so
- writeable = yes
- browseable = yes</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The modules are used in the order they are specified.</P
-><P
->Further documentation on writing VFS modules for Samba can be found in
-the Samba Developers Guide.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3609"
->21.2. Included modules</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3611"
->21.2.1. audit</A
-></H3
-><P
->A simple module to audit file access to the syslog
-facility. The following operations are logged:
-<P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->share</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->connect/disconnect</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->directory opens/create/remove</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->file open/close/rename/unlink/chmod</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3619"
->21.2.2. extd_audit</A
-></H3
-><P
->This module is identical with the <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->audit</I
-></SPAN
-> module above except
-that it sends audit logs to both syslog as well as the smbd log file/s. The
-loglevel for this module is set in the smb.conf file. At loglevel = 0, only file
-and directory deletions and directory and file creations are logged. At loglevel = 1
-file opens are renames and permission changes are logged , while at loglevel = 2 file
-open and close calls are logged also.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3623"
->21.2.3. recycle</A
-></H3
-><P
->A recycle-bin like modules. When used any unlink call
-will be intercepted and files moved to the recycle
-directory instead of beeing deleted.</P
-><P
->Supported options:
-<P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
->vfs_recycle_bin:repository</DT
-><DD
-><P
->FIXME</P
-></DD
-><DT
->vfs_recycle_bin:keeptree</DT
-><DD
-><P
->FIXME</P
-></DD
-><DT
->vfs_recycle_bin:versions</DT
-><DD
-><P
->FIXME</P
-></DD
-><DT
->vfs_recycle_bin:touch</DT
-><DD
-><P
->FIXME</P
-></DD
-><DT
->vfs_recycle_bin:maxsize</DT
-><DD
-><P
->FIXME</P
-></DD
-><DT
->vfs_recycle_bin:exclude</DT
-><DD
-><P
->FIXME</P
-></DD
-><DT
->vfs_recycle_bin:exclude_dir</DT
-><DD
-><P
->FIXME</P
-></DD
-><DT
->vfs_recycle_bin:noversions</DT
-><DD
-><P
->FIXME</P
-></DD
-></DL
-></DIV
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3660"
->21.2.4. netatalk</A
-></H3
-><P
->A netatalk module, that will ease co-existence of samba and
-netatalk file sharing services.</P
-><P
->Advantages compared to the old netatalk module:
-<P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->it doesn't care about creating of .AppleDouble forks, just keeps ones in sync</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->if share in smb.conf doesn't contain .AppleDouble item in hide or veto list, it will be added automatically</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3667"
->21.3. VFS modules available elsewhere</A
-></H2
-><P
->This section contains a listing of various other VFS modules that
-have been posted but don't currently reside in the Samba CVS
-tree for one reason ot another (e.g. it is easy for the maintainer
-to have his or her own CVS tree).</P
-><P
->No statemets about the stability or functionality any module
-should be implied due to its presence here.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3671"
->21.3.1. DatabaseFS</A
-></H3
-><P
->URL: <A
-HREF="http://www.css.tayloru.edu/~elorimer/databasefs/index.php"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.css.tayloru.edu/~elorimer/databasefs/index.php</A
-></P
-><P
->By <A
-HREF="mailto:elorimer@css.tayloru.edu"
-TARGET="_top"
->Eric Lorimer</A
->.</P
-><P
->I have created a VFS module which implements a fairly complete read-only
-filesystem. It presents information from a database as a filesystem in
-a modular and generic way to allow different databases to be used
-(originally designed for organizing MP3s under directories such as
-"Artists," "Song Keywords," etc... I have since applied it to a student
-roster database very easily). The directory structure is stored in the
-database itself and the module makes no assumptions about the database
-structure beyond the table it requires to run.</P
-><P
->Any feedback would be appreciated: comments, suggestions, patches,
-etc... If nothing else, hopefully it might prove useful for someone
-else who wishes to create a virtual filesystem.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3679"
->21.3.2. vscan</A
-></H3
-><P
->URL: <A
-HREF="http://www.openantivirus.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.openantivirus.org/</A
-></P
-><P
->samba-vscan is a proof-of-concept module for Samba, which
-uses the VFS (virtual file system) features of Samba 2.2.x/3.0
-alphaX. Of couse, Samba has to be compiled with VFS support.
-samba-vscan supports various virus scanners and is maintained
-by Rainer Link.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="MSDFS"
-></A
->Chapter 22. Hosting a Microsoft Distributed File System tree on Samba</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3695"
->22.1. Instructions</A
-></H2
-><P
->The Distributed File System (or Dfs) provides a means of
- separating the logical view of files and directories that users
- see from the actual physical locations of these resources on the
- network. It allows for higher availability, smoother storage expansion,
- load balancing etc. For more information about Dfs, refer to <A
-HREF="http://www.microsoft.com/NTServer/nts/downloads/winfeatures/NTSDistrFile/AdminGuide.asp"
-TARGET="_top"
-> Microsoft documentation</A
->. </P
-><P
->This document explains how to host a Dfs tree on a Unix
- machine (for Dfs-aware clients to browse) using Samba.</P
-><P
->To enable SMB-based DFS for Samba, configure it with the
- <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->--with-msdfs</VAR
-> option. Once built, a
- Samba server can be made a Dfs server by setting the global
- boolean <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#HOSTMSDFS"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
-> host msdfs</VAR
-></A
-> parameter in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf
- </TT
-> file. You designate a share as a Dfs root using the share
- level boolean <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html#MSDFSROOT"
-TARGET="_top"
-><VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
-> msdfs root</VAR
-></A
-> parameter. A Dfs root directory on
- Samba hosts Dfs links in the form of symbolic links that point
- to other servers. For example, a symbolic link
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->junction-&#62;msdfs:storage1\share1</TT
-> in
- the share directory acts as the Dfs junction. When Dfs-aware
- clients attempt to access the junction link, they are redirected
- to the storage location (in this case, \\storage1\share1).</P
-><P
->Dfs trees on Samba work with all Dfs-aware clients ranging
- from Windows 95 to 2000.</P
-><P
->Here's an example of setting up a Dfs tree on a Samba
- server.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-># The smb.conf file:
-[global]
- netbios name = SAMBA
- host msdfs = yes
-
-[dfs]
- path = /export/dfsroot
- msdfs root = yes
- </PRE
-></P
-><P
->In the /export/dfsroot directory we set up our dfs links to
- other servers on the network.</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->cd /export/dfsroot</KBD
-></P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->chown root /export/dfsroot</KBD
-></P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->chmod 755 /export/dfsroot</KBD
-></P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->ln -s msdfs:storageA\\shareA linka</KBD
-></P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->ln -s msdfs:serverB\\share,serverC\\share linkb</KBD
-></P
-><P
->You should set up the permissions and ownership of
- the directory acting as the Dfs root such that only designated
- users can create, delete or modify the msdfs links. Also note
- that symlink names should be all lowercase. This limitation exists
- to have Samba avoid trying all the case combinations to get at
- the link name. Finally set up the symbolic links to point to the
- network shares you want, and start Samba.</P
-><P
->Users on Dfs-aware clients can now browse the Dfs tree
- on the Samba server at \\samba\dfs. Accessing
- links linka or linkb (which appear as directories to the client)
- takes users directly to the appropriate shares on the network.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3730"
->22.1.1. Notes</A
-></H3
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Windows clients need to be rebooted
- if a previously mounted non-dfs share is made a dfs
- root or vice versa. A better way is to introduce a
- new share and make it the dfs root.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Currently there's a restriction that msdfs
- symlink names should all be lowercase.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->For security purposes, the directory
- acting as the root of the Dfs tree should have ownership
- and permissions set so that only designated users can
- modify the symbolic links in the directory.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="INTEGRATE-MS-NETWORKS"
-></A
->Chapter 23. Integrating MS Windows networks with Samba</H1
-><P
->This section deals with NetBIOS over TCP/IP name to IP address resolution. If you
-your MS Windows clients are NOT configured to use NetBIOS over TCP/IP then this
-section does not apply to your installation. If your installation involves use of
-NetBIOS over TCP/IP then this section may help you to resolve networking problems.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
-> NetBIOS over TCP/IP has nothing to do with NetBEUI. NetBEUI is NetBIOS
- over Logical Link Control (LLC). On modern networks it is highly advised
- to NOT run NetBEUI at all. Note also that there is NO such thing as
- NetBEUI over TCP/IP - the existence of such a protocol is a complete
- and utter mis-apprehension.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->Since the introduction of MS Windows 2000 it is possible to run MS Windows networking
-without the use of NetBIOS over TCP/IP. NetBIOS over TCP/IP uses UDP port 137 for NetBIOS
-name resolution and uses TCP port 139 for NetBIOS session services. When NetBIOS over
-TCP/IP is disabled on MS Windows 2000 and later clients then only TCP port 445 will be
-used and UDP port 137 and TCP port 139 will not.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->When using Windows 2000 or later clients, if NetBIOS over TCP/IP is NOT disabled, then
-the client will use UDP port 137 (NetBIOS Name Service, also known as the Windows Internet
-Name Service or WINS), TCP port 139 AND TCP port 445 (for actual file and print traffic).</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->When NetBIOS over TCP/IP is disabled the use of DNS is essential. Most installations that
-disable NetBIOS over TCP/IP today use MS Active Directory Service (ADS). ADS requires
-Dynamic DNS with Service Resource Records (SRV RR) and with Incremental Zone Transfers (IXFR).
-Use of DHCP with ADS is recommended as a further means of maintaining central control
-over client workstation network configuration.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3758"
->23.1. Name Resolution in a pure Unix/Linux world</A
-></H2
-><P
->The key configuration files covered in this section are:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-><TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/hosts</TT
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/resolv.conf</TT
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/host.conf</TT
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-><TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/nsswitch.conf</TT
-></P
-></LI
-></UL
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3774"
->23.1.1. <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/hosts</TT
-></A
-></H3
-><P
->Contains a static list of IP Addresses and names.
-eg:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> 127.0.0.1 localhost localhost.localdomain
- 192.168.1.1 bigbox.caldera.com bigbox alias4box</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The purpose of <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/hosts</TT
-> is to provide a
-name resolution mechanism so that uses do not need to remember
-IP addresses.</P
-><P
->Network packets that are sent over the physical network transport
-layer communicate not via IP addresses but rather using the Media
-Access Control address, or MAC address. IP Addresses are currently
-32 bits in length and are typically presented as four (4) decimal
-numbers that are separated by a dot (or period). eg: 168.192.1.1</P
-><P
->MAC Addresses use 48 bits (or 6 bytes) and are typically represented
-as two digit hexadecimal numbers separated by colons. eg:
-40:8e:0a:12:34:56</P
-><P
->Every network interfrace must have an MAC address. Associated with
-a MAC address there may be one or more IP addresses. There is NO
-relationship between an IP address and a MAC address, all such assignments
-are arbitary or discretionary in nature. At the most basic level all
-network communications takes place using MAC addressing. Since MAC
-addresses must be globally unique, and generally remains fixed for
-any particular interface, the assignment of an IP address makes sense
-from a network management perspective. More than one IP address can
-be assigned per MAC address. One address must be the primary IP address,
-this is the address that will be returned in the ARP reply.</P
-><P
->When a user or a process wants to communicate with another machine
-the protocol implementation ensures that the "machine name" or "host
-name" is resolved to an IP address in a manner that is controlled
-by the TCP/IP configuration control files. The file
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/hosts</TT
-> is one such file.</P
-><P
->When the IP address of the destination interface has been
-determined a protocol called ARP/RARP is used to identify
-the MAC address of the target interface. ARP stands for Address
-Resolution Protocol, and is a broadcast oriented method that
-uses UDP (User Datagram Protocol) to send a request to all
-interfaces on the local network segment using the all 1's MAC
-address. Network interfaces are programmed to respond to two
-MAC addresses only; their own unique address and the address
-ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff. The reply packet from an ARP request will
-contain the MAC address and the primary IP address for each
-interface.</P
-><P
->The <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/hosts</TT
-> file is foundational to all
-Unix/Linux TCP/IP installations and as a minumum will contain
-the localhost and local network interface IP addresses and the
-primary names by which they are known within the local machine.
-This file helps to prime the pump so that a basic level of name
-resolution can exist before any other method of name resolution
-becomes available.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3790"
->23.1.2. <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/resolv.conf</TT
-></A
-></H3
-><P
->This file tells the name resolution libraries:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->The name of the domain to which the machine
- belongs
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->The name(s) of any domains that should be
- automatically searched when trying to resolve unqualified
- host names to their IP address
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->The name or IP address of available Domain
- Name Servers that may be asked to perform name to address
- translation lookups
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3801"
->23.1.3. <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/host.conf</TT
-></A
-></H3
-><P
-><TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/host.conf</TT
-> is the primary means by
-which the setting in /etc/resolv.conf may be affected. It is a
-critical configuration file. This file controls the order by
-which name resolution may procede. The typical structure is:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> order hosts,bind
- multi on</PRE
-></P
-><P
->then both addresses should be returned. Please refer to the
-man page for host.conf for further details.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3809"
->23.1.4. <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/nsswitch.conf</TT
-></A
-></H3
-><P
->This file controls the actual name resolution targets. The
-file typically has resolver object specifications as follows:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> # /etc/nsswitch.conf
- #
- # Name Service Switch configuration file.
- #
-
- passwd: compat
- # Alternative entries for password authentication are:
- # passwd: compat files nis ldap winbind
- shadow: compat
- group: compat
-
- hosts: files nis dns
- # Alternative entries for host name resolution are:
- # hosts: files dns nis nis+ hesoid db compat ldap wins
- networks: nis files dns
-
- ethers: nis files
- protocols: nis files
- rpc: nis files
- services: nis files</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Of course, each of these mechanisms requires that the appropriate
-facilities and/or services are correctly configured.</P
-><P
->It should be noted that unless a network request/message must be
-sent, TCP/IP networks are silent. All TCP/IP communications assumes a
-principal of speaking only when necessary.</P
-><P
->Starting with version 2.2.0 samba has Linux support for extensions to
-the name service switch infrastructure so that linux clients will
-be able to obtain resolution of MS Windows NetBIOS names to IP
-Addresses. To gain this functionality Samba needs to be compiled
-with appropriate arguments to the make command (ie: <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->make
-nsswitch/libnss_wins.so</B
->). The resulting library should
-then be installed in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/lib</TT
-> directory and
-the "wins" parameter needs to be added to the "hosts:" line in
-the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/nsswitch.conf</TT
-> file. At this point it
-will be possible to ping any MS Windows machine by it's NetBIOS
-machine name, so long as that machine is within the workgroup to
-which both the samba machine and the MS Windows machine belong.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3821"
->23.2. Name resolution as used within MS Windows networking</A
-></H2
-><P
->MS Windows networking is predicated about the name each machine
-is given. This name is known variously (and inconsistently) as
-the "computer name", "machine name", "networking name", "netbios name",
-"SMB name". All terms mean the same thing with the exception of
-"netbios name" which can apply also to the name of the workgroup or the
-domain name. The terms "workgroup" and "domain" are really just a
-simply name with which the machine is associated. All NetBIOS names
-are exactly 16 characters in length. The 16th character is reserved.
