From 4d6b1b6836af6b8e46d03b2f0357a2d171a9c0cb Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jelmer Vernooij Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2003 21:24:11 +0000 Subject: regenerate (This used to be commit bdee29ef5b45210c4d6477e5e764a8a298bebaa7) --- docs/htmldocs/NetworkBrowsing.html | 900 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 900 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/htmldocs/NetworkBrowsing.html (limited to 'docs/htmldocs/NetworkBrowsing.html') diff --git a/docs/htmldocs/NetworkBrowsing.html b/docs/htmldocs/NetworkBrowsing.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..ffe96d2471 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/htmldocs/NetworkBrowsing.html @@ -0,0 +1,900 @@ +Chapter 10. Network Browsing

Chapter 10. Network Browsing

John H. Terpstra

Samba Team

Jelmer R. Vernooij

The Samba Team

July 5, 1998

Updated: April 21, 2003

+This document contains detailed information as well as a 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 addresses. WINS is +not involved in browse list handling except by way of name to address resolution. +

Note

+MS Windows 2000 and later versions can be configured to operate with no NetBIOS +over TCP/IP. Samba-3 and later versions also support this mode of operation. +When the use of NetBIOS over TCP/IP has been disabled, the primary +means for resolution of MS Windows machine names is via DNS and Active Directory. +The following information assumes that your site is running NetBIOS over TCP/IP. +

Features and Benefits

+Someone once referred to the past in these words “It was the best of times, +it was the worst of times.” The more we look back, the more we long for what was and +hope it never returns. +

+ +For many MS Windows network administrators, that statement sums up their feelings about +NetBIOS networking precisely. For those who mastered NetBIOS networking, its fickle +nature was just par for the course. For those who never quite managed to tame its +lusty features, NetBIOS is like Paterson's Curse. +

+For those not familiar with botanical problems in Australia, Paterson's Curse, +Echium plantagineum, was introduced to Australia from Europe during the mid-nineteenth +century. Since then it has spread rapidly. The high seed production, with densities of +thousands of seeds per square meter, a seed longevity of more than seven years, and an +ability to germinate at any time of year, given the right conditions, are some of the +features which make it such a persistent weed. +

+In this chapter we explore vital aspects of Server Message Block (SMB) networking with +a particular focus on SMB as implemented through running NetBIOS (Network Basic +Input/Output System) over TCP/IP. Since Samba does not implement SMB or NetBIOS over +any other protocols, we need to know how to configure our network environment and simply +remember to use nothing but TCP/IP on all our MS Windows network clients. +

+Samba provides the ability to implement a WINS (Windows Internetworking Name Server) +and implements extensions to Microsoft's implementation of WINS. These extensions +help Samba to effect stable WINS operations beyond the normal scope of MS WINS. +

+WINS is exclusively a service that applies only to those systems +that run NetBIOS over TCP/IP. MS Windows 200x/XP have the capacity to operate with +support for NetBIOS disabled, in which case WINS is of no relevance. Samba supports this also. +

+For those networks on which NetBIOS has been disabled (i.e., WINS is not required) +the use of DNS is necessary for host name resolution. +

What Is Browsing?

+To most people browsing means they can see the MS Windows and Samba servers +in the Network Neighborhood, and when the computer icon for a particular server is +clicked, it opens up and shows the shares and printers available on the target server. +

+What seems so simple is in fact a complex interaction of different technologies. +The technologies (or methods) employed in making all of this work include: +

  • MS Windows machines register their presence to the network.
  • Machines announce themselves to other machines on the network.
  • One or more machine on the network collates the local announcements.
  • The client machine finds the machine that has the collated list of machines.
  • The client machine is able to resolve the machine names to IP addresses.
  • The client machine is able to connect to a target machine.

+The Samba application that controls browse list management and name resolution is +called nmbd. The configuration parameters involved in nmbd's operation are: +

Browsing options: os level(*), + lm announce, + lm interval, + preferred master(*), + local master(*), + domain master(*), + browse list, + enhanced browsing. +

Name Resolution Method: + name resolve order(*). +

WINS options: + dns proxy, + wins proxy, + wins server(*), + wins support(*), + wins hook. +

+ +For Samba, the WINS Server and WINS Support are mutually exclusive options. Those marked with +an (*) are the only options that commonly may need to be modified. Even if none of these +parameters is set, nmbd will still do its job. +

