From d069dacb6e17866dd5d3862e1837a9cae008644f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jelmer Vernooij Date: Fri, 15 Aug 2003 18:26:34 +0000 Subject: Regenerate docs (This used to be commit dc33e94161e4fc1ca6bf66a321c708c89bb276e3) --- docs/htmldocs/groupmapping.html | 196 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 196 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/htmldocs/groupmapping.html (limited to 'docs/htmldocs/groupmapping.html') diff --git a/docs/htmldocs/groupmapping.html b/docs/htmldocs/groupmapping.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..39d317e8cf --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/htmldocs/groupmapping.html @@ -0,0 +1,196 @@ +Chapter 12. Mapping MS Windows and UNIX Groups

Chapter 12. Mapping MS Windows and UNIX Groups

Jean François Micouleau

Gerald (Jerry) Carter

Samba Team

John H. Terpstra

Samba Team

+ Starting with Samba-3, new group mapping functionality is available to create associations + between Windows group SIDs and UNIX groups. The groupmap subcommand + included with the net tool can be used to manage these associations. +

Warning

+ The first immediate reason to use the group mapping on a Samba PDC, is that + + the domain admin group has been removed and should no longer + be specified in smb.conf. This parameter was used to give the listed users membership + in the Domain Admins Windows group which gave local admin rights on their workstations + (in default configurations). +

Features and Benefits

+ Samba allows the administrator to create MS Windows NT4 / 200x group accounts and to + arbitrarily associate them with UNIX/Linux group accounts. +

+ Group accounts can be managed using the MS Windows NT4 or MS Windows 200x / XP Professional MMC tools. + Appropriate interface scripts should be provided in smb.conf if it is desired that UNIX / Linux system + accounts should be automatically created when these tools are used. In the absence of these scripts, and + so long as winbind is running, Samba accounts group accounts that are created using these tools will be + allocated UNIX UIDs/GIDs from the parameters set by the idmap uid/idmap gid settings + in the smb.conf file. +

Figure 12.1. IDMAP groups

IDMAP groups

+ Administrators should be aware that where smb.conf group interface scripts make + direct calls to the UNIX/Linux system tools (eg: the shadow utilities, groupadd, + groupdel, groupmod) then the resulting UNIX/Linux group names will be subject + to any limits imposed by these tools. If the tool does NOT allow upper case characters + or space characters, then the creation of an MS Windows NT4 / 200x style group of + Engineering Managers will attempt to create an identically named + UNIX/Linux group, an attempt that will of course fail! +

+ There are several possible work-arounds for the operating system tools limitation. One + method is to use a script that generates a name for the UNIX/Linux system group that + fits the operating system limits, and that then just passes the UNIX/Linux group id (GID) + back to the calling Samba interface. This will provide a dynamic work-around solution. +

+ Another work-around is to manually create a UNIX/Linux group, then manually create the + MS Windows NT4 / 200x group on the Samba server and then use the net groupmap + tool to connect the two to each other. +

Discussion

+ When installing MS Windows NT4 / 200x on a computer, the installation + program creates default users and groups, notably the Administrators group, + and gives that group privileges necessary privileges to perform essential system tasks. + eg: Ability to change the date and time or to kill (or close) any process running on the + local machine. +

+ The 'Administrator' user is a member of the 'Administrators' group, and thus inherits + 'Administrators' group privileges. If a 'joe' user is created to be a member of the + 'Administrator' group, 'joe' has exactly the same rights as 'Administrator'. +

+ When an MS Windows NT4 / W200x is made a domain member, the "Domain Admins" group of the + PDC is added to the local 'Administrators' group of the workstation. Every member of the + 'Domain Administrators' group inherits the rights of the local 'Administrators' group when + logging on the workstation. +

+ The following steps describe how to make Samba PDC users members of the 'Domain Admins' group? +

  1. + create a unix group (usually in /etc/group), let's call it domadm +

  2. add to this group the users that must be Administrators. For example + if you want joe, john and mary, your entry in /etc/group will + look like: +

    +		domadm:x:502:joe,john,mary
    +		

    +

  3. + Map this domadm group to the "Domain Admins" group by running the command: +

    +

    +root# net groupmap add ntgroup="Domain Admins" unixgroup=domadm
    +

    +

    + The quotes around "Domain Admins" are necessary due to the space in the group name. + Also make sure to leave no whitespace surrounding the equal character (=). +

+ Now joe, john and mary are domain administrators! +

+ It is possible to map any arbitrary UNIX group to any Windows NT4 / 200x group as well as + making any UNIX group a Windows domain group. For example, if you wanted to include a + UNIX group (e.g. acct) in a ACL on a local file or printer on a domain member machine, + you would flag that group as a domain group by running the following on the Samba PDC: +