-It is used to store a one byte value that indicates service level
-information for the NetBIOS name that is registered. A NetBIOS machine
-name is therefore registered for each service type that is provided by
-the client/server.</P
-><P
->The following are typical NetBIOS name/service type registrations:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> Unique NetBIOS Names:
- MACHINENAME&#60;00&#62; = Server Service is running on MACHINENAME
- MACHINENAME&#60;03&#62; = Generic Machine Name (NetBIOS name)
- MACHINENAME&#60;20&#62; = LanMan Server service is running on MACHINENAME
- WORKGROUP&#60;1b&#62; = Domain Master Browser
-
- Group Names:
- WORKGROUP&#60;03&#62; = Generic Name registered by all members of WORKGROUP
- WORKGROUP&#60;1c&#62; = Domain Controllers / Netlogon Servers
- WORKGROUP&#60;1d&#62; = Local Master Browsers
- WORKGROUP&#60;1e&#62; = Internet Name Resolvers</PRE
-></P
-><P
->It should be noted that all NetBIOS machines register their own
-names as per the above. This is in vast contrast to TCP/IP
-installations where traditionally the system administrator will
-determine in the /etc/hosts or in the DNS database what names
-are associated with each IP address.</P
-><P
->One further point of clarification should be noted, the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/hosts</TT
->
-file and the DNS records do not provide the NetBIOS name type information
-that MS Windows clients depend on to locate the type of service that may
-be needed. An example of this is what happens when an MS Windows client
-wants to locate a domain logon server. It find this service and the IP
-address of a server that provides it by performing a lookup (via a
-NetBIOS broadcast) for enumeration of all machines that have
-registered the name type *&#60;1c&#62;. A logon request is then sent to each
-IP address that is returned in the enumerated list of IP addresses. Which
-ever machine first replies then ends up providing the logon services.</P
-><P
->The name "workgroup" or "domain" really can be confusing since these
-have the added significance of indicating what is the security
-architecture of the MS Windows network. The term "workgroup" indicates
-that the primary nature of the network environment is that of a
-peer-to-peer design. In a WORKGROUP all machines are responsible for
-their own security, and generally such security is limited to use of
-just a password (known as SHARE MODE security). In most situations
-with peer-to-peer networking the users who control their own machines
-will simply opt to have no security at all. It is possible to have
-USER MODE security in a WORKGROUP environment, thus requiring use
-of a user name and a matching password.</P
-><P
->MS Windows networking is thus predetermined to use machine names
-for all local and remote machine message passing. The protocol used is
-called Server Message Block (SMB) and this is implemented using
-the NetBIOS protocol (Network Basic Input Output System). NetBIOS can
-be encapsulated using LLC (Logical Link Control) protocol - in which case
-the resulting protocol is called NetBEUI (Network Basic Extended User
-Interface). NetBIOS can also be run over IPX (Internetworking Packet
-Exchange) protocol as used by Novell NetWare, and it can be run
-over TCP/IP protocols - in which case the resulting protocol is called
-NBT or NetBT, the NetBIOS over TCP/IP.</P
-><P
->MS Windows machines use a complex array of name resolution mechanisms.
-Since we are primarily concerned with TCP/IP this demonstration is
-limited to this area.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3833"
->23.2.1. The NetBIOS Name Cache</A
-></H3
-><P
->All MS Windows machines employ an in memory buffer in which is
-stored the NetBIOS names and IP addresses for all external
-machines that that machine has communicated with over the
-past 10-15 minutes. It is more efficient to obtain an IP address
-for a machine from the local cache than it is to go through all the
-configured name resolution mechanisms.</P
-><P
->If a machine whose name is in the local name cache has been shut
-down before the name had been expired and flushed from the cache, then
-an attempt to exchange a message with that machine will be subject
-to time-out delays. i.e.: Its name is in the cache, so a name resolution
-lookup will succeed, but the machine can not respond. This can be
-frustrating for users - but it is a characteristic of the protocol.</P
-><P
->The MS Windows utility that allows examination of the NetBIOS
-name cache is called "nbtstat". The Samba equivalent of this
-is called "nmblookup".</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3838"
->23.2.2. The LMHOSTS file</A
-></H3
-><P
->This file is usually located in MS Windows NT 4.0 or
-2000 in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->C:\WINNT\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\ETC</TT
-> and contains
-the IP Address and the machine name in matched pairs. The
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->LMHOSTS</TT
-> file performs NetBIOS name
-to IP address mapping oriented.</P
-><P
->It typically looks like:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> # Copyright (c) 1998 Microsoft Corp.
- #
- # This is a sample LMHOSTS file used by the Microsoft Wins Client (NetBIOS
- # over TCP/IP) stack for Windows98
- #
- # This file contains the mappings of IP addresses to NT computernames
- # (NetBIOS) names. Each entry should be kept on an individual line.
- # The IP address should be placed in the first column followed by the
- # corresponding computername. The address and the comptername
- # should be separated by at least one space or tab. The "#" character
- # is generally used to denote the start of a comment (see the exceptions
- # below).
- #
- # This file is compatible with Microsoft LAN Manager 2.x TCP/IP lmhosts
- # files and offers the following extensions:
- #
- # #PRE
- # #DOM:&#60;domain&#62;
- # #INCLUDE &#60;filename&#62;
- # #BEGIN_ALTERNATE
- # #END_ALTERNATE
- # \0xnn (non-printing character support)
- #
- # Following any entry in the file with the characters "#PRE" will cause
- # the entry to be preloaded into the name cache. By default, entries are
- # not preloaded, but are parsed only after dynamic name resolution fails.
- #
- # Following an entry with the "#DOM:&#60;domain&#62;" tag will associate the
- # entry with the domain specified by &#60;domain&#62;. This affects how the
- # browser and logon services behave in TCP/IP environments. To preload
- # the host name associated with #DOM entry, it is necessary to also add a
- # #PRE to the line. The &#60;domain&#62; is always preloaded although it will not
- # be shown when the name cache is viewed.
- #
- # Specifying "#INCLUDE &#60;filename&#62;" will force the RFC NetBIOS (NBT)
- # software to seek the specified &#60;filename&#62; and parse it as if it were
- # local. &#60;filename&#62; is generally a UNC-based name, allowing a
- # centralized lmhosts file to be maintained on a server.
- # It is ALWAYS necessary to provide a mapping for the IP address of the
- # server prior to the #INCLUDE. This mapping must use the #PRE directive.
- # In addtion the share "public" in the example below must be in the
- # LanManServer list of "NullSessionShares" in order for client machines to
- # be able to read the lmhosts file successfully. This key is under
- # \machine\system\currentcontrolset\services\lanmanserver\parameters\nullsessionshares
- # in the registry. Simply add "public" to the list found there.
- #
- # The #BEGIN_ and #END_ALTERNATE keywords allow multiple #INCLUDE
- # statements to be grouped together. Any single successful include
- # will cause the group to succeed.
- #
- # Finally, non-printing characters can be embedded in mappings by
- # first surrounding the NetBIOS name in quotations, then using the
- # \0xnn notation to specify a hex value for a non-printing character.
- #
- # The following example illustrates all of these extensions:
- #
- # 102.54.94.97 rhino #PRE #DOM:networking #net group's DC
- # 102.54.94.102 "appname \0x14" #special app server
- # 102.54.94.123 popular #PRE #source server
- # 102.54.94.117 localsrv #PRE #needed for the include
- #
- # #BEGIN_ALTERNATE
- # #INCLUDE \\localsrv\public\lmhosts
- # #INCLUDE \\rhino\public\lmhosts
- # #END_ALTERNATE
- #
- # In the above example, the "appname" server contains a special
- # character in its name, the "popular" and "localsrv" server names are
- # preloaded, and the "rhino" server name is specified so it can be used
- # to later #INCLUDE a centrally maintained lmhosts file if the "localsrv"
- # system is unavailable.
- #
- # Note that the whole file is parsed including comments on each lookup,
- # so keeping the number of comments to a minimum will improve performance.
- # Therefore it is not advisable to simply add lmhosts file entries onto the
- # end of this file.</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3846"
->23.2.3. HOSTS file</A
-></H3
-><P
->This file is usually located in MS Windows NT 4.0 or 2000 in
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->C:\WINNT\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\ETC</TT
-> and contains
-the IP Address and the IP hostname in matched pairs. It can be
-used by the name resolution infrastructure in MS Windows, depending
-on how the TCP/IP environment is configured. This file is in
-every way the equivalent of the Unix/Linux <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/hosts</TT
-> file.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3851"
->23.2.4. DNS Lookup</A
-></H3
-><P
->This capability is configured in the TCP/IP setup area in the network
-configuration facility. If enabled an elaborate name resolution sequence
-is followed the precise nature of which isdependant on what the NetBIOS
-Node Type parameter is configured to. A Node Type of 0 means use
-NetBIOS broadcast (over UDP broadcast) is first used if the name
-that is the subject of a name lookup is not found in the NetBIOS name
-cache. If that fails then DNS, HOSTS and LMHOSTS are checked. If set to
-Node Type 8, then a NetBIOS Unicast (over UDP Unicast) is sent to the
-WINS Server to obtain a lookup before DNS, HOSTS, LMHOSTS, or broadcast
-lookup is used.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3854"
->23.2.5. WINS Lookup</A
-></H3
-><P
->A WINS (Windows Internet Name Server) service is the equivaent of the
-rfc1001/1002 specified NBNS (NetBIOS Name Server). A WINS server stores
-the names and IP addresses that are registered by a Windows client
-if the TCP/IP setup has been given at least one WINS Server IP Address.</P
-><P
->To configure Samba to be a WINS server the following parameter needs
-to be added to the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> wins support = Yes</PRE
-></P
-><P
->To configure Samba to use a WINS server the following parameters are
-needed in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> wins support = No
- wins server = xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx</PRE
-></P
-><P
->where <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx</VAR
-> is the IP address
-of the WINS server.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="IMPROVED-BROWSING"
-></A
->Chapter 24. Improved browsing in samba</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3874"
->24.1. Overview of browsing</A
-></H2
-><P
->SMB networking provides a mechanism by which clients can access a list
-of machines in a network, a so-called <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->browse list</B
->. This list
-contains machines that are ready to offer file and/or print services
-to other machines within the network. Thus it does not include
-machines which aren't currently able to do server tasks. The browse
-list is heavily used by all SMB clients. Configuration of SMB
-browsing has been problematic for some Samba users, hence this
-document.</P
-><P
->MS Windows 2000 and later, as with Samba 3 and later, can be
-configured to not use NetBIOS over TCP/IP. When configured this way
-it is imperative that name resolution (using DNS/LDAP/ADS) be correctly
-configured and operative. Browsing will NOT work if name resolution
-from SMB machine names to IP addresses does not function correctly.</P
-><P
->Where NetBIOS over TCP/IP is enabled use of a WINS server is highly
-recommended to aid the resolution of NetBIOS (SMB) names to IP addresses.
-WINS allows remote segment clients to obtain NetBIOS name_type information
-that can NOT be provided by any other means of name resolution.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3880"
->24.2. Browsing support in samba</A
-></H2
-><P
->Samba facilitates browsing. The browsing is supported by <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->nmbd</SPAN
->
-and is also controlled by options in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file.
-Samba can act as a local browse master for a workgroup and the ability
-for samba to support domain logons and scripts is now available.</P
-><P
->Samba can also act as a domain master browser for a workgroup. This
-means that it will collate lists from local browse masters into a
-wide area network server list. In order for browse clients to
-resolve the names they may find in this list, it is recommended that
-both samba and your clients use a WINS server.</P
-><P
->Note that you should NOT set Samba to be the domain master for a
-workgroup that has the same name as an NT Domain: on each wide area
-network, you must only ever have one domain master browser per workgroup,
-regardless of whether it is NT, Samba or any other type of domain master
-that is providing this service.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Nmbd can be configured as a WINS server, but it is not
-necessary to specifically use samba as your WINS server. MS Windows
-NT4, Server or Advanced Server 2000 or 2003 can be configured as
-your WINS server. In a mixed NT/2000/2003 server and samba environment on
-a Wide Area Network, it is recommended that you use the Microsoft
-WINS server capabilities. In a samba-only environment, it is
-recommended that you use one and only one Samba server as your WINS server.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->To get browsing to work you need to run nmbd as usual, but will need
-to use the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->workgroup</B
-> option in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->
-to control what workgroup Samba becomes a part of.</P
-><P
->Samba also has a useful option for a Samba server to offer itself for
-browsing on another subnet. It is recommended that this option is only
-used for 'unusual' purposes: announcements over the internet, for
-example. See <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->remote announce</B
-> in the
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> man page. </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3895"
->24.3. Problem resolution</A
-></H2
-><P
->If something doesn't work then hopefully the log.nmb file will help
-you track down the problem. Try a debug level of 2 or 3 for finding
-problems. Also note that the current browse list usually gets stored
-in text form in a file called <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->browse.dat</TT
->.</P
-><P
->Note that if it doesn't work for you, then you should still be able to
-type the server name as <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->\\SERVER</TT
-> in filemanager then
-hit enter and filemanager should display the list of available shares.</P
-><P
->Some people find browsing fails because they don't have the global
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->guest account</B
-> set to a valid account. Remember that the
-IPC$ connection that lists the shares is done as guest, and thus you must
-have a valid guest account.</P
-><P
-><SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->MS Windows 2000 and upwards (as with Samba) can be configured to disallow
-anonymous (ie: Guest account) access to the IPC$ share. In that case, the
-MS Windows 2000/XP/2003 machine acting as an SMB/CIFS client will use the
-name of the currently logged in user to query the IPC$ share. MS Windows
-9X clients are not able to do this and thus will NOT be able to browse
-server resources.</I
-></SPAN
-></P
-><P
->The other big problem people have is that their broadcast address,
-netmask or IP address is wrong (specified with the "interfaces" option
-in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->)</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3907"
->24.4. Browsing across subnets</A
-></H2
-><P
->Since the release of Samba 1.9.17(alpha1) Samba has been
-updated to enable it to support the replication of browse lists
-across subnet boundaries. New code and options have been added to
-achieve this. This section describes how to set this feature up
-in different settings.</P
-><P
->To see browse lists that span TCP/IP subnets (ie. networks separated
-by routers that don't pass broadcast traffic) you must set up at least
-one WINS server. The WINS server acts as a DNS for NetBIOS names, allowing
-NetBIOS name to IP address translation to be done by doing a direct
-query of the WINS server. This is done via a directed UDP packet on
-port 137 to the WINS server machine. The reason for a WINS server is
-that by default, all NetBIOS name to IP address translation is done
-by broadcasts from the querying machine. This means that machines
-on one subnet will not be able to resolve the names of machines on
-another subnet without using a WINS server.</P
-><P
->Remember, for browsing across subnets to work correctly, all machines,
-be they Windows 95, Windows NT, or Samba servers must have the IP address
-of a WINS server given to them by a DHCP server, or by manual configuration
-(for Win95 and WinNT, this is in the TCP/IP Properties, under Network
-settings) for Samba this is in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3913"
->24.4.1. How does cross subnet browsing work ?</A
-></H3
-><P
->Cross subnet browsing is a complicated dance, containing multiple
-moving parts. It has taken Microsoft several years to get the code
-that achieves this correct, and Samba lags behind in some areas.
