&author.jelmer;
&author.jht;
&author.jerry;
&author.jeremy;
&person.gd;LDAP updatesOlivier (lem)LemaireIDEALXolem@IDEALX.orgMay 24, 2003Account Information Databases
Samba-3 implements a new capability to work concurrently with multiple account backends.
The possible new combinations of password backends allows Samba-3 a degree of flexibility
and scalability that previously could be achieved only with MS Windows Active Directory.
This chapter describes the new functionality and how to get the most out of it.
Features and Benefits
Samba-3 provides for complete backward compatibility with Samba-2.2.x functionality
as follows:
SAM backendsmbpasswdSAM backendldapsam_compatencrypted passwordsBackward Compatibility BackendsPlain Text
This isn't really a backend at all, but is listed here for simplicity. Samba can be
configured to pass plaintext authentication requests to the traditional UNIX/Linux
/etc/passwd and /etc/shadow
style subsystems. On systems that have Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM)
support, all PAM modules are supported. The behavior is just as it was with
Samba-2.2.x, and the protocol limitations imposed by MS Windows clients
apply likewise. Please refer to Technical Information for more information
regarding the limitations of Plain Text password usage.
smbpasswd
This option allows continued use of the smbpasswd
file that maintains a plain ASCII (text) layout that includes the MS Windows
LanMan and NT encrypted passwords as well as a field that stores some
account information. This form of password backend does not store any of
the MS Windows NT/200x SAM (Security Account Manager) information required to
provide the extended controls that are needed for more comprehensive
inter-operation with MS Windows NT4/200x servers.
This backend should be used only for backward compatibility with older
versions of Samba. It may be deprecated in future releases.
ldapsam_compat (Samba-2.2 LDAP Compatibility)
There is a password backend option that allows continued operation with
an existing OpenLDAP backend that uses the Samba-2.2.x LDAP schema extension.
This option is provided primarily as a migration tool, although there is
no reason to force migration at this time. This tool will eventually
be deprecated.
New Backends
Samba-3 introduces a number of new password backend capabilities.
SAM backendtdbsamSAM backendldapsamSAM backendmysqlsamSAM backendxmlsamtdbsam
This backend provides a rich database backend for local servers. This
backend is not suitable for multiple Domain Controllers (i.e., PDC + one
or more BDC) installations.
The tdbsam password backend stores the old
smbpasswd information plus the extended MS Windows NT / 200x
SAM information into a binary format TDB (trivial database) file.
The inclusion of the extended information makes it possible for Samba-3
to implement the same account and system access controls that are possible
with MS Windows NT4/200x-based systems.
The inclusion of the tdbsam capability is a direct
response to user requests to allow simple site operation without the overhead
of the complexities of running OpenLDAP. It is recommended to use this only
for sites that have fewer than 250 users. For larger sites or implementations,
the use of OpenLDAP or of Active Directory integration is strongly recommended.
ldapsam
This provides a rich directory backend for distributed account installation.
Samba-3 has a new and extended LDAP implementation that requires configuration
of OpenLDAP with a new format Samba schema. The new format schema file is
included in the examples/LDAP directory of the Samba distribution.
The new LDAP implementation significantly expands the control abilities that
were possible with prior versions of Samba. It is now possible to specify
per user profile settings, home directories, account access controls, and
much more. Corporate sites will see that the Samba Team has listened to their
requests both for capability and to allow greater scalability.
mysqlsam (MySQL based backend)
It is expected that the MySQL-based SAM will be very popular in some corners.
This database backend will be of considerable interest to sites that want to
leverage existing MySQL technology.
pgsqlsam (PostGreSQL based backend)
Stores user information in a PostgreSQL database.
This backend is largely undocumented at
the moment, though it's configuration is very similar to
that of the mysqlsam backend.
xmlsam (XML based datafile)pdbedit
Allows the account and password data to be stored in an XML format
data file. This backend cannot be used for normal operation, it can only
be used in conjunction with pdbedit's pdb2pdb
functionality. The DTD that is used might be subject to changes in the future.
The xmlsam option can be useful for account migration between database
backends or backups. Use of this tool will allow the data to be edited before migration
into another backend format.
Technical Information
Old Windows clients send plain text passwords over the wire. Samba can check these
passwords by encrypting them and comparing them to the hash stored in the UNIX user database.
encrypted passwords
Newer Windows clients send encrypted passwords (so-called LanMan and NT hashes) over
the wire, instead of plain text passwords. The newest clients will send only encrypted
passwords and refuse to send plain text passwords, unless their registry is tweaked.
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.
