&author.jelmer; &author.jht; &author.tridge; 22 May 2001 18 March 2003 June 2005 How to Compile Samba You can obtain the Samba source file from the Samba Web site. To obtain a development version, you can download Samba from Subversion or using rsync. Access Samba Source Code via GIT Introduction Subversion Samba is developed in an open environment. Developers use GIT to checkin (also known as commit) new source code. See the Using Git for Samba Development page in the Samba wiki. Accessing the Samba Sources via rsync and ftp rsync ftp pserver.samba.org also exports unpacked copies of most parts of the Subversion tree at the Samba unpacked location and also via anonymous rsync at the Samba rsync server location. I recommend using rsync rather than ftp, because rsync is capable of compressing data streams, but it is also more useful than FTP because during a partial update it will transfer only the data that is missing plus a small overhead. See the rsync home page for more info on rsync. The disadvantage of the unpacked trees is that they do not support automatic merging of local changes as GIT does. rsync access is most convenient for an initial install. Verifying Samba's PGP Signature GPG PGP It is strongly recommended that you verify the PGP signature for any source file before installing it. Even if you're not downloading from a mirror site, verifying PGP signatures should be a standard reflex. Many people today use the GNU GPG tool set in place of PGP. GPG can substitute for PGP. With that said, go ahead and download the following files: &prompt;wget http://samba.org/samba/ftp/samba-latest.tar.asc &prompt;wget http://samba.org/samba/ftp/samba-latest.tar.gz &prompt;wget http://samba.org/samba/ftp/samba-pubkey.asc PGP 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: &prompt;gpg --import samba-pubkey.asc and verify the Samba source code integrity with: &prompt;gzip -d samba-latest.tar.gz &prompt;gpg --verify samba-latest.tar.asc 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: gpg: BAD signature from Samba Distribution Verification Key Building the Binaries configure To build the binaries, run the program ./configure in the top level directory of the source tree. This should automatically configure Samba for your operating system. If you have unusual needs, then you may wish to first run: &rootprompt;./configure --help This will help you to see what special options can be enabled. Now execute ./configure with any arguments it might need: &rootprompt;./configure [... arguments ...] make Execute the following create the binaries: &rootprompt; make Once it is successfully compiled, you can execute the command shown here to install the binaries and manual pages: &rootprompt; make install Compiling Samba with Active Directory Support In order to compile Samba with ADS support, you need to have installed on your system: The MIT or Heimdal Kerberos development libraries (either install from the sources or use a package). The OpenLDAP development libraries. If your Kerberos libraries are in a nonstandard location, then remember to add the configure option . After you run configure, make sure that the bin/default/include/config.h it generates contain lines like this: #define HAVE_KRB5 1 #define HAVE_LDAP 1 If it does not, configure did not find your KRB5 libraries or your LDAP libraries. Look in bin/config.log to figure out why and fix it. Installing the Required Packages for Debian On Debian, you need to install the following packages: libkrb5-dev krb5-user Installing the Required Packages for Red Hat Linux On Red Hat Linux, this means you should have at least: krb5-workstation (for kinit) krb5-libs (for linking with) krb5-devel (because you are compiling from source) in addition to the standard development environment. If these files are not installed on your system, you should check the installation CDs to find which has them and install the files using your tool of choice. If in doubt about what tool to use, refer to the Red Hat Linux documentation. SuSE Linux Package Requirements SuSE Linux installs Heimdal packages that may be required to allow you to build binary packages. You should verify that the development libraries have been installed on your system. SuSE Linux Samba RPMs support Kerberos. Please refer to the documentation for your SuSE Linux system for information regarding SuSE Linux specific configuration. Additionally, SuSE is very active in the maintenance of Samba packages that provide the maximum capabilities that are available. You should consider using SuSE-provided packages where they are available. Starting the &smbd; &nmbd; and &winbindd; inetd You must choose to start &smbd;, &winbindd; and &nmbd; either as daemons or from inetd. Don't try to do both! Either you can put them in inetd.conf and have them started on demand by inetd or xinetd, or you can start them as daemons either from the command-line or in /etc/rc.local. See the man pages for details on the command line options. Take particular care to read the bit about what user you need to have to start Samba. In many cases, you must be root. The main advantage of starting &smbd; and &nmbd; using the recommended daemon method is that they will respond slightly more quickly to an initial connection request. Starting &smbd; as a Daemon daemon startsmb To start the server as a daemon, you should create a script something like this one, perhaps calling it startsmb. #!/bin/sh /usr/local/samba/sbin/smbd -D /usr/local/samba/sbin/winbindd -D /usr/local/samba/sbin/nmbd -D Make it executable with chmod +x startsmb. You can then run startsmb by hand or execute it from /etc/rc.local. To kill it, send a kill signal to the processes &nmbd; and &smbd;. If you use the SVR4-style init system, you may like to look at the examples/svr4-startup script to make Samba fit into that system. Starting Samba for Red Hat Linux The process for starting Samba will now be outlined. Be sure to configure Samba's &smb.conf; file before starting Samba. When configured, start Samba by executing: &rootprompt; service smb start &rootprompt; service winbind start These steps will start &nmbd;, &smbd; and &winbindd;. To ensure that these services will be automatically restarted when the system is rebooted execute: &rootprompt; chkconfig smb on &rootprompt; chkconfig winbind on Samba will be started automatically at every system reboot. Starting Samba for Novell SUSE Linux Novell SUSE Linux products automatically install all essential Samba components in a default installation. Configure your &smb.conf; file, then execute the following to start Samba: &rootprompt; rcnmb start &rootprompt; rcsmb start &rootprompt; rcwinbind start Now execute these commands so that Samba will be started automatically following a system reboot: &rootprompt; chkconfig nmb on &rootprompt; chkconfig smb on &rootprompt; chkconfig winbind on The Samba services will now be started automatically following a system reboot.