-Samba is capable of cross subnet browsing when configured correctly.</P
-><P
->Consider a network set up as follows :</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> (DMB)
- N1_A N1_B N1_C N1_D N1_E
- | | | | |
- -------------------------------------------------------
- | subnet 1 |
- +---+ +---+
- |R1 | Router 1 Router 2 |R2 |
- +---+ +---+
- | |
- | subnet 2 subnet 3 |
- -------------------------- ------------------------------------
- | | | | | | | |
- N2_A N2_B N2_C N2_D N3_A N3_B N3_C N3_D
- (WINS)</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Consisting of 3 subnets (1, 2, 3) connected by two routers
-(R1, R2) - these do not pass broadcasts. Subnet 1 has 5 machines
-on it, subnet 2 has 4 machines, subnet 3 has 4 machines. Assume
-for the moment that all these machines are configured to be in the
-same workgroup (for simplicities sake). Machine N1_C on subnet 1
-is configured as Domain Master Browser (ie. it will collate the
-browse lists for the workgroup). Machine N2_D is configured as
-WINS server and all the other machines are configured to register
-their NetBIOS names with it.</P
-><P
->As all these machines are booted up, elections for master browsers
-will take place on each of the three subnets. Assume that machine
-N1_C wins on subnet 1, N2_B wins on subnet 2, and N3_D wins on
-subnet 3 - these machines are known as local master browsers for
-their particular subnet. N1_C has an advantage in winning as the
-local master browser on subnet 1 as it is set up as Domain Master
-Browser.</P
-><P
->On each of the three networks, machines that are configured to
-offer sharing services will broadcast that they are offering
-these services. The local master browser on each subnet will
-receive these broadcasts and keep a record of the fact that
-the machine is offering a service. This list of records is
-the basis of the browse list. For this case, assume that
-all the machines are configured to offer services so all machines
-will be on the browse list.</P
-><P
->For each network, the local master browser on that network is
-considered 'authoritative' for all the names it receives via
-local broadcast. This is because a machine seen by the local
-master browser via a local broadcast must be on the same
-network as the local master browser and thus is a 'trusted'
-and 'verifiable' resource. Machines on other networks that
-the local master browsers learn about when collating their
-browse lists have not been directly seen - these records are
-called 'non-authoritative'.</P
-><P
->At this point the browse lists look as follows (these are
-the machines you would see in your network neighborhood if
-you looked in it on a particular network right now).</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->Subnet Browse Master List
------- ------------- ----
-Subnet1 N1_C N1_A, N1_B, N1_C, N1_D, N1_E
-
-Subnet2 N2_B N2_A, N2_B, N2_C, N2_D
-
-Subnet3 N3_D N3_A, N3_B, N3_C, N3_D</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Note that at this point all the subnets are separate, no
-machine is seen across any of the subnets.</P
-><P
->Now examine subnet 2. As soon as N2_B has become the local
-master browser it looks for a Domain master browser to synchronize
-its browse list with. It does this by querying the WINS server
-(N2_D) for the IP address associated with the NetBIOS name
-WORKGROUP&#62;1B&#60;. This name was registerd by the Domain master
-browser (N1_C) with the WINS server as soon as it was booted.</P
-><P
->Once N2_B knows the address of the Domain master browser it
-tells it that is the local master browser for subnet 2 by
-sending a MasterAnnouncement packet as a UDP port 138 packet.
-It then synchronizes with it by doing a NetServerEnum2 call. This
-tells the Domain Master Browser to send it all the server
-names it knows about. Once the domain master browser receives
-the MasterAnnouncement packet it schedules a synchronization
-request to the sender of that packet. After both synchronizations
-are done the browse lists look like :</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->Subnet Browse Master List
------- ------------- ----
-Subnet1 N1_C N1_A, N1_B, N1_C, N1_D, N1_E,
- N2_A(*), N2_B(*), N2_C(*), N2_D(*)
-
-Subnet2 N2_B N2_A, N2_B, N2_C, N2_D
- N1_A(*), N1_B(*), N1_C(*), N1_D(*), N1_E(*)
-
-Subnet3 N3_D N3_A, N3_B, N3_C, N3_D
-
-Servers with a (*) after them are non-authoritative names.</PRE
-></P
-><P
->At this point users looking in their network neighborhood on
-subnets 1 or 2 will see all the servers on both, users on
-subnet 3 will still only see the servers on their own subnet.</P
-><P
->The same sequence of events that occured for N2_B now occurs
-for the local master browser on subnet 3 (N3_D). When it
-synchronizes browse lists with the domain master browser (N1_A)
-it gets both the server entries on subnet 1, and those on
-subnet 2. After N3_D has synchronized with N1_C and vica-versa
-the browse lists look like.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->Subnet Browse Master List
------- ------------- ----
-Subnet1 N1_C N1_A, N1_B, N1_C, N1_D, N1_E,
- N2_A(*), N2_B(*), N2_C(*), N2_D(*),
- N3_A(*), N3_B(*), N3_C(*), N3_D(*)
-
-Subnet2 N2_B N2_A, N2_B, N2_C, N2_D
- N1_A(*), N1_B(*), N1_C(*), N1_D(*), N1_E(*)
-
-Subnet3 N3_D N3_A, N3_B, N3_C, N3_D
- N1_A(*), N1_B(*), N1_C(*), N1_D(*), N1_E(*),
- N2_A(*), N2_B(*), N2_C(*), N2_D(*)
-
-Servers with a (*) after them are non-authoritative names.</PRE
-></P
-><P
->At this point users looking in their network neighborhood on
-subnets 1 or 3 will see all the servers on all sunbets, users on
-subnet 2 will still only see the servers on subnets 1 and 2, but not 3.</P
-><P
->Finally, the local master browser for subnet 2 (N2_B) will sync again
-with the domain master browser (N1_C) and will recieve the missing
-server entries. Finally - and as a steady state (if no machines
-are removed or shut off) the browse lists will look like :</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->Subnet Browse Master List
------- ------------- ----
-Subnet1 N1_C N1_A, N1_B, N1_C, N1_D, N1_E,
- N2_A(*), N2_B(*), N2_C(*), N2_D(*),
- N3_A(*), N3_B(*), N3_C(*), N3_D(*)
-
-Subnet2 N2_B N2_A, N2_B, N2_C, N2_D
- N1_A(*), N1_B(*), N1_C(*), N1_D(*), N1_E(*)
- N3_A(*), N3_B(*), N3_C(*), N3_D(*)
-
-Subnet3 N3_D N3_A, N3_B, N3_C, N3_D
- N1_A(*), N1_B(*), N1_C(*), N1_D(*), N1_E(*),
- N2_A(*), N2_B(*), N2_C(*), N2_D(*)
-
-Servers with a (*) after them are non-authoritative names.</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Synchronizations between the domain master browser and local
-master browsers will continue to occur, but this should be a
-steady state situation.</P
-><P
->If either router R1 or R2 fails the following will occur:</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> Names of computers on each side of the inaccessible network fragments
- will be maintained for as long as 36 minutes, in the network neighbourhood
- lists.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Attempts to connect to these inaccessible computers will fail, but the
- names will not be removed from the network neighbourhood lists.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> If one of the fragments is cut off from the WINS server, it will only
- be able to access servers on its local subnet, by using subnet-isolated
- broadcast NetBIOS name resolution. The effects are similar to that of
- losing access to a DNS server.
- </P
-></LI
-></OL
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3948"
->24.5. Setting up a WINS server</A
-></H2
-><P
->Either a Samba machine or a Windows NT Server machine may be set up
-as a WINS server. To set a Samba machine to be a WINS server you must
-add the following option to the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file on the selected machine :
-in the [globals] section add the line </P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
-> wins support = yes</B
-></P
-><P
->Versions of Samba prior to 1.9.17 had this parameter default to
-yes. If you have any older versions of Samba on your network it is
-strongly suggested you upgrade to a recent version, or at the very
-least set the parameter to 'no' on all these machines.</P
-><P
->Machines with <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->wins support = yes</B
-> will keep a list of
-all NetBIOS names registered with them, acting as a DNS for NetBIOS names.</P
-><P
->You should set up only ONE wins server. Do NOT set the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->wins support = yes</B
-> option on more than one Samba
-server.</P
-><P
->To set up a Windows NT Server as a WINS server you need to set up
-the WINS service - see your NT documentation for details. Note that
-Windows NT WINS Servers can replicate to each other, allowing more
-than one to be set up in a complex subnet environment. As Microsoft
-refuse to document these replication protocols Samba cannot currently
-participate in these replications. It is possible in the future that
-a Samba-&#62;Samba WINS replication protocol may be defined, in which
-case more than one Samba machine could be set up as a WINS server
-but currently only one Samba server should have the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->wins support = yes</B
-> parameter set.</P
-><P
->After the WINS server has been configured you must ensure that all
-machines participating on the network are configured with the address
-of this WINS server. If your WINS server is a Samba machine, fill in
-the Samba machine IP address in the "Primary WINS Server" field of
-the "Control Panel-&#62;Network-&#62;Protocols-&#62;TCP-&#62;WINS Server" dialogs
-in Windows 95 or Windows NT. To tell a Samba server the IP address
-of the WINS server add the following line to the [global] section of
-all <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> files :</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->wins server = &#62;name or IP address&#60;</B
-></P
-><P
->where &#62;name or IP address&#60; is either the DNS name of the WINS server
-machine or its IP address.</P
-><P
->Note that this line MUST NOT BE SET in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file of the Samba
-server acting as the WINS server itself. If you set both the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->wins support = yes</B
-> option and the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->wins server = &#60;name&#62;</B
-> option then
-nmbd will fail to start.</P
-><P
->There are two possible scenarios for setting up cross subnet browsing.
-The first details setting up cross subnet browsing on a network containing
-Windows 95, Samba and Windows NT machines that are not configured as
-part of a Windows NT Domain. The second details setting up cross subnet
-browsing on networks that contain NT Domains.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3971"
->24.6. Setting up Browsing in a WORKGROUP</A
-></H2
-><P
->To set up cross subnet browsing on a network containing machines
-in up to be in a WORKGROUP, not an NT Domain you need to set up one
-Samba server to be the Domain Master Browser (note that this is *NOT*
-the same as a Primary Domain Controller, although in an NT Domain the
-same machine plays both roles). The role of a Domain master browser is
-to collate the browse lists from local master browsers on all the
-subnets that have a machine participating in the workgroup. Without
-one machine configured as a domain master browser each subnet would
-be an isolated workgroup, unable to see any machines on any other
-subnet. It is the presense of a domain master browser that makes
-cross subnet browsing possible for a workgroup.</P
-><P
->In an WORKGROUP environment the domain master browser must be a
-Samba server, and there must only be one domain master browser per
-workgroup name. To set up a Samba server as a domain master browser,
-set the following option in the [global] section of the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file :</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->domain master = yes</B
-></P
-><P
->The domain master browser should also preferrably be the local master
-browser for its own subnet. In order to achieve this set the following
-options in the [global] section of the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file :</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->domain master = yes
-local master = yes
-preferred master = yes
-os level = 65</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The domain master browser may be the same machine as the WINS
-server, if you require.</P
-><P
->Next, you should ensure that each of the subnets contains a
-machine that can act as a local master browser for the
-workgroup. Any MS Windows NT/2K/XP/2003 machine should be
-able to do this, as will Windows 9x machines (although these
-tend to get rebooted more often, so it's not such a good idea
-to use these). To make a Samba server a local master browser
-set the following options in the [global] section of the
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file :</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->domain master = no
-local master = yes
-preferred master = yes
-os level = 65</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Do not do this for more than one Samba server on each subnet,
-or they will war with each other over which is to be the local
-master browser.</P
-><P
->The <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->local master</B
-> parameter allows Samba to act as a
-local master browser. The <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->preferred master</B
-> causes nmbd
-to force a browser election on startup and the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->os level</B
->
-parameter sets Samba high enough so that it should win any browser elections.</P
-><P
->If you have an NT machine on the subnet that you wish to
-be the local master browser then you can disable Samba from
-becoming a local master browser by setting the following
-options in the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->[global]</B
-> section of the
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file :</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->domain master = no
-local master = no
-preferred master = no
-os level = 0</PRE
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN3997"
->24.7. Setting up Browsing in a DOMAIN</A
-></H2
-><P
->If you are adding Samba servers to a Windows NT Domain then
-you must not set up a Samba server as a domain master browser.
-By default, a Windows NT Primary Domain Controller for a Domain
-name is also the Domain master browser for that name, and many
-things will break if a Samba server registers the Domain master
-browser NetBIOS name (<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->DOMAIN</VAR
->&#60;1B&#62;)
-with WINS instead of the PDC.</P
-><P
->For subnets other than the one containing the Windows NT PDC
-you may set up Samba servers as local master browsers as
-described. To make a Samba server a local master browser set
-the following options in the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->[global]</B
-> section
-of the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file :</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->domain master = no
-local master = yes
-preferred master = yes
-os level = 65</PRE
-></P
-><P
->If you wish to have a Samba server fight the election with machines
-on the same subnet you may set the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->os level</B
-> parameter
-to lower levels. By doing this you can tune the order of machines that
-will become local master browsers if they are running. For
-more details on this see the section <A
-HREF="#BROWSE-FORCE-MASTER"
->Forcing samba to be the master browser</A
->
-below.</P
-><P
->If you have Windows NT machines that are members of the domain
-on all subnets, and you are sure they will always be running then
-you can disable Samba from taking part in browser elections and
-ever becoming a local master browser by setting following options
-in the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->[global]</B
-> section of the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->
-file :</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
-> domain master = no
- local master = no
- preferred master = no
- os level = 0</B
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="BROWSE-FORCE-MASTER"
->24.8. Forcing samba to be the master</A
-></H2
-><P
->Who becomes the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->master browser</B
-> is determined by an election
-process using broadcasts. Each election packet contains a number of parameters
-which determine what precedence (bias) a host should have in the
-election. By default Samba uses a very low precedence and thus loses
-elections to just about anyone else.</P
-><P
->If you want Samba to win elections then just set the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->os level</B
-> global
-option in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> to a higher number. It defaults to 0. Using 34
-would make it win all elections over every other system (except other
-samba systems!)</P
-><P
->A <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->os level</B
-> of 2 would make it beat WfWg and Win95, but not MS Windows
-NT/2K Server. A MS Windows NT/2K Server domain controller uses level 32.</P
-><P
->The maximum os level is 255</P
-><P
->If you want samba to force an election on startup, then set the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->preferred master</B
-> global option in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> to "yes". Samba will
-then have a slight advantage over other potential master browsers
-that are not preferred master browsers. Use this parameter with
-care, as if you have two hosts (whether they are windows 95 or NT or
-samba) on the same local subnet both set with <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->preferred master</B
-> to
-"yes", then periodically and continually they will force an election
-in order to become the local master browser.</P
-><P
->If you want samba to be a <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->domain master browser</B
->, then it is
-recommended that you also set <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->preferred master</B
-> to "yes", because
-samba will not become a domain master browser for the whole of your
-LAN or WAN if it is not also a local master browser on its own
-broadcast isolated subnet.</P
-><P
->It is possible to configure two samba servers to attempt to become
-the domain master browser for a domain. The first server that comes
-up will be the domain master browser. All other samba servers will
-attempt to become the domain master browser every 5 minutes. They
-will find that another samba server is already the domain master
-browser and will fail. This provides automatic redundancy, should
-the current domain master browser fail.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4032"
->24.9. Making samba the domain master</A
-></H2
-><P
->The domain master is responsible for collating the browse lists of
-multiple subnets so that browsing can occur between subnets. You can
-make samba act as the domain master by setting <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->domain master = yes</B
->
-in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->. By default it will not be a domain master.</P
-><P
->Note that you should NOT set Samba to be the domain master for a
-workgroup that has the same name as an NT Domain.</P
-><P
->When samba is the domain master and the master browser it will listen
-for master announcements (made roughly every twelve minutes) from local
-master browsers on other subnets and then contact them to synchronise
-browse lists.</P
-><P
->If you want samba to be the domain master then I suggest you also set
-the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->os level</B
-> high enough to make sure it wins elections, and set
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->preferred master</B
-> to "yes", to get samba to force an election on
-startup.</P
-><P
->Note that all your servers (including samba) and clients should be
-using a WINS server to resolve NetBIOS names. If your clients are only
-using broadcasting to resolve NetBIOS names, then two things will occur:</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> your local master browsers will be unable to find a domain master
- browser, as it will only be looking on the local subnet.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> if a client happens to get hold of a domain-wide browse list, and
- a user attempts to access a host in that list, it will be unable to
- resolve the NetBIOS name of that host.