Discussion

+All MS Windows networking uses SMB-based messaging. SMB messaging may be implemented with or without NetBIOS. +MS Windows 200x supports NetBIOS over TCP/IP for backwards compatibility. Microsoft appears intent on phasing +out NetBIOS support. +

NetBIOS over TCP/IP

+Samba implements NetBIOS, as does MS Windows NT/200x/XP, by encapsulating it over TCP/IP. +MS Windows products can do likewise. NetBIOS-based networking uses broadcast messaging to +effect browse list management. When running NetBIOS over TCP/IP, this uses UDP-based messaging. +UDP messages can be broadcast or unicast. +

+ +Normally, only unicast UDP messaging can be forwarded by routers. The +remote announce parameter to smb.conf helps to project browse announcements +to remote network segments via unicast UDP. Similarly, the +remote browse sync parameter of smb.conf +implements browse list collation using unicast UDP. +

+Secondly, in those networks where Samba is the only SMB server technology, +wherever possible nmbd should be configured on one machine as the WINS +server. This makes it easy to manage the browsing environment. If each network +segment is configured with its own Samba WINS server, then the only way to +get cross-segment browsing to work is by using the + + +remote announce and the remote browse sync +parameters to your smb.conf file. +

+ +If only one WINS server is used for an entire multi-segment network, then +the use of the remote announce and the +remote browse sync parameters should not be necessary. +

+ +As of Samba-3 WINS replication is being worked on. The bulk of the code has +been committed, but it still needs maturation. This is not a supported feature +of the Samba-3.0.0 release. Hopefully, this will become a supported feature +of one of the Samba-3 release series. +

+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 nmbd +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 +remote browse sync and remote announce +to effect 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 (i.e., an “if all else fails” scenario). +

+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 stabilize, particularly across network segments. +

TCP/IP without NetBIOS

+ + + +All TCP/IP-enabled systems use various forms of host name resolution. The primary +methods for TCP/IP hostname resolution involve either a static file (/etc/hosts) +or the Domain Name System (DNS). DNS is the technology that makes +the Internet usable. DNS-based host name resolution is supported by nearly all +TCP/IP-enabled systems. Only a few embedded TCP/IP systems do not support DNS. +

+When an MS Windows 200x/XP system attempts to resolve a host name to an IP address +it follows a defined path: +

  1. + Checks the hosts file. It is located in + C:\Windows NT\System32\Drivers\etc. +

  2. + Does a DNS lookup. +

  3. + Checks the NetBIOS name cache. +

  4. + Queries the WINS server. +

  5. + Does a broadcast name lookup over UDP. +

  6. + Looks up entries in LMHOSTS. It is located in + C:\Windows NT\System32\Drivers\etc. +

+ +Windows 200x/XP can register its host name with a Dynamic DNS server. You can +force register with a Dynamic DNS server in Windows 200x/XP using: +ipconfig /registerdns. +

+With Active Directory (ADS), a correctly functioning DNS server is absolutely +essential. In the absence of a working DNS server that has been correctly configured, +MS Windows clients and servers will be unable to locate each other, so +consequently network services will be severely impaired. +

+The use of Dynamic DNS is highly recommended with Active Directory, in which case +the use of BIND9 is preferred for its ability to adequately support the SRV (service) +records that are needed for Active Directory. +

DNS and Active Directory

+ +Occasionally we hear from UNIX network administrators who want to use a UNIX-based Dynamic +DNS server in place of the Microsoft DNS server. While this might be desirable to some, the +MS Windows 200x DNS server is auto-configured to work with Active Directory. It is possible +to use BIND version 8 or 9, but it will almost certainly be necessary to create service records +so MS Active Directory clients can resolve host names to locate essential network services. +The following are some of the default service records that Active Directory requires: +

_ldap._tcp.pdc.ms-dcs.Domain

+ This provides the address of the Windows NT PDC for the Domain. +

_ldap._tcp.pdc.ms-dcs.DomainTree

+ Resolves the addresses of Global Catalog servers in the domain. +

_ldap._tcp.site.sites.writable.ms-dcs.Domain

+ Provides list of Domain Controllers based on sites. +

_ldap._tcp.writable.ms-dcs.Domain

+ Enumerates list of Domain Controllers that have the writable copies of the Active Directory datastore. +

_ldap._tcp.GUID.domains.ms-dcs.DomainTree

+ Entry used by MS Windows clients to locate machines using the Global Unique Identifier. +