In addition to differently encrypted passwords, Windows also stores certain data for each
user that is not stored in a UNIX user database. For example, workstations the user may logon from,
the location where the user's profile is stored, and so on. Samba retrieves and stores this
information using a . Commonly available backends are LDAP, plain text
file, and MySQL. For more information, see the man page for &smb.conf; regarding the
parameter.
IDMAP: Resolution of SIDs to UIDs.idmap-sid2uidSID
The resolution of SIDs to UIDs is fundamental to correct operation of Samba. In both cases shown, if winbindd is not running, or cannot
be contacted, then only local SID/UID resolution is possible. See resolution of SIDs to UIDs and
resolution of UIDs to SIDs diagrams.
IDMAP: Resolution of UIDs to SIDs.idmap-uid2sidImportant Notes About Security
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 clear-text 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 clear-text
passwords of all your users. Its contents must be kept secret and the file should
be protected accordingly.
Ideally, we would like a password scheme that involves neither plain text passwords
on the network nor on disk. Unfortunately, this is not available as Samba is stuck with
having to be compatible with other SMB systems (Windows NT, Windows for Workgroups, Windows 9x/Me).
Windows NT 4.0 Service Pack 3 changed the default setting so plaintext passwords
are disabled from being sent over the wire. This mandates either the use of encrypted
password support or editing the Windows NT registry to re-enable plaintext passwords.
The following versions of Microsoft Windows do not support full domain security protocols,
although they may log onto a domain environment:
MS DOS Network client 3.0 with the basic network redirector installed.Windows 95 with the network redirector update installed.Windows 98 [Second Edition].Windows Me.
MS Windows XP Home does not have facilities to become a Domain Member and it cannot participate in domain logons.
The following versions of MS Windows fully support domain security protocols.
Windows NT 3.5x.Windows NT 4.0.Windows 2000 Professional.Windows 200x Server/Advanced Server.Windows XP Professional.
All current releases 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.
Instead, it allows the client to negotiate either plain text or encrypted password
handling.
MS Windows clients will cache the encrypted password alone. Where 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
effect an auto-reconnect. If the resource server does not support encrypted passwords the
auto-reconnect will fail. Use of encrypted passwords is strongly advised.
Advantages of Encrypted PasswordsPlaintext passwords are not passed across
the network. Someone using a network sniffer cannot just
record passwords going to the SMB server.Plaintext passwords are not stored anywhere in
memory or on disk.Windows NT does not like talking to a server
that does 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.
Encrypted password support allows automatic share
(resource) reconnects.Encrypted passwords are essential for PDC/BDC
operation.Advantages of Non-Encrypted PasswordsPlaintext passwords are not kept
on disk, and are not cached in memory. Uses same password file as other UNIX
services such as Login and FTP.Use of other services (such as Telnet and FTP) that
send plain text passwords over the network, so sending them for SMB
is not such a big deal.Mapping User Identifiers between MS Windows and UNIX
Every operation in UNIX/Linux requires a user identifier (UID), just as in
MS Windows NT4/200x this requires a Security Identifier (SID). Samba provides
two means for mapping an MS Windows user to a UNIX/Linux UID.
First, all Samba SAM (Security Account Manager database) accounts require
a UNIX/Linux UID that the account will map to. As users are added to the account
information database, Samba will call the
interface to add the account to the Samba host OS. In essence all accounts in
the local SAM require a local user account.
idmap uididmap gid
The second way to effect Windows SID to UNIX UID mapping is via the
idmap uid and idmap gid parameters in &smb.conf;.
Please refer to the man page for information about these parameters.
These parameters are essential when mapping users from a remote SAM server.
Mapping Common UIDs/GIDs on Distributed Machines
Samba-3 has a special facility that makes it possible to maintain identical UIDs and GIDs
on all servers in a distributed network. A distributed network is one where there exists
a PDC, one or more BDCs and/or one or more Domain Member servers. Why is this important?
This is important if files are being shared over more than one protocol (e.g., NFS) and where
users are copying files across UNIX/Linux systems using tools such as rsync.
idmap backend
The special facility is enabled using a parameter called idmap backend.
The default setting for this parameter is an empty string. Technically it is possible to use
an LDAP based idmap backend for UIDs and GIDs, but it makes most sense when this is done for
network configurations that also use LDAP for the SAM backend. Following
example shows that.