- </P
-></LI
-></OL
-><P
->If, however, both samba and your clients are using a WINS server, then:</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> your local master browsers will contact the WINS server and, as long as
- samba has registered that it is a domain master browser with the WINS
- server, your local master browser will receive samba's ip address
- as its domain master browser.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> when a client receives a domain-wide browse list, and a user attempts
- to access a host in that list, it will contact the WINS server to
- resolve the NetBIOS name of that host. as long as that host has
- registered its NetBIOS name with the same WINS server, the user will
- be able to see that host.
- </P
-></LI
-></OL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4054"
->24.10. Note about broadcast addresses</A
-></H2
-><P
->If your network uses a "0" based broadcast address (for example if it
-ends in a 0) then you will strike problems. Windows for Workgroups
-does not seem to support a 0's broadcast and you will probably find
-that browsing and name lookups won't work.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4057"
->24.11. Multiple interfaces</A
-></H2
-><P
->Samba now supports machines with multiple network interfaces. If you
-have multiple interfaces then you will need to use the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->interfaces</B
->
-option in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> to configure them. </P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="SECURING-SAMBA"
-></A
->Chapter 25. Securing Samba</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4073"
->25.1. Introduction</A
-></H2
-><P
->This note was attached to the Samba 2.2.8 release notes as it contained an
-important security fix. The information contained here applies to Samba
-installations in general.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4076"
->25.2. Using host based protection</A
-></H2
-><P
->In many installations of Samba the greatest threat comes for outside
-your immediate network. By default Samba will accept connections from
-any host, which means that if you run an insecure version of Samba on
-a host that is directly connected to the Internet you can be
-especially vulnerable.</P
-><P
->One of the simplest fixes in this case is to use the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->hosts allow</B
-> and
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->hosts deny</B
-> options in the Samba <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> configuration file to only
-allow access to your server from a specific range of hosts. An example
-might be:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> hosts allow = 127.0.0.1 192.168.2.0/24 192.168.3.0/24
- hosts deny = 0.0.0.0/0</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The above will only allow SMB connections from 'localhost' (your own
-computer) and from the two private networks 192.168.2 and
-192.168.3. All other connections will be refused connections as soon
-as the client sends its first packet. The refusal will be marked as a
-'not listening on called name' error.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4086"
->25.3. Using interface protection</A
-></H2
-><P
->By default Samba will accept connections on any network interface that
-it finds on your system. That means if you have a ISDN line or a PPP
-connection to the Internet then Samba will accept connections on those
-links. This may not be what you want.</P
-><P
->You can change this behaviour using options like the following:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> interfaces = eth* lo
- bind interfaces only = yes</PRE
-></P
-><P
->This tells Samba to only listen for connections on interfaces with a
-name starting with 'eth' such as eth0, eth1, plus on the loopback
-interface called 'lo'. The name you will need to use depends on what
-OS you are using, in the above I used the common name for Ethernet
-adapters on Linux.</P
-><P
->If you use the above and someone tries to make a SMB connection to
-your host over a PPP interface called 'ppp0' then they will get a TCP
-connection refused reply. In that case no Samba code is run at all as
-the operating system has been told not to pass connections from that
-interface to any process.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4094"
->25.4. Using a firewall</A
-></H2
-><P
->Many people use a firewall to deny access to services that they don't
-want exposed outside their network. This can be a very good idea,
-although I would recommend using it in conjunction with the above
-methods so that you are protected even if your firewall is not active
-for some reason.</P
-><P
->If you are setting up a firewall then you need to know what TCP and
-UDP ports to allow and block. Samba uses the following:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->UDP/137 - used by nmbd
-UDP/138 - used by nmbd
-TCP/139 - used by smbd
-TCP/445 - used by smbd</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The last one is important as many older firewall setups may not be
-aware of it, given that this port was only added to the protocol in
-recent years. </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4101"
->25.5. Using a IPC$ share deny</A
-></H2
-><P
->If the above methods are not suitable, then you could also place a
-more specific deny on the IPC$ share that is used in the recently
-discovered security hole. This allows you to offer access to other
-shares while denying access to IPC$ from potentially untrustworthy
-hosts.</P
-><P
->To do that you could use:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> [ipc$]
- hosts allow = 192.168.115.0/24 127.0.0.1
- hosts deny = 0.0.0.0/0</PRE
-></P
-><P
->this would tell Samba that IPC$ connections are not allowed from
-anywhere but the two listed places (localhost and a local
-subnet). Connections to other shares would still be allowed. As the
-IPC$ share is the only share that is always accessible anonymously
-this provides some level of protection against attackers that do not
-know a username/password for your host.</P
-><P
->If you use this method then clients will be given a 'access denied'
-reply when they try to access the IPC$ share. That means that those
-clients will not be able to browse shares, and may also be unable to
-access some other resources. </P
-><P
->This is not recommended unless you cannot use one of the other
-methods listed above for some reason.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4110"
->25.6. Upgrading Samba</A
-></H2
-><P
->Please check regularly on <A
-HREF="http://www.samba.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.samba.org/</A
-> for updates and
-important announcements. Occasionally security releases are made and
-it is highly recommended to upgrade Samba when a security vulnerability
-is discovered.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="UNICODE"
-></A
->Chapter 26. Unicode/Charsets</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4132"
->26.1. What are charsets and unicode?</A
-></H2
-><P
->Computers communicate in numbers. In texts, each number will be
-translated to a corresponding letter. The meaning that will be assigned
-to a certain number depends on the <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->character set(charset)</I
-></SPAN
-> that is used.
-A charset can be seen as a table that is used to translate numbers to
-letters. Not all computers use the same charset (there are charsets
-with German umlauts, Japanese characters, etc). Usually a charset contains
-256 characters, which means that storing a character with it takes
-exactly one byte. </P
-><P
->There are also charsets that support even more characters,
-but those need twice(or even more) as much storage space. These
-charsets can contain <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->256 * 256 = 65536</B
-> characters, which
-is more then all possible characters one could think of. They are called
-multibyte charsets (because they use more then one byte to
-store one character). </P
-><P
->A standardised multibyte charset is unicode, info available at
-<A
-HREF="http://www.unicode.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->www.unicode.org</A
->.
-Big advantage of using a multibyte charset is that you only need one; no
-need to make sure two computers use the same charset when they are
-communicating.</P
-><P
->Old windows clients used to use single-byte charsets, named
-'codepages' by microsoft. However, there is no support for
-negotiating the charset to be used in the smb protocol. Thus, you
-have to make sure you are using the same charset when talking to an old client.
-Newer clients (Windows NT, 2K, XP) talk unicode over the wire.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4141"
->26.2. Samba and charsets</A
-></H2
-><P
->As of samba 3.0, samba can (and will) talk unicode over the wire. Internally,
-samba knows of three kinds of character sets: </P
-><P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
->unix charset</DT
-><DD
-><P
-> This is the charset used internally by your operating system.
- The default is <CODE
-CLASS="CONSTANT"
->ASCII</CODE
->, which is fine for most
- systems.
- </P
-></DD
-><DT
->display charset</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This is the charset samba will use to print messages
- on your screen. It should generally be the same as the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->unix charset</B
->.
- </P
-></DD
-><DT
->dos charset</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This is the charset samba uses when communicating with
- DOS and Windows 9x clients. It will talk unicode to all newer clients.
- The default depends on the charsets you have installed on your system.
- Run <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->testparm -v | grep "dos charset"</B
-> to see
- what the default is on your system.
- </P
-></DD
-></DL
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4160"
->26.3. Conversion from old names</A
-></H2
-><P
->Because previous samba versions did not do any charset conversion,
-characters in filenames are usually not correct in the unix charset but only
-for the local charset used by the DOS/Windows clients.</P
-><P
->The following script from Steve Langasek converts all
-filenames from CP850 to the iso8859-15 charset.</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->#</SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->find <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->/path/to/share</VAR
-> -type f -exec bash -c 'CP="{}"; ISO=`echo -n "$CP" | iconv -f cp850 \
- -t iso8859-15`; if [ "$CP" != "$ISO" ]; then mv "$CP" "$ISO"; fi' \;</KBD
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4168"
->26.4. Japanese charsets</A
-></H2
-><P
->Samba doesn't work correctly with Japanese charsets yet. Here are points of attention when setting it up:</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->You should set <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->mangling method = hash</B
-></TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->There are various iconv() implementations around and not all of
-them work equally well. glibc2's iconv() has a critical problem in CP932.
-libiconv-1.8 works with CP932 but still has some problems and does not
-work with EUC-JP. </TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->You should set <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->dos charset = CP932</B
->, not Shift_JIS, SJIS...</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Currently only <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->unix charset = CP932</B
-> will work (but still has some problems...) because of iconv() issues. <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->unix charset = EUC-JP</B
-> doesn't work well because of iconv() issues.</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Currently Samba 3.0 does not support <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->unix charset = UTF8-MAC/CAP/HEX/JIS*</B
-></TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-><P
->More information (in Japanese) is available at: <A
-HREF="http://www.atmarkit.co.jp/flinux/special/samba3/samba3a.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.atmarkit.co.jp/flinux/special/samba3/samba3a.html</A
->.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="PART"
-><A
-NAME="APPENDIXES"
-></A
-><DIV
-CLASS="TITLEPAGE"
-><H1
-CLASS="TITLE"
->IV. Appendixes</H1
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="COMPILING"
-></A
->Chapter 27. How to compile SAMBA</H1
-><P
->You can obtain the samba source from the <A
-HREF="http://samba.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->samba website</A
->. To obtain a development version,
-you can download samba from CVS or using rsync.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4204"
->27.1. Access Samba source code via CVS</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4206"
->27.1.1. Introduction</A
-></H3
-><P
->Samba is developed in an open environment. Developers use CVS
-(Concurrent Versioning System) to "checkin" (also known as
-"commit") new source code. Samba's various CVS branches can
-be accessed via anonymous CVS using the instructions
-detailed in this chapter.</P
-><P
->This chapter is a modified version of the instructions found at
-<A
-HREF="http://samba.org/samba/cvs.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://samba.org/samba/cvs.html</A
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4211"
->27.1.2. CVS Access to samba.org</A
-></H3
-><P
->The machine samba.org runs a publicly accessible CVS
-repository for access to the source code of several packages,
-including samba, rsync and jitterbug. There are two main ways of
-accessing the CVS server on this host.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4214"
->27.1.2.1. Access via CVSweb</A
-></H4
-><P
->You can access the source code via your
-favourite WWW browser. This allows you to access the contents of
-individual files in the repository and also to look at the revision
-history and commit logs of individual files. You can also ask for a diff
-listing between any two versions on the repository.</P
-><P
->Use the URL : <A
-HREF="http://samba.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://samba.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb</A
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4219"
->27.1.2.2. Access via cvs</A
-></H4
-><P
->You can also access the source code via a
-normal cvs client. This gives you much more control over you can
-do with the repository and allows you to checkout whole source trees
-and keep them up to date via normal cvs commands. This is the
-preferred method of access if you are a developer and not
-just a casual browser.</P
-><P
->To download the latest cvs source code, point your
-browser at the URL : <A
-HREF="http://www.cyclic.com/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.cyclic.com/</A
->.
-and click on the 'How to get cvs' link. CVS is free software under
-the GNU GPL (as is Samba). Note that there are several graphical CVS clients
-which provide a graphical interface to the sometimes mundane CVS commands.
-Links to theses clients are also available from http://www.cyclic.com.</P
-><P
->To gain access via anonymous cvs use the following steps.
-For this example it is assumed that you want a copy of the
-samba source code. For the other source code repositories
-on this system just substitute the correct package name</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> Install a recent copy of cvs. All you really need is a
- copy of the cvs client binary.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Run the command
- </P
-><P
-> <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->cvs -d :pserver:cvs@samba.org:/cvsroot login</KBD
->
- </P
-><P
-> When it asks you for a password type <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->cvs</KBD
->.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Run the command
- </P
-><P
-> <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->cvs -d :pserver:cvs@samba.org:/cvsroot co samba</KBD
->
- </P
-><P
-> This will create a directory called samba containing the
- latest samba source code (i.e. the HEAD tagged cvs branch). This
- currently corresponds to the 3.0 development tree.
- </P
-><P
-> CVS branches other HEAD can be obtained by using the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->-r</VAR
->
- and defining a tag name. A list of branch tag names can be found on the
- "Development" page of the samba web site. A common request is to obtain the
- latest 2.2 release code. This could be done by using the following userinput.
- </P
-><P
-> <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->cvs -d :pserver:cvs@samba.org:/cvsroot co -r SAMBA_2_2 samba</KBD
->
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Whenever you want to merge in the latest code changes use
- the following command from within the samba directory:
- </P
-><P
-> <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->cvs update -d -P</KBD
->
- </P
-></LI
-></OL
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4247"
->27.2. Accessing the samba sources via rsync and ftp</A
-></H2
-><P
-> pserver.samba.org also exports unpacked copies of most parts of the CVS tree at <A
-HREF="ftp://pserver.samba.org/pub/unpacked"
-TARGET="_top"
->ftp://pserver.samba.org/pub/unpacked</A
-> and also via anonymous rsync at rsync://pserver.samba.org/ftp/unpacked/. I recommend using rsync rather than ftp.
- See <A
-HREF="http://rsync.samba.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->the rsync homepage</A
-> for more info on rsync.
- </P
-><P
-> The disadvantage of the unpacked trees
- is that they do not support automatic
- merging of local changes like CVS does.
- rsync access is most convenient for an
- initial install.
- </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4253"
->27.3. Verifying Samba's PGP signature</A
-></H2
-><P
->In these days of insecurity, it's strongly recommended that you verify the PGP signature for any
-source file before installing it. According to Jerry Carter of the Samba Team, only about 22% of
-all Samba downloads have had a corresponding PGP signature download (a very low percentage, which
-should be considered a bad thing). Even if you're not downloading from a mirror site, verifying PGP
-signatures should be a standard reflex.</P
-><P
->With that said, go ahead and download the following files:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> $ wget http://us1.samba.org/samba/ftp/samba-2.2.8a.tar.asc
- $ wget http://us1.samba.org/samba/ftp/samba-pubkey.asc</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The first file is the PGP signature for the Samba source file; the other is the Samba public
-PGP key itself. Import the public PGP key with:</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> $ gpg --import samba-pubkey.asc</PRE
-><P
->And verify the Samba source code integrity with:</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> $ gzip -d samba-2.2.8a.tar.gz
- $ gpg --verify samba-2.2.8a.tar.asc</PRE
-><P
->If you receive a message like, "Good signature from Samba Distribution Verification Key..."
-then all is well. The warnings about trust relationships can be ignored. An example of what
-you would not want to see would be:</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> gpg: BAD signature from "Samba Distribution Verification Key"</PRE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4265"
->27.4. Building the Binaries</A
-></H2
-><P
->To do this, first run the program <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->./configure
- </KBD
-> in the source directory. This should automatically
- configure Samba for your operating system. If you have unusual
- needs then you may wish to run</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->./configure --help
- </KBD
-></P
-><P
->first to see what special options you can enable.