_ldap._tcp.Site.gc.ms-dcs.DomainTree

+ Used by MS Windows clients to locate site configuration dependent Global Catalog server. +

How Browsing Functions

+MS Windows machines register their NetBIOS names +(i.e., the machine name for each service type in operation) on start-up. +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. +

+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 +remote announce parameter). +

+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. +

+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 to 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. +

+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. +

+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. +

+Samba supports a feature that allows forced synchronization of browse lists across +routed networks using the remote browse sync +parameter in the smb.conf file. This causes Samba to contact the local master +browser on a remote network and to request browse list synchronization. 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 +remote browse sync parameter provides +browse list synchronization 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, /etc/hosts, and so on. +

Configuring WORKGROUP Browsing

+To configure cross-subnet browsing on a network containing machines +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 another +subnet. It is the presence of a Domain Master Browser that makes +cross-subnet browsing possible for a workgroup. +

+In a 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 smb.conf file: +

+

domain master = yes

+

+The Domain Master Browser should preferably be the local master +browser for its own subnet. In order to achieve this, set the following +options in the [global] section of the smb.conf +file as shown in . +

+

Example 10.1. Domain Master Browser smb.conf

[global]
domain master = yes
local master = yes
preferred master = yes
os level = 65

+

+The Domain Master Browser may be the same machine as the WINS server, if necessary. +

+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/200x/XP machine should +be able to do this, as will Windows 9x/Me machines (although these tend to get +rebooted more often, so it is 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 smb.conf file as +shown in : +

+

Example 10.2. Local master browser smb.conf

[global]
domain master = no
local master = yes
preferred master = yes
os level = 65

+

+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. +

+The local master parameter allows Samba to act as a +Local Master Browser. The preferred master causes nmbd +to force a browser election on startup and the os level +parameter sets Samba high enough so it should win any browser elections. +

+If you have an NT machine on the subnet that you wish to be the Local Master Browser, you can disable Samba from +becoming a Local Master Browser by setting the following options in the [global] section of the +smb.conf file as shown in : +

+

Example 10.3. smb.conf for not being a Master Browser

[global]
domain master = no
local master = no
preferred master = no
os level = 0

+

DOMAIN Browsing Configuration

+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 is also the Domain Master Browser for that domain. Network +browsing may break if a Samba server registers the domain master browser NetBIOS name (DOMAIN<1B>) +with WINS instead of the PDC. +

+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 [global] section +of the smb.conf file as shown in : +

+

Example 10.4. Local Master Browser smb.conf

[global]
domain master = no
local master = yes
preferred master = yes
os level = 65

+

+If you wish to have a Samba server fight the election with machines on the same subnet you +may set the os level 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 refer to . +

+If you have Windows NT machines that are members of the domain on all subnets and you are +sure they will always be running, you can disable Samba from taking part in browser elections +and ever becoming a Local Master Browser by setting the following options in the +[global] section of the smb.conf file as shown in : +

+

Example 10.5. smb.conf for not being a master browser

[global]
domain master = no
local master = no
preferred master = no
os level = 0

+

Forcing Samba to Be the Master

+Who becomes the master browser is determined by an election process using broadcasts. Each election packet contains a number of parameters +that determine what precedence (bias) a host should have in the election. By default Samba uses a low precedence and thus loses +elections to just about every Windows network server or client. +

+If you want Samba to win elections, set the os level +global option in smb.conf to a higher number. It defaults to zero. Using 34 would make it win +all elections every other system (except other samba systems). +

+An os level of two would make it beat Windows for Workgroups and Windows 9x/Me, but not MS Windows +NT/200x Server. An MS Windows NT/200x Server Domain Controller uses level 32. The maximum os level is 255. +

+If you want Samba to force an election on startup, set the +preferred master global option in smb.conf to yes. +Samba will then have a slight advantage over other potential master browsers that are not Perferred Master Browsers. +Use this parameter with care, as if you have two hosts (whether they are Windows 9x/Me or +NT/200x/XP or Samba) on the same local subnet both set with preferred master +to yes, then periodically and continually they will force an election in order +to become the Local Master Browser. +

+If you want Samba to be a Domain Master Browser, then it is recommended that +you also set preferred master 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. +

+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 five 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. +

Making Samba the Domain Master

+The domain master is responsible for collating the browse lists of multiple subnets so browsing can occur between subnets. You can +make Samba act as the Domain Master by setting domain master = yes +in smb.conf. By default it will not be a Domain Master. +