+

+root# net groupmap add rid=1000 ntgroup="Accounting" unixgroup=acct
+

+

+ Be aware that the RID parameter is a unsigned 32 bit integer that should + normally start at 1000. However, this rid must not overlap with any RID assigned + to a user. Verifying this is done differently depending on the passdb backend + you are using. Future versions of the tools may perform the verification automatically, + but for now the burden is on you. +

Example Configuration

+ You can list the various groups in the mapping database by executing + net groupmap list. Here is an example: +

+

+root#  net groupmap list
+System Administrators (S-1-5-21-2547222302-1596225915-2414751004-1002) -> sysadmin
+Domain Admins (S-1-5-21-2547222302-1596225915-2414751004-512) -> domadmin
+Domain Users (S-1-5-21-2547222302-1596225915-2414751004-513) -> domuser
+Domain Guests (S-1-5-21-2547222302-1596225915-2414751004-514) -> domguest
+

+

+ For complete details on net groupmap, refer to the net(8) man page. +

Configuration Scripts

+ Everyone needs tools. Some of us like to create our own, others prefer to use canned tools + (ie: prepared by someone else for general use). +

Sample smb.conf add group script

+ A script to create complying group names for use by the Samba group interfaces: +

+

Example 12.1. smbgrpadd.sh

+
+#!/bin/bash
+
+# Add the group using normal system groupadd tool.
+groupadd smbtmpgrp00
+
+thegid=`cat /etc/group | grep smbtmpgrp00 | cut -d ":" -f3`
+
+# Now change the name to what we want for the MS Windows networking end
+cp /etc/group /etc/group.bak
+cat /etc/group.bak | sed s/smbtmpgrp00/$1/g > /etc/group
+
+# Now return the GID as would normally happen.
+echo $thegid
+exit 0
+

+

+ The smb.conf entry for the above script would look like: +

add group script = /path_to_tool/smbgrpadd.sh %g

+

Script to configure Group Mapping

+ In our example we have created a UNIX/Linux group called ntadmin. + Our script will create the additional groups Orks, Elves, Gnomes: +

+

+#!/bin/bash
+
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="Domain Admins" unixgroup=ntadmin
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="Domain Users" unixgroup=users
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="Domain Guests" unixgroup=nobody
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="Administrators" unixgroup=root
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="Users" unixgroup=users
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="Guests" unixgroup=nobody
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="System Operators" unixgroup=sys
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="Account Operators" unixgroup=root
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="Backup Operators" unixgroup=bin
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="Print Operators" unixgroup=lp
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="Replicators" unixgroup=daemon
+net groupmap modify ntgroup="Power Users" unixgroup=sys
+
+groupadd Orks
+groupadd Elves
+groupadd Gnomes
+
+net groupmap add ntgroup="Orks"       unixgroup=Orks         type=d
+net groupmap add ntgroup="Elves"      unixgroup=Elves        type=d
+net groupmap add ntgroup="Gnomes"     unixgroup=Gnomes       type=d
+

+

+ Of course it is expected that the administrator will modify this to suit local needs. + For information regarding the use of the net groupmap tool please + refer to the man page. +

Common Errors

+At this time there are many little surprises for the unwary administrator. In a real sense +it is imperative that every step of automated control scripts must be carefully tested +manually before putting them into active service. +

Adding Groups Fails

+ This is a common problem when the groupadd is called directly + by the Samba interface script for the add group script in + the smb.conf file. +

+ The most common cause of failure is an attempt to add an MS Windows group account + that has either an upper case character and/or a space character in it. +

+ There are three possible work-arounds. Firstly, use only group names that comply + with the limitations of the UNIX/Linux groupadd system tool. + The second involves use of the script mentioned earlier in this chapter, and the + third option is to manually create a UNIX/Linux group account that can substitute + for the MS Windows group name, then use the procedure listed above to map that group + to the MS Windows group. +

Adding MS Windows Groups to MS Windows Groups Fails

+ Samba-3 does NOT support nested groups from the MS Windows control environment. +

Adding Domain Users to the Power Users group

+ What must I do to add Domain Users to the Power Users group? +

+ The Power Users group is a group that is local to each Windows + 200x / XP Professional workstation. You can not add the Domain Users group to the Power Users + group automatically, this must be done on each workstation by logging in as the local workstation + administrator and then using click on Start / Control Panel / Users and Passwords + now click on the 'Advanced' tab, then on the 'Advanced' Button. +

+ Now click on 'Groups', then double click on 'Power Users'. This will launch the panel to add users + or groups to the local machine 'Power Uses' group. Click on the 'Add' button, select the domain + from which the 'Domain Users' group is to be added, double click on the 'Domain Users' group, then + click on the 'Ok' button. Note: If a logon box is presented during this process please remember to + enter the connect as DOMAIN\UserName. ie: For the domain MIDEARTH and the user 'root' enter + MIDEARTH\root. +

-- cgit