- Then executing</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->make</KBD
-></P
-><P
->will create the binaries. Once it's successfully
- compiled you can use </P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->make install</KBD
-></P
-><P
->to install the binaries and manual pages. You can
- separately install the binaries and/or man pages using</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->make installbin
- </KBD
-></P
-><P
->and</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->make installman
- </KBD
-></P
-><P
->Note that if you are upgrading for a previous version
- of Samba you might like to know that the old versions of
- the binaries will be renamed with a ".old" extension. You
- can go back to the previous version with</P
-><P
-><SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->root# </SAMP
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->make revert
- </KBD
-></P
-><P
->if you find this version a disaster!</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4293"
->27.4.1. Compiling samba with Active Directory support</A
-></H3
-><P
->In order to compile samba with ADS support, you need to have installed
- on your system:
- <P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->the MIT kerberos development libraries (either install from the sources or use a package). The heimdal libraries will not work.</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->the OpenLDAP development libraries.</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></P
-><P
->If your kerberos libraries are in a non-standard location then
- remember to add the configure option --with-krb5=DIR.</P
-><P
->After you run configure make sure that <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->include/config.h</TT
-> it generates contains lines like this:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->#define HAVE_KRB5 1
-#define HAVE_LDAP 1
- </PRE
-></P
-><P
->If it doesn't then configure did not find your krb5 libraries or
- your ldap libraries. Look in config.log to figure out why and fix
- it.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4305"
->27.4.1.1. Installing the required packages for Debian</A
-></H4
-><P
->On Debian you need to install the following packages:</P
-><P
-> <P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->libkrb5-dev</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->krb5-user</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
->
- </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><HR><H4
-CLASS="SECT3"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4312"
->27.4.1.2. Installing the required packages for RedHat</A
-></H4
-><P
->On RedHat this means you should have at least: </P
-><P
-> <P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->krb5-workstation (for kinit)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->krb5-libs (for linking with)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->krb5-devel (because you are compiling from source)</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
->
- </P
-><P
->in addition to the standard development environment.</P
-><P
->Note that these are not standard on a RedHat install, and you may need
- to get them off CD2.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4322"
->27.5. Starting the smbd and nmbd</A
-></H2
-><P
->You must choose to start smbd and nmbd either
- as daemons or from <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->inetd</SPAN
->Don't try
- to do both! Either you can put them in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
-> inetd.conf</TT
-> and have them started on demand
- by <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->inetd</SPAN
->, or you can start them as
- daemons either from the command line or in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
-> /etc/rc.local</TT
->. See the man pages for details
- on the command line options. Take particular care to read
- the bit about what user you need to be in order to start
- Samba. In many cases you must be root.</P
-><P
->The main advantage of starting <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbd</SPAN
->
- and <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->nmbd</SPAN
-> using the recommended daemon method
- is that they will respond slightly more quickly to an initial connection
- request.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4332"
->27.5.1. Starting from inetd.conf</A
-></H3
-><P
->NOTE; The following will be different if
- you use NIS, NIS+ or LDAP to distribute services maps.</P
-><P
->Look at your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/services</TT
->.
- What is defined at port 139/tcp. If nothing is defined
- then add a line like this:</P
-><P
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->netbios-ssn 139/tcp</KBD
-></P
-><P
->similarly for 137/udp you should have an entry like:</P
-><P
-><KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->netbios-ns 137/udp</KBD
-></P
-><P
->Next edit your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/inetd.conf</TT
->
- and add two lines something like this:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> netbios-ssn stream tcp nowait root /usr/local/samba/bin/smbd smbd
- netbios-ns dgram udp wait root /usr/local/samba/bin/nmbd nmbd
- </PRE
-></P
-><P
->The exact syntax of <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/inetd.conf</TT
->
- varies between unixes. Look at the other entries in inetd.conf
- for a guide.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Some unixes already have entries like netbios_ns
- (note the underscore) in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/services</TT
->.
- You must either edit <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/services</TT
-> or
- <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/inetd.conf</TT
-> to make them consistent.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->On many systems you may need to use the
- <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->interfaces</B
-> option in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> to specify the IP address
- and netmask of your interfaces. Run <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->ifconfig</SPAN
->
- as root if you don't know what the broadcast is for your
- net. <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->nmbd</SPAN
-> tries to determine it at run
- time, but fails on some unixes.
- </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="WARNING"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="WARNING"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/warning.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Warning"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Many unixes only accept around 5
- parameters on the command line in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->inetd.conf</TT
->.
- This means you shouldn't use spaces between the options and
- arguments, or you should use a script, and start the script
- from <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->inetd</B
->.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->Restart <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->inetd</B
->, perhaps just send
- it a HUP. If you have installed an earlier version of <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
-> nmbd</SPAN
-> then you may need to kill nmbd as well.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4366"
->27.5.2. Alternative: starting it as a daemon</A
-></H3
-><P
->To start the server as a daemon you should create
- a script something like this one, perhaps calling
- it <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->startsmb</TT
->.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> #!/bin/sh
- /usr/local/samba/bin/smbd -D
- /usr/local/samba/bin/nmbd -D
- </PRE
-></P
-><P
->then make it executable with <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->chmod
- +x startsmb</B
-></P
-><P
->You can then run <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->startsmb</B
-> by
- hand or execute it from <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/rc.local</TT
->
- </P
-><P
->To kill it send a kill signal to the processes
- <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->nmbd</B
-> and <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->smbd</B
->.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->If you use the SVR4 style init system then
- you may like to look at the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->examples/svr4-startup</TT
->
- script to make Samba fit into that system.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="NT4MIGRATION"
-></A
->Chapter 28. Migration from NT4 PDC to Samba-3 PDC</H1
-><P
->This is a rough guide to assist those wishing to migrate from NT4 domain control to
-Samba-3 based domain control.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4396"
->28.1. Planning and Getting Started</A
-></H2
-><P
->In the IT world there is often a saying that all problems are encountered because of
-poor planning. The corrollary to this saying is that not all problems can be anticpated
-and planned for. Then again, good planning will anticpate most show stopper type situations.</P
-><P
->Those wishing to migrate from MS Windows NT4 domain control to a Samba-3 domain control
-environment would do well to develop a detailed migration plan. So here are a few pointers to
-help migration get under way.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4400"
->28.1.1. Objectives</A
-></H3
-><P
->The key objective for most organisations will be to make the migration from MS Windows NT4
-to Samba-3 domain control as painless as possible. One of the challenges you may experience
-in your migration process may well be one of convincing management that the new environment
-should remain in place. Many who have introduced open source technologies have experienced
-pressure to return to a Microsoft based platform solution at the first sign of trouble. </P
-><P
->It is strongly advised that before attempting a migration to a Samba-3 controlled network
-that every possible effort be made to gain all-round commitment to the change. Firstly, you
-should know precisely <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->why</I
-></SPAN
-> the change is important for the organisation.
-Possible motivations to make a change include:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Improve network manageability</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Obtain better user level functionality</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Reduce network operating costs</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Reduce exposure caused by Microsoft withdrawal of NT4 support</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Avoid MS License 6 implications</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Reduce organisation's dependency on Microsoft</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->It is vital that oit be well recognised that Samba-3 is NOT MS Windows NT4. Samba-3 offers
-an alternative solution that is both different from MS Windows NT4 and that offers some
-advantages compared with it. It should also be recognised that Samba-3 lacks many of the
-features that Microsoft has promoted as core values in migration from MS Windows NT4 to
-MS Windows 2000 and beyond (with or without Active Directory services).</P
-><P
->What are the features the Samba-3 can NOT provide?</P
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="0"
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->Active Directory Server</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Group Policy Objects (in Active Direcrtory)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Machine Policy objects</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Logon Scripts in Active Directorty</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->Software Application and Access Controls in Active Directory</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-><P
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4426"
->28.1.2. Steps In Migration Process</A
-></H3
-><P
->This is not a definitive ste-by-step process yet - just a place holder so the info
-is not lost.
-
-1. You will have an NT4 PDC that has the users, groups, policies and profiles to be migrated
-
-2. Samba-3 set up as a DC with netlogon share, profile share, etc.
-
-3. Process:
- a. Create a BDC account for the samba server using NT Server Manager
- - Samba must NOT be running
-
- b. rpcclient NT4PDC -U Administrator%passwd
- lsaquery
-
- Note the SID returned by step b.
-
- c. net getsid -S NT4PDC -w DOMNAME -U Administrator%passwd
-
- Note the SID in step c.
-
- d. net getlocalsid
-
- Note the SID, now check that all three SIDS reported are the same!
-
- e. net rpc join -S NT4PDC -w DOMNAME -U Administrator%passwd
-
- f. net rpc vampire -S NT4PDC -U administrator%passwd
-
- g. pdbedit -l
-
- Note - did the users migrate?
-
- h. initGrps.sh DOMNAME
-
- i. smbgroupedit -v
-
- Now check that all groups are recognised
-
- j. net rpc campire -S NT4PDC -U administrator%passwd
-
- k. pdbedit -lv
-
- Note - check that all group membership has been migrated.
-
-
-Now it is time to migrate all the profiles, then migrate all policy files.
-
-Moe later.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4429"
->28.2. Managing Samba-3 Domain Control</A
-></H2
-><P
->Lots of blah blah here.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="PORTABILITY"
-></A
->Chapter 29. Portability</H1
-><P
->Samba works on a wide range of platforms but the interface all the
-platforms provide is not always compatible. This chapter contains
-platform-specific information about compiling and using samba.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4444"
->29.1. HPUX</A
-></H2
-><P
->HP's implementation of supplementary groups is, er, non-standard (for
-hysterical reasons). There are two group files, /etc/group and
-/etc/logingroup; the system maps UIDs to numbers using the former, but
-initgroups() reads the latter. Most system admins who know the ropes
-symlink /etc/group to /etc/logingroup (hard link doesn't work for reasons
-too stupid to go into here). initgroups() will complain if one of the
-groups you're in in /etc/logingroup has what it considers to be an invalid
-ID, which means outside the range [0..UID_MAX], where UID_MAX is (I think)
-60000 currently on HP-UX. This precludes -2 and 65534, the usual 'nobody'
-GIDs.</P
-><P
->If you encounter this problem, make sure that the programs that are failing
-to initgroups() be run as users not in any groups with GIDs outside the
-allowed range.</P
-><P
->This is documented in the HP manual pages under setgroups(2) and passwd(4).</P
-><P
->On HPUX you must use gcc or the HP Ansi compiler. The free compiler
-that comes with HP-UX is not Ansi compliant and cannot compile
-Samba.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4450"
->29.2. SCO Unix</A
-></H2
-><P
->
-If you run an old version of SCO Unix then you may need to get important
-TCP/IP patches for Samba to work correctly. Without the patch, you may
-encounter corrupt data transfers using samba.</P
-><P
->The patch you need is UOD385 Connection Drivers SLS. It is available from
-SCO (ftp.sco.com, directory SLS, files uod385a.Z and uod385a.ltr.Z).</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4454"
->29.3. DNIX</A
-></H2
-><P
->DNIX has a problem with seteuid() and setegid(). These routines are
-needed for Samba to work correctly, but they were left out of the DNIX
-C library for some reason.</P
-><P
->For this reason Samba by default defines the macro NO_EID in the DNIX
-section of includes.h. This works around the problem in a limited way,
-but it is far from ideal, some things still won't work right.</P
-><P
->
-To fix the problem properly you need to assemble the following two
-functions and then either add them to your C library or link them into
-Samba.</P
-><P
->
-put this in the file <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->setegid.s</TT
->:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> .globl _setegid
-_setegid:
- moveq #47,d0
- movl #100,a0
- moveq #1,d1
- movl 4(sp),a1
- trap #9
- bccs 1$
- jmp cerror
-1$:
- clrl d0
- rts</PRE
-></P
-><P
->put this in the file <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->seteuid.s</TT
->:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> .globl _seteuid
-_seteuid:
- moveq #47,d0
- movl #100,a0
- moveq #0,d1
- movl 4(sp),a1
- trap #9
- bccs 1$
- jmp cerror
-1$:
- clrl d0
- rts</PRE
-></P
-><P
->after creating the above files you then assemble them using</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->as seteuid.s</B
-></P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->as setegid.s</B
-></P
-><P
->that should produce the files <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->seteuid.o</TT
-> and
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->setegid.o</TT
-></P
-><P
->then you need to add these to the LIBSM line in the DNIX section of
-the Samba Makefile. Your LIBSM line will then look something like this:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->LIBSM = setegid.o seteuid.o -ln</PRE
-></P
-><P
->
-You should then remove the line:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->#define NO_EID</PRE
-></P
-><P
->from the DNIX section of <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->includes.h</TT
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4483"
->29.4. RedHat Linux Rembrandt-II</A
-></H2
-><P
->By default RedHat Rembrandt-II during installation adds an
-entry to /etc/hosts as follows:
-<PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> 127.0.0.1 loopback "hostname"."domainname"</PRE
-></P
-><P
->This causes Samba to loop back onto the loopback interface.
-The result is that Samba fails to communicate correctly with
-the world and therefor may fail to correctly negotiate who
-is the master browse list holder and who is the master browser.</P
-><P
->Corrective Action: Delete the entry after the word loopback
- in the line starting 127.0.0.1</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4489"
->29.5. AIX</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4491"
->29.5.1. Sequential Read Ahead</A
-></H3
-><P
->Disabling Sequential Read Ahead using <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->vmtune -r 0</KBD
-> improves
-samba performance significally.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4495"
->29.6. Solaris</A
-></H2
-><P
->Some people have been experiencing problems with F_SETLKW64/fcntl
-when running samba on solaris. The built in file locking mechanism was
-not scalable. Performance would degrade to the point where processes would
-get into loops of trying to lock a file. It woul try a lock, then fail,
-then try again. The lock attempt was failing before the grant was
-occurring. So the visible manifestation of this would be a handful of
-processes stealing all of the CPU, and when they were trussed they would
-be stuck if F_SETLKW64 loops.</P
-><P
->Sun released patches for Solaris 2.6, 8, and 9. The patch for Solaris 7
-has not been released yet.</P
-><P
->The patch revision for 2.6 is 105181-34
-for 8 is 108528-19
-and for 9 is 112233-04</P
-><P
->After the install of these patches it is recommended to reconfigure
-and rebuild samba.</P
-><P
->Thanks to Joe Meslovich for reporting</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="OTHER-CLIENTS"
-></A
->Chapter 30. Samba and other CIFS clients</H1
-><P
->This chapter contains client-specific information.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4522"
->30.1. Macintosh clients?</A
-></H2
-><P
->Yes. <A
-HREF="http://www.thursby.com/"
-TARGET="_top"
->Thursby</A
-> now have a CIFS Client / Server called DAVE - see</P
-><P
->They test it against Windows 95, Windows NT and samba for
-compatibility issues. At the time of writing, DAVE was at version
-1.0.1. The 1.0.0 to 1.0.1 update is available as a free download from
-the Thursby web site (the speed of finder copies has been greatly
-enhanced, and there are bug-fixes included).</P
-><P
->
-Alternatives - There are two free implementations of AppleTalk for
-several kinds of UNIX machnes, and several more commercial ones.
-These products allow you to run file services and print services
-natively to Macintosh users, with no additional support required on
-the Macintosh. The two free omplementations are
-<A
-HREF="http://www.umich.edu/~rsug/netatalk/"
-TARGET="_top"
->Netatalk</A
->, and
-<A
-HREF="http://www.cs.mu.oz.au/appletalk/atalk.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->CAP</A
->.