+Do not set Samba to be the Domain Master for a workgroup that has the same name as an NT/200x Domain. +If Samba is configured to be the Domain Master for a workgroup that is present on the same +network as a Windows NT/200x domain that has the same name, network browsing problems will +certainly be experienced. +

+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 synchronize browse lists. +

+If you want Samba to be the domain master, you should also set the +os level high enough to make sure it wins elections, and +set preferred master to yes, to +get Samba to force an election on startup. +

+All 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: +

  1. + Local Master Browsers will be unable to find a Domain Master Browser, as they will be looking only on the local subnet. +

  2. + 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. +

+If, however, both Samba and your clients are using a WINS server, then: +

  1. + 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, the Local Master Browser will receive Samba's IP address as its Domain Master Browser. +

  2. + 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. +

Note about Broadcast Addresses

+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 zeros broadcast and you will probably find that browsing and name lookups will not work. +

Multiple Interfaces

+Samba supports machines with multiple network interfaces. If you have multiple interfaces, you will +need to use the interfaces option in smb.conf to configure them. +

Use of the Remote Announce Parameter

+The remote announce parameter of +smb.conf can be used to forcibly ensure +that all the NetBIOS names on a network get announced to a remote network. +The syntax of the remote announce parameter is: +

remote announce = a.b.c.d [e.f.g.h] ...

+or +

remote announce = a.b.c.d/WORKGROUP [e.f.g.h/WORKGROUP] ...

+ +where: +

a.b.c.d and e.f.g.h

+ + + is either the LMB (Local Master Browser) IP address or the broadcast address of the remote network. + i.e., 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. +

WORKGROUP

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, our NetBIOS machine names will end up looking like + they belong to that workgroup. This may cause name resolution problems and should be avoided. +

+

Use of the Remote Browse Sync Parameter

+The remote browse sync parameter of +smb.conf is used to announce to another LMB that it must synchronize its NetBIOS name list with our +Samba LMB. This works only if the Samba server that has this option is +simultaneously the LMB on its network segment. +

+The syntax of the remote browse sync parameter is: + +

remote browse sync = a.b.c.d

+ +where a.b.c.d is either the IP address of the +remote LMB or else is the network broadcast address of the remote segment. +

WINS The Windows Internetworking Name Server

+Use of WINS (either Samba WINS or MS Windows NT Server WINS) is highly +recommended. Every NetBIOS machine registers its name together with a +name_type value for each of several types of service it has available. +It registers its name directly as a unique (the type 0x03) name. +It also registers its 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. +

+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. Thus, all NetBIOS names are 16 characters long (including the +name_type information). +

+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 cannot be used across network segments this type of +information can only be provided via WINS or via a statically configured +lmhosts file that must reside on all clients in the +absence of WINS. +

+WINS also serves the purpose of forcing browse list synchronization by all +LMBs. LMBs must synchronize their browse list with the DMB (Domain Master +Browser) and WINS helps the LMB to identify its 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. +

+WINS will work correctly only if every client TCP/IP protocol stack +has been configured to use the WINS servers. Any client that has not been +configured to use the WINS server will continue to use only broadcast-based +name registration so 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. +

+To configure Samba as a WINS server just add +wins support = yes to the smb.conf +file [global] section. +

+To configure Samba to register with a WINS server just add +wins server = a.b.c.d +to your smb.conf file [global] section. +

Important

+Never use both wins support = yes together +with wins server = a.b.c.d +particularly not using its own IP address. Specifying both will cause nmbd to refuse to start! +

WINS Server Configuration

+Either a Samba Server or a Windows NT Server machine may be set up +as a WINS server. To configure a Samba Server to be a WINS server you must +add to the smb.conf file on the selected Server the following line to +the [global] section: +

+

wins support = yes

+

+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. +

+Machines configured with wins support = yes will keep a list of +all NetBIOS names registered with them, acting as a DNS for NetBIOS names. +

+It is strongly recommended to set up only one WINS server. Do not set the +wins support = yes option on more than one Samba +server. +

+ +To configure Windows NT/200x Server as a WINS server, install and configure +the WINS service. See the Windows NT/200x documentation for details. +Windows NT/200x WINS servers can replicate to each other, allowing more +than one to be set up in a complex subnet environment. As Microsoft +refuses to document the replication protocols, Samba cannot currently +participate in these replications. It is possible in the future that +a Samba-to-Samba WINS replication protocol may be defined, in which +case more than one Samba machine could be set up as a WINS server. +Currently only one Samba server should have the +wins support = yes parameter set. +