-What Samba offers MS
-Windows users, these packages offer to Macs. For more info on these
-packages, Samba, and Linux (and other UNIX-based systems) see
-<A
-HREF="http://www.eats.com/linux_mac_win.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.eats.com/linux_mac_win.html</A
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4531"
->30.2. OS2 Client</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4533"
->30.2.1. How can I configure OS/2 Warp Connect or
- OS/2 Warp 4 as a client for Samba?</A
-></H3
-><P
->A more complete answer to this question can be
- found on <A
-HREF="http://carol.wins.uva.nl/~leeuw/samba/warp.html"
-TARGET="_top"
-> http://carol.wins.uva.nl/~leeuw/samba/warp.html</A
->.</P
-><P
->Basically, you need three components:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->The File and Print Client ('IBM Peer')
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->TCP/IP ('Internet support')
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->The "NetBIOS over TCP/IP" driver ('TCPBEUI')
- </P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Installing the first two together with the base operating
- system on a blank system is explained in the Warp manual. If Warp
- has already been installed, but you now want to install the
- networking support, use the "Selective Install for Networking"
- object in the "System Setup" folder.</P
-><P
->Adding the "NetBIOS over TCP/IP" driver is not described
- in the manual and just barely in the online documentation. Start
- MPTS.EXE, click on OK, click on "Configure LAPS" and click
- on "IBM OS/2 NETBIOS OVER TCP/IP" in 'Protocols'. This line
- is then moved to 'Current Configuration'. Select that line,
- click on "Change number" and increase it from 0 to 1. Save this
- configuration.</P
-><P
->If the Samba server(s) is not on your local subnet, you
- can optionally add IP names and addresses of these servers
- to the "Names List", or specify a WINS server ('NetBIOS
- Nameserver' in IBM and RFC terminology). For Warp Connect you
- may need to download an update for 'IBM Peer' to bring it on
- the same level as Warp 4. See the webpage mentioned above.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4548"
->30.2.2. How can I configure OS/2 Warp 3 (not Connect),
- OS/2 1.2, 1.3 or 2.x for Samba?</A
-></H3
-><P
->You can use the free Microsoft LAN Manager 2.2c Client
- for OS/2 from
- <A
-HREF="ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/BusSys/Clients/LANMAN.OS2/"
-TARGET="_top"
-> ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/BusSys/Clients/LANMAN.OS2/</A
->.
- See <A
-HREF="http://carol.wins.uva.nl/~leeuw/lanman.html"
-TARGET="_top"
-> http://carol.wins.uva.nl/~leeuw/lanman.html</A
-> for
- more information on how to install and use this client. In
- a nutshell, edit the file \OS2VER in the root directory of
- the OS/2 boot partition and add the lines:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> 20=setup.exe
- 20=netwksta.sys
- 20=netvdd.sys
- </PRE
-></P
-><P
->before you install the client. Also, don't use the
- included NE2000 driver because it is buggy. Try the NE2000
- or NS2000 driver from
- <A
-HREF="ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/os2/network/ndis/"
-TARGET="_top"
-> ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/os2/network/ndis/</A
-> instead.
- </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4557"
->30.2.3. Are there any other issues when OS/2 (any version)
- is used as a client?</A
-></H3
-><P
->When you do a NET VIEW or use the "File and Print
- Client Resource Browser", no Samba servers show up. This can
- be fixed by a patch from <A
-HREF="http://carol.wins.uva.nl/~leeuw/samba/fix.html"
-TARGET="_top"
-> http://carol.wins.uva.nl/~leeuw/samba/fix.html</A
->.
- The patch will be included in a later version of Samba. It also
- fixes a couple of other problems, such as preserving long
- filenames when objects are dragged from the Workplace Shell
- to the Samba server. </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4561"
->30.2.4. How do I get printer driver download working
- for OS/2 clients?</A
-></H3
-><P
->First, create a share called [PRINTDRV] that is
- world-readable. Copy your OS/2 driver files there. Note
- that the .EA_ files must still be separate, so you will need
- to use the original install files, and not copy an installed
- driver from an OS/2 system.</P
-><P
->Install the NT driver first for that printer. Then,
- add to your smb.conf a parameter, os2 driver map =
- <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->filename</VAR
->". Then, in the file
- specified by <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->filename</VAR
->, map the
- name of the NT driver name to the OS/2 driver name as
- follows:</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->nt driver name = os2 "driver
- name"."device name"</B
->, e.g.:
- HP LaserJet 5L = LASERJET.HP LaserJet 5L</P
-><P
->You can have multiple drivers mapped in this file.</P
-><P
->If you only specify the OS/2 driver name, and not the
- device name, the first attempt to download the driver will
- actually download the files, but the OS/2 client will tell
- you the driver is not available. On the second attempt, it
- will work. This is fixed simply by adding the device name
- to the mapping, after which it will work on the first attempt.
- </P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4571"
->30.3. Windows for Workgroups</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4573"
->30.3.1. Use latest TCP/IP stack from Microsoft</A
-></H3
-><P
->Use the latest TCP/IP stack from microsoft if you use Windows
-for workgroups.</P
-><P
->The early TCP/IP stacks had lots of bugs.</P
-><P
->
-Microsoft has released an incremental upgrade to their TCP/IP 32-Bit
-VxD drivers. The latest release can be found on their ftp site at
-ftp.microsoft.com, located in /peropsys/windows/public/tcpip/wfwt32.exe.
-There is an update.txt file there that describes the problems that were
-fixed. New files include WINSOCK.DLL, TELNET.EXE, WSOCK.386, VNBT.386,
-WSTCP.386, TRACERT.EXE, NETSTAT.EXE, and NBTSTAT.EXE.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4578"
->30.3.2. Delete .pwl files after password change</A
-></H3
-><P
->WfWg does a lousy job with passwords. I find that if I change my
-password on either the unix box or the PC the safest thing to do is to
-delete the .pwl files in the windows directory. The PC will complain about not finding the files, but will soon get over it, allowing you to enter the new password.</P
-><P
->
-If you don't do this you may find that WfWg remembers and uses the old
-password, even if you told it a new one.</P
-><P
->
-Often WfWg will totally ignore a password you give it in a dialog box.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4583"
->30.3.3. Configure WfW password handling</A
-></H3
-><P
->There is a program call admincfg.exe
-on the last disk (disk 8) of the WFW 3.11 disk set. To install it
-type EXPAND A:\ADMINCFG.EX_ C:\WINDOWS\ADMINCFG.EXE Then add an icon
-for it via the "Progam Manager" "New" Menu. This program allows you
-to control how WFW handles passwords. ie disable Password Caching etc
-for use with <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->security = user</B
-></P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4587"
->30.3.4. Case handling of passwords</A
-></H3
-><P
->Windows for Workgroups uppercases the password before sending it to the server. Unix passwords can be case-sensitive though. Check the <A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->smb.conf(5)</A
-> information on <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->password level</B
-> to specify what characters samba should try to uppercase when checking.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4592"
->30.3.5. Use TCP/IP as default protocol</A
-></H3
-><P
->To support print queue reporting you may find
-that you have to use TCP/IP as the default protocol under
-WfWg. For some reason if you leave Netbeui as the default
-it may break the print queue reporting on some systems.
-It is presumably a WfWg bug.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4595"
->30.4. Windows '95/'98</A
-></H2
-><P
->When using Windows 95 OEM SR2 the following updates are recommended where Samba
-is being used. Please NOTE that the above change will affect you once these
-updates have been installed.</P
-><P
->
-There are more updates than the ones mentioned here. You are referred to the
-Microsoft Web site for all currently available updates to your specific version
-of Windows 95.</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
->Kernel Update: KRNLUPD.EXE</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Ping Fix: PINGUPD.EXE</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->RPC Update: RPCRTUPD.EXE</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->TCP/IP Update: VIPUPD.EXE</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Redirector Update: VRDRUPD.EXE</P
-></LI
-></OL
-><P
->Also, if using MS OutLook it is desirable to install the OLEUPD.EXE fix. This
-fix may stop your machine from hanging for an extended period when exiting
-OutLook and you may also notice a significant speedup when accessing network
-neighborhood services.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4611"
->30.5. Windows 2000 Service Pack 2</A
-></H2
-><P
->
-There are several annoyances with Windows 2000 SP2. One of which
-only appears when using a Samba server to host user profiles
-to Windows 2000 SP2 clients in a Windows domain. This assumes
-that Samba is a member of the domain, but the problem will
-likely occur if it is not.</P
-><P
->
-In order to server profiles successfully to Windows 2000 SP2
-clients (when not operating as a PDC), Samba must have
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->nt acl support = no</B
->
-added to the file share which houses the roaming profiles.
-If this is not done, then the Windows 2000 SP2 client will
-complain about not being able to access the profile (Access
-Denied) and create multiple copies of it on disk (DOMAIN.user.001,
-DOMAIN.user.002, etc...). See the
-<A
-HREF="smb.conf.5.html"
-TARGET="_top"
->smb.conf(5)</A
-> man page
-for more details on this option. Also note that the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->nt acl support</B
-> parameter was formally a global parameter in
-releases prior to Samba 2.2.2.</P
-><P
->
-The following is a minimal profile share:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> [profile]
- path = /export/profile
- create mask = 0600
- directory mask = 0700
- nt acl support = no
- read only = no</PRE
-></P
-><P
->The reason for this bug is that the Win2k SP2 client copies
-the security descriptor for the profile which contains
-the Samba server's SID, and not the domain SID. The client
-compares the SID for SAMBA\user and realizes it is
-different that the one assigned to DOMAIN\user. Hence the reason
-for the "access denied" message.</P
-><P
->By disabling the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->nt acl support</B
-> parameter, Samba will send
-the Win2k client a response to the QuerySecurityDescriptor
-trans2 call which causes the client to set a default ACL
-for the profile. This default ACL includes </P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->DOMAIN\user "Full Control"</B
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->This bug does not occur when using winbind to
-create accounts on the Samba host for Domain users.</P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4628"
->30.6. Windows NT 3.1</A
-></H2
-><P
->If you have problems communicating across routers with Windows
-NT 3.1 workstations, read <A
-HREF="http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;[LN];Q103765"
-TARGET="_top"
->this Microsoft Knowledge Base article</A
->.&#13;</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="SWAT"
-></A
->Chapter 31. SWAT - The Samba Web Admininistration Tool</H1
-><P
->This is a rough guide to SWAT.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4645"
->31.1. SWAT Features and Benefits</A
-></H2
-><P
->You must use at least the following ...</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4648"
->31.1.1. The SWAT Home Page</A
-></H3
-><P
->Blah blah here.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4651"
->31.1.2. Global Settings</A
-></H3
-><P
->Document steps right here!</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4654"
->31.1.3. The SWAT Wizard</A
-></H3
-><P
->Lots of blah blah here.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4657"
->31.1.4. Share Settings</A
-></H3
-><P
->Document steps right here!</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4660"
->31.1.5. Printing Settings</A
-></H3
-><P
->Document steps right here!</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4663"
->31.1.6. The Status Page</A
-></H3
-><P
->Document steps right here!</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><HR><H3
-CLASS="SECT2"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4666"
->31.1.7. The Password Change Page</A
-></H3
-><P
->Document steps right here!</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="SPEED"
-></A
->Chapter 32. Samba performance issues</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4687"
->32.1. Comparisons</A
-></H2
-><P
->The Samba server uses TCP to talk to the client. Thus if you are
-trying to see if it performs well you should really compare it to
-programs that use the same protocol. The most readily available
-programs for file transfer that use TCP are ftp or another TCP based
-SMB server.</P
-><P
->If you want to test against something like a NT or WfWg server then
-you will have to disable all but TCP on either the client or
-server. Otherwise you may well be using a totally different protocol
-(such as Netbeui) and comparisons may not be valid.</P
-><P
->Generally you should find that Samba performs similarly to ftp at raw
-transfer speed. It should perform quite a bit faster than NFS,
-although this very much depends on your system.</P
-><P
->Several people have done comparisons between Samba and Novell, NFS or
-WinNT. In some cases Samba performed the best, in others the worst. I
-suspect the biggest factor is not Samba vs some other system but the
-hardware and drivers used on the various systems. Given similar
-hardware Samba should certainly be competitive in speed with other
-systems.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4693"
->32.2. Socket options</A
-></H2
-><P
->There are a number of socket options that can greatly affect the
-performance of a TCP based server like Samba.</P
-><P
->The socket options that Samba uses are settable both on the command
-line with the -O option, or in the smb.conf file.</P
-><P
->The "socket options" section of the smb.conf manual page describes how
-to set these and gives recommendations.</P
-><P
->Getting the socket options right can make a big difference to your
-performance, but getting them wrong can degrade it by just as
-much. The correct settings are very dependent on your local network.</P
-><P
->The socket option TCP_NODELAY is the one that seems to make the
-biggest single difference for most networks. Many people report that
-adding "socket options = TCP_NODELAY" doubles the read performance of
-a Samba drive. The best explanation I have seen for this is that the
-Microsoft TCP/IP stack is slow in sending tcp ACKs.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4700"
->32.3. Read size</A
-></H2
-><P
->The option "read size" affects the overlap of disk reads/writes with
-network reads/writes. If the amount of data being transferred in
-several of the SMB commands (currently SMBwrite, SMBwriteX and
-SMBreadbraw) is larger than this value then the server begins writing
-the data before it has received the whole packet from the network, or
-in the case of SMBreadbraw, it begins writing to the network before
-all the data has been read from disk.</P
-><P
->This overlapping works best when the speeds of disk and network access
-are similar, having very little effect when the speed of one is much
-greater than the other.</P
-><P
->The default value is 16384, but very little experimentation has been
-done yet to determine the optimal value, and it is likely that the best
-value will vary greatly between systems anyway. A value over 65536 is
-pointless and will cause you to allocate memory unnecessarily.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4705"
->32.4. Max xmit</A
-></H2
-><P
->At startup the client and server negotiate a "maximum transmit" size,
-which limits the size of nearly all SMB commands. You can set the
-maximum size that Samba will negotiate using the "max xmit = " option
-in smb.conf. Note that this is the maximum size of SMB request that
-Samba will accept, but not the maximum size that the *client* will accept.
-The client maximum receive size is sent to Samba by the client and Samba
-honours this limit.</P
-><P
->It defaults to 65536 bytes (the maximum), but it is possible that some
-clients may perform better with a smaller transmit unit. Trying values
-of less than 2048 is likely to cause severe problems.</P
-><P
->In most cases the default is the best option.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4710"
->32.5. Log level</A
-></H2
-><P
->If you set the log level (also known as "debug level") higher than 2
-then you may suffer a large drop in performance. This is because the
-server flushes the log file after each operation, which can be very
-expensive. </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4713"
->32.6. Read raw</A
-></H2
-><P
->The "read raw" operation is designed to be an optimised, low-latency
-file read operation. A server may choose to not support it,
-however. and Samba makes support for "read raw" optional, with it
-being enabled by default.</P
-><P
->In some cases clients don't handle "read raw" very well and actually
-get lower performance using it than they get using the conventional
-read operations. </P
-><P
->So you might like to try "read raw = no" and see what happens on your
-network. It might lower, raise or not affect your performance. Only
-testing can really tell.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4718"
->32.7. Write raw</A
-></H2
-><P
->The "write raw" operation is designed to be an optimised, low-latency
-file write operation. A server may choose to not support it,
-however. and Samba makes support for "write raw" optional, with it
-being enabled by default.</P
-><P
->Some machines may find "write raw" slower than normal write, in which
-case you may wish to change this option.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4722"
->32.8. Slow Clients</A
-></H2
-><P
->One person has reported that setting the protocol to COREPLUS rather
-than LANMAN2 gave a dramatic speed improvement (from 10k/s to 150k/s).</P
-><P
->I suspect that his PC's (386sx16 based) were asking for more data than
-they could chew. I suspect a similar speed could be had by setting
-"read raw = no" and "max xmit = 2048", instead of changing the
-protocol. Lowering the "read size" might also help.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4726"
->32.9. Slow Logins</A
-></H2
-><P
->Slow logins are almost always due to the password checking time. Using
-the lowest practical "password level" will improve things a lot. You
-could also enable the "UFC crypt" option in the Makefile.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4729"
->32.10. Client tuning</A
-></H2
-><P
->Often a speed problem can be traced to the client. The client (for
-example Windows for Workgroups) can often be tuned for better TCP
-performance.</P
-><P
->See your client docs for details. In particular, I have heard rumours
-that the WfWg options TCPWINDOWSIZE and TCPSEGMENTSIZE can have a
-large impact on performance.</P
-><P
->Also note that some people have found that setting DefaultRcvWindow in
-the [MSTCP] section of the SYSTEM.INI file under WfWg to 3072 gives a
-big improvement. I don't know why.</P
-><P
->My own experience wth DefaultRcvWindow is that I get much better
-performance with a large value (16384 or larger). Other people have
-reported that anything over 3072 slows things down enourmously. One
-person even reported a speed drop of a factor of 30 when he went from
-3072 to 8192. I don't know why.</P
-><P
->It probably depends a lot on your hardware, and the type of unix box
-you have at the other end of the link.</P
-><P
->Paul Cochrane has done some testing on client side tuning and come
-to the following conclusions:</P
-><P
->Install the W2setup.exe file from www.microsoft.com. This is an
-update for the winsock stack and utilities which improve performance.</P
-><P
->Configure the win95 TCPIP registry settings to give better
-perfomance. I use a program called MTUSPEED.exe which I got off the
-net. There are various other utilities of this type freely available.
-The setting which give the best performance for me are:</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
->MaxMTU Remove</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->RWIN Remove</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->MTUAutoDiscover Disable</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->MTUBlackHoleDetect Disable</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Time To Live Enabled</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Time To Live - HOPS 32</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->NDI Cache Size 0</P
-></LI
-></OL
-><P
->I tried virtually all of the items mentioned in the document and
-the only one which made a difference to me was the socket options. It
-turned out I was better off without any!!!!!</P
-><P
->In terms of overall speed of transfer, between various win95 clients
-and a DX2-66 20MB server with a crappy NE2000 compatible and old IDE
-drive (Kernel 2.0.30). The transfer rate was reasonable for 10 baseT.</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->The figures are: Put Get
-P166 client 3Com card: 420-440kB/s 500-520kB/s
-P100 client 3Com card: 390-410kB/s 490-510kB/s
-DX4-75 client NE2000: 370-380kB/s 330-350kB/s</PRE
-></P
-><P
->I based these test on transfer two files a 4.5MB text file and a 15MB
-textfile. The results arn't bad considering the hardware Samba is
-running on. It's a crap machine!!!!</P
-><P
->The updates mentioned in 1 and 2 brought up the transfer rates from
-just over 100kB/s in some clients.</P
-><P
->A new client is a P333 connected via a 100MB/s card and hub. The
-transfer rates from this were good: 450-500kB/s on put and 600+kB/s
-on get.</P
-><P
->Looking at standard FTP throughput, Samba is a bit slower (100kB/s
-upwards). I suppose there is more going on in the samba protocol, but
-if it could get up to the rate of FTP the perfomance would be quite
-staggering.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="DIAGNOSIS"
-></A
->Chapter 33. The samba checklist</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4781"
->33.1. Introduction</A
-></H2
-><P
->This file contains a list of tests you can perform to validate your
-Samba server. It also tells you what the likely cause of the problem
-is if it fails any one of these steps. If it passes all these tests
-then it is probably working fine.</P
-><P
->You should do ALL the tests, in the order shown. We have tried to
-carefully choose them so later tests only use capabilities verified in
-the earlier tests.</P
-><P
->If you send one of the samba mailing lists an email saying "it doesn't work"
-and you have not followed this test procedure then you should not be surprised
-your email is ignored.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4786"
->33.2. Assumptions</A
-></H2
-><P
->In all of the tests it is assumed you have a Samba server called
-BIGSERVER and a PC called ACLIENT both in workgroup TESTGROUP.</P
-><P
->The procedure is similar for other types of clients.</P
-><P
->It is also assumed you know the name of an available share in your
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->. I will assume this share is called <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->tmp</VAR
->.
-You can add a <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->tmp</VAR
-> share like by adding the
-following to <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->&#13;[tmp]
- comment = temporary files
- path = /tmp
- read only = yes&#13;</PRE
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->These tests assume version 3.0 or later of the samba suite. Some commands shown did not exist in earlier versions. </P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->Please pay attention to the error messages you receive. If any error message
-reports that your server is being unfriendly you should first check that you
-IP name resolution is correctly set up. eg: Make sure your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/resolv.conf</TT
->
-file points to name servers that really do exist.</P
-><P
->Also, if you do not have DNS server access for name resolution please check
-that the settings for your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file results in <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->dns proxy = no</B
->. The
-best way to check this is with <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->testparm smb.conf</KBD
->.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4805"
->33.3. The tests</A
-></H2
-><DIV
-CLASS="PROCEDURE"
-><P
-><B
->Diagnosing your samba server</B
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
->In the directory in which you store your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file, run the command
-<KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->testparm smb.conf</KBD
->. If it reports any errors then your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->
-configuration file is faulty.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->Your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file may be located in: <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/samba</TT
->
-Or in: <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/local/samba/lib</TT
-></P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Run the command <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->ping BIGSERVER</KBD
-> from the PC and
-<KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->ping ACLIENT</KBD
-> from
-the unix box. If you don't get a valid response then your TCP/IP
-software is not correctly installed. </P
-><P
->Note that you will need to start a "dos prompt" window on the PC to
-run ping.</P
-><P
->If you get a message saying "host not found" or similar then your DNS
-software or <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/etc/hosts</TT
-> file is not correctly setup.
-It is possible to
-run samba without DNS entries for the server and client, but I assume
-you do have correct entries for the remainder of these tests. </P
-><P
->Another reason why ping might fail is if your host is running firewall
-software. You will need to relax the rules to let in the workstation
-in question, perhaps by allowing access from another subnet (on Linux
-this is done via the <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->ipfwadm</SPAN
-> program.)</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Run the command <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbclient -L BIGSERVER</KBD
-> on the unix box. You
-should get a list of available shares back. </P
-><P
->If you get a error message containing the string "Bad password" then
-you probably have either an incorrect <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->hosts allow</B
->,
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->hosts deny</B
-> or <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->valid users</B
-> line in your
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->, or your guest account is not
-valid. Check what your guest account is using <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->testparm</SPAN
-> and
-temporarily remove any <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->hosts allow</B
->, <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->hosts deny</B
->, <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->valid users</B
-> or <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->invalid users</B
-> lines.</P
-><P
->If you get a "connection refused" response then the smbd server may
-not be running. If you installed it in inetd.conf then you probably edited
-that file incorrectly. If you installed it as a daemon then check that
-it is running, and check that the netbios-ssn port is in a LISTEN
-state using <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->netstat -a</KBD
->.</P
-><P
->If you get a "session request failed" then the server refused the
-connection. If it says "Your server software is being unfriendly" then
-its probably because you have invalid command line parameters to <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbd</SPAN
->,
-or a similar fatal problem with the initial startup of <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbd</SPAN
->. Also
-check your config file (<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->) for syntax errors with <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->testparm</SPAN
->
-and that the various directories where samba keeps its log and lock
-files exist.</P
-><P
->There are a number of reasons for which smbd may refuse or decline
-a session request. The most common of these involve one or more of
-the following <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file entries:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> hosts deny = ALL
- hosts allow = xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx/yy
- bind interfaces only = Yes</PRE
-></P
-><P
->In the above, no allowance has been made for any session requests that
-will automatically translate to the loopback adaptor address 127.0.0.1.
-To solve this problem change these lines to:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
-> hosts deny = ALL
- hosts allow = xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx/yy 127.</PRE
-></P
-><P
->Do NOT use the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->bind interfaces only</B
-> parameter where you
-may wish to
-use the samba password change facility, or where <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbclient</SPAN
-> may need to
-access local service for name resolution or for local resource
-connections. (Note: the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->bind interfaces only</B
-> parameter deficiency
-where it will not allow connections to the loopback address will be
-fixed soon).</P
-><P
->Another common cause of these two errors is having something already running
-on port 139, such as Samba (ie: smbd is running from <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->inetd</SPAN
-> already) or
-something like Digital's Pathworks. Check your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->inetd.conf</TT
-> file before trying
-to start <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbd</SPAN
-> as a daemon, it can avoid a lot of frustration!</P
-><P
->And yet another possible cause for failure of this test is when the subnet mask
-and / or broadcast address settings are incorrect. Please check that the
-network interface IP Address / Broadcast Address / Subnet Mask settings are
-correct and that Samba has correctly noted these in the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->log.nmb</TT
-> file.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Run the command <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->nmblookup -B BIGSERVER __SAMBA__</KBD
->. You should get the
-IP address of your Samba server back.</P
-><P
->If you don't then nmbd is incorrectly installed. Check your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->inetd.conf</TT
->
-if you run it from there, or that the daemon is running and listening
-to udp port 137.</P
-><P
->One common problem is that many inetd implementations can't take many
-parameters on the command line. If this is the case then create a
-one-line script that contains the right parameters and run that from
-inetd.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->run the command <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->nmblookup -B ACLIENT '*'</KBD
-></P
-><P
->You should get the PCs IP address back. If you don't then the client
-software on the PC isn't installed correctly, or isn't started, or you
-got the name of the PC wrong. </P
-><P
->If ACLIENT doesn't resolve via DNS then use the IP address of the
-client in the above test.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Run the command <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->nmblookup -d 2 '*'</KBD
-></P
-><P
->This time we are trying the same as the previous test but are trying
-it via a broadcast to the default broadcast address. A number of
-Netbios/TCPIP hosts on the network should respond, although Samba may
-not catch all of the responses in the short time it listens. You
-should see "got a positive name query response" messages from several
-hosts.</P
-><P
->If this doesn't give a similar result to the previous test then
-nmblookup isn't correctly getting your broadcast address through its
-automatic mechanism. In this case you should experiment use the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->interfaces</B
-> option in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> to manually configure your IP
-address, broadcast and netmask. </P
-><P
->If your PC and server aren't on the same subnet then you will need to
-use the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->-B</VAR
-> option to set the broadcast address to the that of the PCs
-subnet.</P
-><P
->This test will probably fail if your subnet mask and broadcast address are
-not correct. (Refer to TEST 3 notes above).</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Run the command <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbclient //BIGSERVER/TMP</KBD
->. You should
-then be prompted for a password. You should use the password of the account
-you are logged into the unix box with. If you want to test with
-another account then add the <VAR
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->-U <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->accountname</VAR
-></VAR
-> option to the end of
-the command line. eg:
-<KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbclient //bigserver/tmp -Ujohndoe</KBD
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="NOTE"
-><P
-></P
-><TABLE
-CLASS="NOTE"
-WIDTH="100%"
-BORDER="0"
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="25"
-ALIGN="CENTER"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><IMG
-SRC="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/stylesheet/dsssl/modular/images/note.gif"
-HSPACE="5"
-ALT="Note"></TD
-><TD
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-VALIGN="TOP"
-><P
->It is possible to specify the password along with the username
-as follows:
-<KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbclient //bigserver/tmp -Ujohndoe%secret</KBD
-></P
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->Once you enter the password you should get the <SAMP
-CLASS="PROMPT"
->smb&#62;</SAMP
-> prompt. If you
-don't then look at the error message. If it says "invalid network
-name" then the service "tmp" is not correctly setup in your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->.</P
-><P
->If it says "bad password" then the likely causes are:</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> you have shadow passords (or some other password system) but didn't
- compile in support for them in <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbd</SPAN
->
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> your <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->valid users</B
-> configuration is incorrect
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> you have a mixed case password and you haven't enabled the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->password
- level</B
-> option at a high enough level
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->path =</B
-> line in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> is incorrect. Check it with <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->testparm</SPAN
->
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> you enabled password encryption but didn't create the SMB encrypted
- password file
- </P
-></LI
-></OL
-><P
->Once connected you should be able to use the commands
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->dir</B
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->get</B
-> <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->put</B
-> etc.
-Type <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->help <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->command</VAR
-></B
-> for instructions. You should
-especially check that the amount of free disk space shown is correct
-when you type <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->dir</B
->.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->On the PC type the command <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->net view \\BIGSERVER</KBD
->. You will
-need to do this from within a "dos prompt" window. You should get back a
-list of available shares on the server.</P
-><P
->If you get a "network name not found" or similar error then netbios
-name resolution is not working. This is usually caused by a problem in
-nmbd. To overcome it you could do one of the following (you only need
-to choose one of them):</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
-> fixup the <SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->nmbd</SPAN
-> installation</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> add the IP address of BIGSERVER to the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->wins server</B
-> box in the
- advanced tcp/ip setup on the PC.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> enable windows name resolution via DNS in the advanced section of
- the tcp/ip setup</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> add BIGSERVER to your lmhosts file on the PC.</P
-></LI
-></OL
-><P
->If you get a "invalid network name" or "bad password error" then the
-same fixes apply as they did for the <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->smbclient -L</KBD
-> test above. In
-particular, make sure your <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->hosts allow</B
-> line is correct (see the man
-pages)</P
-><P
->Also, do not overlook that fact that when the workstation requests the
-connection to the samba server it will attempt to connect using the
-name with which you logged onto your Windows machine. You need to make
-sure that an account exists on your Samba server with that exact same
-name and password.</P
-><P
->If you get "specified computer is not receiving requests" or similar
-it probably means that the host is not contactable via tcp services.