+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->Network->Protocols->TCP->WINS Server dialogs +in Windows 9x/Me or Windows NT/200x. To tell a Samba server the IP address +of the WINS server, add the following line to the [global] section of +all smb.conf files: +

+

wins server = <name or IP address>

+

+where <name or IP address> is either the DNS name of the WINS server +machine or its IP address. +

+This line must not be set in the smb.conf file of the Samba +server acting as the WINS server itself. If you set both the +wins support = yes option and the +wins server = <name> option then +nmbd will fail to start. +

+There are two possible scenarios for setting up cross-subnet browsing. +The first details setting up cross-subnet browsing on a network containing +Windows 9x/Me, Samba and Windows NT/200x 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. +

WINS Replication

+ +Samba-3 permits WINS replication through the use of the wrepld 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. +

Static WINS Entries

+Adding static entries to your Samba WINS server is actually fairly easy. +All you have to do is add a line to wins.dat, typically +located in /usr/local/samba/var/locks. +

+Entries in wins.dat take the form of: + +

+"NAME#TYPE" TTL ADDRESS+ FLAGS
+

+ +where NAME is the NetBIOS name, TYPE is the NetBIOS type, TTL is the +time-to-live as an absolute time in seconds, ADDRESS+ is one or more +addresses corresponding to the registration and FLAGS are the NetBIOS +flags for the registration. +

+A typical dynamic entry looks like this: +

+"MADMAN#03" 1055298378 192.168.1.2 66R
+

+ +To make it static, all that has to be done is set the TTL to 0, like this: + +

+"MADMAN#03" 0 192.168.1.2 66R
+

+

+Though this method works with early Samba-3 versions, there is a +possibility that it may change in future versions if WINS replication +is added. +

Helpful Hints

+The following hints should be carefully considered as they are stumbling points +for many new network administrators. +

Windows Networking Protocols

Warning

+Do not use more than one protocol on MS Windows machines. +

+A common cause of browsing problems results from installing more than +one protocol on an MS Windows machine. +

+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 precedence for winning this election process. A machine running Samba or +Windows NT will be biased so the most suitable machine will predictably +win and thus retain its role. +

+The election process is “fought out” so to speak over every NetBIOS network +interface. In the case of a Windows 9x/Me 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/Me 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/Me 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. +

+Windows 95, 98, 98se, and Me are referred to generically as Windows 9x/Me. +The Windows NT4, 200x, and XP use common protocols. These are roughly +referred to as the Windows NT family, but it should be recognized 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. +

+The safest rule of all to follow is: use only one protocol! +

Name Resolution Order

+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: +

  • WINS the best tool.
  • LMHOSTS static and hard to maintain.
  • Broadcast uses UDP and cannot resolve names across remote segments.

+Alternative means of name resolution include: +

  • Static /etc/hosts hard to maintain, and lacks name_type info.
  • DNS is a good choice but lacks essential name_type info.

+Many sites want to restrict DNS lookups and avoid broadcast name +resolution traffic. The name resolve order parameter is of great help here. +The syntax of the name resolve order parameter is: +

name resolve order = wins lmhosts bcast host

+or +

name resolve order = wins lmhosts (eliminates bcast and host)

+The default is: +

name resolve order = host lmhost wins bcast

+where “host” refers to the native methods used by the UNIX system +to implement the gethostbyname() function call. This is normally +controlled by /etc/host.conf, /etc/nsswitch.conf and /etc/resolv.conf. +

Technical Overview of Browsing

+SMB networking provides a mechanism by which clients can access a list +of machines in a network, a so-called browse list. 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 that 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. +

+MS Windows 2000 and later versions, as with Samba-3 and later versions, 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. +

+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 cannot be provided by any other means of name resolution. +

Browsing Support in Samba

+Samba facilitates browsing. The browsing is supported by nmbd +and is also controlled by options in the smb.conf file. +Samba can act as a local browse master for a workgroup and the ability +to support domain logons and scripts is now available. +

+Samba can also act as a Domain Master Browser for a workgroup. This +means that it will collate lists from Local Master Browsers 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. +

+Do 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. +

Note

+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 200x can be configured as +your WINS server. In a mixed NT/200x 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 the WINS server. +