-Check to see if the host is running tcp wrappers, and if so add an entry in
-the <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->hosts.allow</TT
-> file for your client (or subnet, etc.)</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Run the command <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->net use x: \\BIGSERVER\TMP</KBD
->. You should
-be prompted for a password then you should get a "command completed
-successfully" message. If not then your PC software is incorrectly
-installed or your smb.conf is incorrect. make sure your <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->hosts allow</B
->
-and other config lines in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> are correct.</P
-><P
->It's also possible that the server can't work out what user name to
-connect you as. To see if this is the problem add the line <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->user =
-<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->username</VAR
-></B
-> to the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->[tmp]</B
-> section of
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> where <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->username</VAR
-> is the
-username corresponding to the password you typed. If you find this
-fixes things you may need the username mapping option. </P
-><P
->It might also be the case that your client only sends encrypted passwords
-and you have <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->encrypt passwords = no</B
-> in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->
-Turn it back on to fix.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Run the command <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->nmblookup -M <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->testgroup</VAR
-></KBD
-> where
-<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->testgroup</VAR
-> is the name of the workgroup that your Samba server and
-Windows PCs belong to. You should get back the IP address of the
-master browser for that workgroup.</P
-><P
->If you don't then the election process has failed. Wait a minute to
-see if it is just being slow then try again. If it still fails after
-that then look at the browsing options you have set in <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->. Make
-sure you have <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->preferred master = yes</B
-> to ensure that
-an election is held at startup.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->From file manager try to browse the server. Your samba server should
-appear in the browse list of your local workgroup (or the one you
-specified in smb.conf). You should be able to double click on the name
-of the server and get a list of shares. If you get a "invalid
-password" error when you do then you are probably running WinNT and it
-is refusing to browse a server that has no encrypted password
-capability and is in user level security mode. In this case either set
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->security = server</B
-> AND
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->password server = Windows_NT_Machine</B
-> in your
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file, or make sure <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->encrypted passwords</B
-> is
-set to "yes".</P
-></LI
-></OL
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN4972"
->33.4. Still having troubles?</A
-></H2
-><P
->Read the chapter on
-<A
-HREF="#PROBLEMS"
->Analysing and Solving Problems</A
->.</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="PROBLEMS"
-></A
->Chapter 34. Analysing and solving samba problems</H1
-><P
->There are many sources of information available in the form
-of mailing lists, RFC's and documentation. The docs that come
-with the samba distribution contain very good explanations of
-general SMB topics such as browsing.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN5004"
->34.1. Diagnostics tools</A
-></H2
-><P
->One of the best diagnostic tools for debugging problems is Samba itself.
-You can use the -d option for both smbd and nmbd to specify what
-'debug level' at which to run. See the man pages on smbd, nmbd and
-smb.conf for more information on debugging options. The debug
-level can range from 1 (the default) to 10 (100 for debugging passwords).</P
-><P
->Another helpful method of debugging is to compile samba using the
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->gcc -g </B
-> flag. This will include debug
-information in the binaries and allow you to attach gdb to the
-running smbd / nmbd process. In order to attach gdb to an smbd
-process for an NT workstation, first get the workstation to make the
-connection. Pressing ctrl-alt-delete and going down to the domain box
-is sufficient (at least, on the first time you join the domain) to
-generate a 'LsaEnumTrustedDomains'. Thereafter, the workstation
-maintains an open connection, and therefore there will be an smbd
-process running (assuming that you haven't set a really short smbd
-idle timeout) So, in between pressing ctrl alt delete, and actually
-typing in your password, you can gdb attach and continue.</P
-><P
->Some useful samba commands worth investigating:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->testparam | more</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->smbclient -L //{netbios name of server}</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->An SMB enabled version of tcpdump is available from
-<A
-HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.tcpdup.org/</A
->.
-Ethereal, another good packet sniffer for Unix and Win32
-hosts, can be downloaded from <A
-HREF="http://www.ethereal.com/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.ethereal.com</A
->.</P
-><P
->For tracing things on the Microsoft Windows NT, Network Monitor
-(aka. netmon) is available on the Microsoft Developer Network CD's,
-the Windows NT Server install CD and the SMS CD's. The version of
-netmon that ships with SMS allows for dumping packets between any two
-computers (i.e. placing the network interface in promiscuous mode).
-The version on the NT Server install CD will only allow monitoring
-of network traffic directed to the local NT box and broadcasts on the
-local subnet. Be aware that Ethereal can read and write netmon
-formatted files.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN5019"
->34.2. Installing 'Network Monitor' on an NT Workstation or a Windows 9x box</A
-></H2
-><P
->Installing netmon on an NT workstation requires a couple
-of steps. The following are for installing Netmon V4.00.349, which comes
-with Microsoft Windows NT Server 4.0, on Microsoft Windows NT
-Workstation 4.0. The process should be similar for other version of
-Windows NT / Netmon. You will need both the Microsoft Windows
-NT Server 4.0 Install CD and the Workstation 4.0 Install CD.</P
-><P
->Initially you will need to install 'Network Monitor Tools and Agent'
-on the NT Server. To do this </P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Goto Start - Settings - Control Panel -
- Network - Services - Add </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Select the 'Network Monitor Tools and Agent' and
- click on 'OK'.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Click 'OK' on the Network Control Panel.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Insert the Windows NT Server 4.0 install CD
- when prompted.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->At this point the Netmon files should exist in
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->%SYSTEMROOT%\System32\netmon\*.*</TT
->.
-Two subdirectories exist as well, <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->parsers\</TT
->
-which contains the necessary DLL's for parsing the netmon packet
-dump, and <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->captures\</TT
->.</P
-><P
->In order to install the Netmon tools on an NT Workstation, you will
-first need to install the 'Network Monitor Agent' from the Workstation
-install CD.</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Goto Start - Settings - Control Panel -
- Network - Services - Add</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Select the 'Network Monitor Agent' and click
- on 'OK'.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Click 'OK' on the Network Control Panel.
- </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Insert the Windows NT Workstation 4.0 install
- CD when prompted.</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->Now copy the files from the NT Server in %SYSTEMROOT%\System32\netmon\*.*
-to %SYSTEMROOT%\System32\netmon\*.* on the Workstation and set
-permissions as you deem appropriate for your site. You will need
-administrative rights on the NT box to run netmon.</P
-><P
->To install Netmon on a Windows 9x box install the network monitor agent
-from the Windows 9x CD (\admin\nettools\netmon). There is a readme
-file located with the netmon driver files on the CD if you need
-information on how to do this. Copy the files from a working
-Netmon installation.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN5048"
->34.3. Useful URL's</A
-></H2
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->Home of Samba site <A
-HREF="http://samba.org"
-TARGET="_top"
-> http://samba.org</A
->. We have a mirror near you !</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> The <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->Development</I
-></SPAN
-> document
-on the Samba mirrors might mention your problem. If so,
-it might mean that the developers are working on it.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->See how Scott Merrill simulates a BDC behavior at
- <A
-HREF="http://www.skippy.net/linux/smb-howto.html"
-TARGET="_top"
-> http://www.skippy.net/linux/smb-howto.html</A
->. </P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Although 2.0.7 has almost had its day as a PDC, David Bannon will
- keep the 2.0.7 PDC pages at <A
-HREF="http://bioserve.latrobe.edu.au/samba"
-TARGET="_top"
-> http://bioserve.latrobe.edu.au/samba</A
-> going for a while yet.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Misc links to CIFS information
- <A
-HREF="http://samba.org/cifs/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://samba.org/cifs/</A
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->NT Domains for Unix <A
-HREF="http://mailhost.cb1.com/~lkcl/ntdom/"
-TARGET="_top"
-> http://mailhost.cb1.com/~lkcl/ntdom/</A
-></P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->FTP site for older SMB specs:
- <A
-HREF="ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/developr/drg/CIFS/"
-TARGET="_top"
-> ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/developr/drg/CIFS/</A
-></P
-></LI
-></UL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN5072"
->34.4. Getting help from the mailing lists</A
-></H2
-><P
->There are a number of Samba related mailing lists. Go to <A
-HREF="http://samba.org"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://samba.org</A
->, click on your nearest mirror
-and then click on <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Support</B
-> and then click on <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Samba related mailing lists</B
->.</P
-><P
->For questions relating to Samba TNG go to
-<A
-HREF="http://www.samba-tng.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://www.samba-tng.org/</A
->
-It has been requested that you don't post questions about Samba-TNG to the
-main stream Samba lists.</P
-><P
->If you post a message to one of the lists please observe the following guide lines :</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
-> Always remember that the developers are volunteers, they are
-not paid and they never guarantee to produce a particular feature at
-a particular time. Any time lines are 'best guess' and nothing more.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Always mention what version of samba you are using and what
-operating system its running under. You should probably list the
-relevant sections of your <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> file, at least the options
-in [global] that affect PDC support.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->In addition to the version, if you obtained Samba via
-CVS mention the date when you last checked it out.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Try and make your question clear and brief, lots of long,
-convoluted questions get deleted before they are completely read !
-Don't post html encoded messages (if you can select colour or font
-size its html).</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> If you run one of those nifty 'I'm on holidays' things when
-you are away, make sure its configured to not answer mailing lists.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
-> Don't cross post. Work out which is the best list to post to
-and see what happens, i.e. don't post to both samba-ntdom and samba-technical.
-Many people active on the lists subscribe to more
-than one list and get annoyed to see the same message two or more times.
-Often someone will see a message and thinking it would be better dealt
-with on another, will forward it on for you.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->You might include <SPAN
-CLASS="emphasis"
-><I
-CLASS="EMPHASIS"
->partial</I
-></SPAN
->
-log files written at a debug level set to as much as 20.
-Please don't send the entire log but enough to give the context of the
-error messages.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->(Possibly) If you have a complete netmon trace ( from the opening of
-the pipe to the error ) you can send the *.CAP file as well.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Please think carefully before attaching a document to an email.
-Consider pasting the relevant parts into the body of the message. The samba
-mailing lists go to a huge number of people, do they all need a copy of your
-smb.conf in their attach directory?</P
-></LI
-></UL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN5102"
->34.5. How to get off the mailinglists</A
-></H2
-><P
->To have your name removed from a samba mailing list, go to the
-same place you went to to get on it. Go to <A
-HREF="http://lists.samba.org/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://lists.samba.org</A
->,
-click on your nearest mirror and then click on <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->Support</B
-> and
-then click on <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
-> Samba related mailing lists</B
->. Or perhaps see
-<A
-HREF="http://lists.samba.org/mailman/roster/samba-ntdom"
-TARGET="_top"
->here</A
-></P
-><P
->Please don't post messages to the list asking to be removed, you will just
-be referred to the above address (unless that process failed in some way...)</P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><HR><H1
-><A
-NAME="BUGREPORT"
-></A
->Chapter 35. Reporting Bugs</H1
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN5125"
->35.1. Introduction</A
-></H2
-><P
->The email address for bug reports for stable releases is <A
-HREF="mailto:samba@samba.org"
-TARGET="_top"
->samba@samba.org</A
->.
-Bug reports for alpha releases should go to <A
-HREF="mailto:samba-technical@samba.org"
-TARGET="_top"
->samba-technical@samba.org</A
->.</P
-><P
->Please take the time to read this file before you submit a bug
-report. Also, please see if it has changed between releases, as we
-may be changing the bug reporting mechanism at some time.</P
-><P
->Please also do as much as you can yourself to help track down the
-bug. Samba is maintained by a dedicated group of people who volunteer
-their time, skills and efforts. We receive far more mail about it than
-we can possibly answer, so you have a much higher chance of an answer
-and a fix if you send us a "developer friendly" bug report that lets
-us fix it fast. </P
-><P
->Do not assume that if you post the bug to the comp.protocols.smb
-newsgroup or the mailing list that we will read it. If you suspect that your
-problem is not a bug but a configuration problem then it is better to send
-it to the Samba mailing list, as there are (at last count) 5000 other users on
-that list that may be able to help you.</P
-><P
->You may also like to look though the recent mailing list archives,
-which are conveniently accessible on the Samba web pages
-at <A
-HREF="http://samba.org/samba/"
-TARGET="_top"
->http://samba.org/samba/</A
->.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN5135"
->35.2. General info</A
-></H2
-><P
->Before submitting a bug report check your config for silly
-errors. Look in your log files for obvious messages that tell you that
-you've misconfigured something and run testparm to test your config
-file for correct syntax.</P
-><P
->Have you run through the <A
-HREF="#DIAGNOSIS"
->diagnosis</A
->?
-This is very important.</P
-><P
->If you include part of a log file with your bug report then be sure to
-annotate it with exactly what you were doing on the client at the
-time, and exactly what the results were.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN5141"
->35.3. Debug levels</A
-></H2
-><P
->If the bug has anything to do with Samba behaving incorrectly as a
-server (like refusing to open a file) then the log files will probably
-be very useful. Depending on the problem a log level of between 3 and
-10 showing the problem may be appropriate. A higher level givesmore
-detail, but may use too much disk space.</P
-><P
->To set the debug level use <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->log level =</B
-> in your
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
->. You may also find it useful to set the log
-level higher for just one machine and keep separate logs for each machine.
-To do this use:</P
-><P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->log level = 10
-log file = /usr/local/samba/lib/log.%m
-include = /usr/local/samba/lib/smb.conf.%m</PRE
-></P
-><P
->then create a file
-<TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->/usr/local/samba/lib/smb.conf.<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->machine</VAR
-></TT
-> where
-<VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->machine</VAR
-> is the name of the client you wish to debug. In that file
-put any <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> commands you want, for example
-<B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->log level=</B
-> may be useful. This also allows you to
-experiment with different security systems, protocol levels etc on just
-one machine.</P
-><P
->The <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> entry <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->log level =</B
->
-is synonymous with the entry <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->debuglevel =</B
-> that has been
-used in older versions of Samba and is being retained for backwards
-compatibility of <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->smb.conf</TT
-> files.</P
-><P
->As the <B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->log level =</B
-> value is increased you will record
-a significantly increasing level of debugging information. For most
-debugging operations you may not need a setting higher than 3. Nearly
-all bugs can be tracked at a setting of 10, but be prepared for a VERY
-large volume of log data.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN5162"
->35.4. Internal errors</A
-></H2
-><P
->If you get a "INTERNAL ERROR" message in your log files it means that
-Samba got an unexpected signal while running. It is probably a
-segmentation fault and almost certainly means a bug in Samba (unless
-you have faulty hardware or system software).</P
-><P
->If the message came from smbd then it will probably be accompanied by
-a message which details the last SMB message received by smbd. This
-info is often very useful in tracking down the problem so please
-include it in your bug report.</P
-><P
->You should also detail how to reproduce the problem, if
-possible. Please make this reasonably detailed.</P
-><P
->You may also find that a core file appeared in a <TT
-CLASS="FILENAME"
->corefiles</TT
->
-subdirectory of the directory where you keep your samba log
-files. This file is the most useful tool for tracking down the bug. To
-use it you do this:</P
-><P
-><B
-CLASS="COMMAND"
->gdb smbd core</B
-></P
-><P
->adding appropriate paths to smbd and core so gdb can find them. If you
-don't have gdb then try <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->dbx</KBD
->. Then within the debugger use the
-command <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->where</KBD
-> to give a stack trace of where the problem
-occurred. Include this in your mail.</P
-><P
->If you known any assembly language then do a <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->disass</KBD
-> of the routine
-where the problem occurred (if its in a library routine then
-disassemble the routine that called it) and try to work out exactly
-where the problem is by looking at the surrounding code. Even if you
-don't know assembly then incuding this info in the bug report can be
-useful. </P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN5176"
->35.5. Attaching to a running process</A
-></H2
-><P
->Unfortunately some unixes (in particular some recent linux kernels)
-refuse to dump a core file if the task has changed uid (which smbd
-does often). To debug with this sort of system you could try to attach
-to the running process using <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->gdb smbd <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->PID</VAR
-></KBD
-> where you get <VAR
-CLASS="REPLACEABLE"
->PID</VAR
-> from
-<SPAN
-CLASS="APPLICATION"
->smbstatus</SPAN
->. Then use <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->c</KBD
-> to continue and try to cause the core dump
-using the client. The debugger should catch the fault and tell you
-where it occurred.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><HR><H2
-CLASS="SECT1"
-><A
-NAME="AEN5184"
->35.6. Patches</A
-></H2
-><P
->The best sort of bug report is one that includes a fix! If you send us
-patches please use <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->diff -u</KBD
-> format if your version of
-diff supports it, otherwise use <KBD
-CLASS="USERINPUT"
->diff -c4</KBD
->. Make sure
-your do the diff against a clean version of the source and let me know
-exactly what version you used. </P
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></DIV
-></BODY
-></HTML
-> \ No newline at end of file