+To get browsing to work you need to run nmbd as usual, but will need +to use the workgroup option in smb.conf +to control what workgroup Samba becomes a part of. +

+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 remote announce in the +smb.conf man page. +

Problem Resolution

+If something does not work, the log.nmbd file will help +to track down the problem. Try a log 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 browse.dat. +

+If it does not work, you should still be able to +type the server name as \\SERVER in filemanager, then +press enter and filemanager should display the list of available shares. +

+Some people find browsing fails because they do not have the global +guest account 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. +

+MS Windows 2000 and later (as with Samba) can be configured to disallow +anonymous (i.e., 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/Me clients are not able to do this and thus will not be able to browse +server resources. +

+The other big problem people have is that their broadcast address, +netmask or IP address is wrong (specified with the interfaces option +in smb.conf) +

Cross-Subnet Browsing

+ +Since the release of Samba 1.9.17 (alpha1), Samba has supported the +replication of browse lists across subnet boundaries. This section +describes how to set this feature up in different settings. +

+To see browse lists that span TCP/IP subnets (i.e., networks separated +by routers that do not pass broadcast traffic), you must set up at least +one WINS server. The WINS server acts as a DNS for NetBIOS names. This will +allow NetBIOS name-to-IP address translation to be completed by a direct +query of the WINS server. This is done via a directed UDP packet on +port 137 to the WINS server machine. The WINS server avoids the necessity +of default NetBIOS name-to-IP address translation, which is done +using UDP 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. +

+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 Windows 9x/Me and Windows NT/200x/XP, this is in the TCP/IP Properties, under Network +settings); for Samba, this is in the smb.conf file. +

Behavior of Cross-Subnet Browsing

+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. +

+Consider a network set up as . +

Figure 10.1. Cross-Subnet Browsing Example.

Cross-Subnet Browsing Example.

+This consists of 3 subnets (1, 2, 3) connected by two routers +(R1, R2) which do not pass broadcasts. Subnet 1 has five machines +on it, subnet 2 has four machines, subnet 3 has four machines. Assume +for the moment that all machines are configured to be in the +same workgroup (for simplicity's sake). Machine N1_C on subnet 1 +is configured as Domain Master Browser (i.e., 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. +

+As 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. +

+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. +

+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.” +

+At this point the browse lists appear as shown in (these are +the machines you would see in your network neighborhood if you looked in it on a particular network right now). +

+

Table 10.1. Browse Subnet Example 1

SubnetBrowse MasterList
Subnet1N1_CN1_A, N1_B, N1_C, N1_D, N1_E
Subnet2N2_BN2_A, N2_B, N2_C, N2_D
Subnet3N3_DN3_A, N3_B, N3_C, N3_D

+

+At this point all the subnets are separate, and no machine is seen across any of the subnets. +

+Now examine subnet 2. As soon as N2_B has become the Local +Master Browser it looks for a Domain Master Browser with which to synchronize +its browse list. It does this by querying the WINS server +(N2_D) for the IP address associated with the NetBIOS name +WORKGROUP<1B>. This name was registered by the Domain Master +Browser (N1_C) with the WINS server as soon as it was started. +

+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 complete the browse lists look as shown in : +

Table 10.2. Browse Subnet Example 2

SubnetBrowse MasterList
Subnet1N1_CN1_A, N1_B, N1_C, N1_D, N1_E, +N2_A(*), N2_B(*), N2_C(*), N2_D(*)
Subnet2N2_BN2_A, N2_B, N2_C, N2_D, N1_A(*), +N1_B(*), N1_C(*), N1_D(*), N1_E(*)
Subnet3N3_DN3_A, N3_B, N3_C, N3_D

+Servers with an (*) after them are non-authoritative names. +

+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. +

+The same sequence of events that occurred 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 will appear as shown in . +

Table 10.3. Browse Subnet Example 3

SubnetBrowse MasterList
Subnet1N1_CN1_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(*)
Subnet2N2_BN2_A, N2_B, N2_C, N2_D, N1_A(*), +N1_B(*), N1_C(*), N1_D(*), N1_E(*)
Subnet3N3_DN3_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 an (*) after them are non-authoritative names. +

+At this point, users looking in their network neighborhood on +subnets 1 or 3 will see all the servers on all subnets, while users on +subnet 2 will still only see the servers on subnets 1 and 2, but not 3. +

+Finally, the Local Master Browser for subnet 2 (N2_B) will sync again +with the Domain Master Browser (N1_C) and will receive the missing +server entries. Finally, as when a steady state (if no machines +are removed or shut off) has been achieved, the browse lists will appear +as shown in . +

Table 10.4. Browse Subnet Example 4

SubnetBrowse MasterList
Subnet1N1_CN1_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(*)
Subnet2N2_BN2_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(*)
Subnet3N3_DN3_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 an (*) after them are non-authoritative names. +

+Synchronizations between the Domain Master Browser and Local +Master Browsers will continue to occur, but this should remain a +steady state operation. +

+If either router R1 or R2 fails, the following will occur: +

  1. + Names of computers on each side of the inaccessible network fragments + will be maintained for as long as 36 minutes in the network neighborhood + lists. +

  2. + Attempts to connect to these inaccessible computers will fail, but the + names will not be removed from the network neighborhood lists. +

  3. + If one of the fragments is cut off from the WINS server, it will only + be able to access servers on its local subnet using subnet-isolated + broadcast NetBIOS name resolution. The effects are similar to that of + losing access to a DNS server. +

Common Errors

+Many questions are asked on the mailing lists regarding browsing. The majority of browsing +problems originate from incorrect configuration of NetBIOS name resolution. Some are of +particular note. +

How Can One Flush the Samba NetBIOS Name Cache without Restarting Samba?

+ +Samba's nmbd process controls all browse list handling. Under normal circumstances it is +safe to restart nmbd. This will effectively flush the Samba NetBIOS name cache and cause it +to be rebuilt. This does not make certain that a rogue machine name will not re-appear +in the browse list. When nmbd is taken out of service, another machine on the network will +become the Browse Master. This new list may still have the rogue entry in it. If you really +want to clear a rogue machine from the list, every machine on the network will need to be +shut down and restarted after all machines are down. Failing a complete restart, the only +other thing you can do is wait until the entry times out and is then flushed from the list. +This may take a long time on some networks (perhaps months). +

Server Resources Can Not Be Listed

My Client Reports ‘This server is not configured to list shared resources

+Your guest account is probably invalid for some reason. Samba uses the +guest account for browsing in smbd. Check that your guest account is +valid. +

Also see guest account in the smb.conf man page.

I get an `Unable to browse the network' error

This error can have multiple causes: + +

  • There is no Local Master Browser. Configure nmbd + or any other machine to serve as Local Master Browser.

  • You cannot log onto the machine that is the local master + browser. Can you logon to it as a guest user?

  • There is no IP connectivity to the Local Master Browser. + Can you reach it by broadcast?

Browsing of Shares and Directories is Very Slow

+ +There are only two machines on a test network. One a Samba server, the other a Windows XP machine. +Authentication and logons work perfectly, but when I try to explore shares on the Samba server, the +Windows XP client becomes unrespsonsive. Sometimes it does not respond for some minutes. Eventually, +Windows Explorer will respond and displays files and directories without problem. +display file and directory.” +

+But, the share is immediately available from a command shell (cmd, followed by +exploration with dos command. Is this a Samba problem or is it a Windows problem? How can I solve this? +

+Here are a few possibilities: +

Bad Networking Hardware

+ + + Most common defective hardware problems center around low cost or defective HUBs, routers, + Network Interface Controllers (NICs) and bad wiring. If one piece of hardware is defective + the whole network may suffer. Bad networking hardware can cause data corruption. Most bad + networking hardware problems are accompanied by an increase in apparent network traffic, + but not all. +

The Windows XP WebClient

+ A number of sites have reported similar slow network browsing problems and found that when + the WebClient service is turned off, the problem dissapears. This is certainly something + that should be explored as it is a simple solution if it works. +

Inconsistent WINS Configuration

+ This type of problem is common when one client is configured to use a WINS server (that is + a TCP/IP configuration setting) and there is no WINS server on the network. Alternately, + this will happen is there is a WINS server and Samba is not configured to use it. The use of + WINS is highly recommended if the network is using NetBIOS over TCP/IP protocols. If use + of NetBIOS over TCP/IP is disabled on all clients, Samba should not be configured as a WINS + server neither should it be configured to use one. +

Incorrect DNS Configuration

+ If use of NetBIOS over TCP/IP is disabled, Active Directory is in use and the DNS server + has been incorrectly configured. Refer for more information. +

-- cgit