SAM backendldapsamExample configuration with the LDAP idmap backendldap:ldap://ldap-server.quenya.org:636Alternately, this could be specified as:ldap:ldaps://ldap-server.quenya.org
A network administrator who wants to make significant use of LDAP backends will sooner or later be
exposed to the excellent work done by PADL Software. PADL have
produced and released to open source an array of tools that might be of interest. These tools include:
nss_ldap: An LDAP Name Service Switch module to provide native
name service support for AIX, Linux, Solaris, and other operating systems. This tool
can be used for centralized storage and retrieval of UIDs/GIDs.
pam_ldap: A PAM module that provides LDAP integration for UNIX/Linux
system access authentication.
idmap_ad: An IDMAP backend that supports the Microsoft Services for
UNIX RFC 2307 schema available from the PADL web
site.
Regarding LDAP Directories and Windows Computer Accounts
Samba doesn't provide a turnkey solution to LDAP. It is best to deal with the design and configuration
of an LDAP directory prior to integration with Samba. A working knowledge of LDAP makes Samba integration
easy and the lack of a working knowledge of LDAP can make it one a frustrating experience.
Computer (machine) accounts can be placed where ever you like in an LDAP directory subject to some
constraints that are described in this chapter.
The POSIX and SambaSAMAccount components of computer (machine) accounts are both used by Samba.
i.e.: Machine accounts are treated inside Samba in the same way that Windows NT4/200X treats
them. A user account and a machine account are indistinquishable from each other, except that
the machine account ends in a '$' character, as do trust accounts.
The need for Windows user, group, machine, trust, etc. accounts to be tied to a valid UNIX uid
is a design decision that was made a long way back in the history of Samba development. It is
unlikely that this decision will be reversed of changed during the remaining life of the
Samba-3.x series.
The resolution of a UID from the Windows SID is achieved within Samba through a mechanism that
must refer back to the host operating system on which Samba is running. The Name Service
Switcher (NSS) is the preferred mechanism that shields applications (like Samba) from the
need to know everything about every host OS it runs on.
Samba asks the host OS to provide a UID via the passwd, shadow
and group facilities in the NSS control (configuration) file. The best tool
for achieving this is left up to the UNIX administrator to determine. It is not imposed by
Samba. Samba provides winbindd together with its support libraries as one method. It is
possible to do this via LDAP - and for that Samba provides the appropriate hooks so that
all account entities can be located in an LDAP directory.
For many the weapon of choice is to use the PADL nss_ldap utility. This utility must
be configured so that computer accounts can be resolved to a POSIX/UNIX account UID. That
is fundamentally an LDAP design question. The information provided on the Samba list and
in the documentation is directed at providing working examples only. The design
of an LDAP directory is a complex subject that is beyond the scope of this documentation.
Account Management Toolspdbedit
Samba provides two tools for management of user and machine accounts. These tools are
called smbpasswd and pdbedit.
The smbpasswd Command
The smbpasswd utility is similar to the passwd
or yppasswd programs. It maintains the two 32 byte password
fields in the passdb backend.
smbpasswd 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.
smbpasswd 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 changing an NT Domain user's password).
smbpasswd can be used to:
User ManagementUser AccountsAdding/Deletingadd user or machine accounts.delete user or machine accounts.enable user or machine accounts.disable user or machine accounts.set to NULL user passwords.manage interdomain trust accounts.
To run smbpasswd as a normal user just type:
&prompt;smbpasswdOld SMB password: secret
For secret, type old value here or press return if
there is no old password.
New SMB Password: new secretRepeat New SMB Password: new secret
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.
When invoked by an ordinary user, the command will only allow the user to change his or her own
SMB password.
When run by root, smbpasswd may take an optional argument specifying
the user name whose SMB password you wish to change. 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.
smbpasswd is designed to work in the way familiar to UNIX
users who use the passwd or yppasswd commands.
While designed for administrative use, this tool provides essential User Level
password change capabilities.
For more details on using smbpasswd, refer to the man page (the
definitive reference).
The pdbedit Commandpdbeditpdbedit is a tool that can be used only by root. It is used to
manage the passdb backend. pdbedit can be used to:
User ManagementUser AccountsAdding/Deletingadd, remove or modify user accounts.list user accounts.migrate user accounts.pdbedit
The pdbedit tool is the only one that can manage the account
security and policy settings. It is capable of all operations that smbpasswd can
do as well as a super set of them.
pdbedit
One particularly important purpose of the pdbedit is to allow
the migration of account information from one passdb backend to another. See the
XML password backend section of this chapter.
The following is an example of the user account information that is stored in
a tdbsam password backend. This listing was produced by running:
&prompt;pdbedit -Lv met
UNIX username: met
NT username:
Account Flags: [UX ]
User SID: S-1-5-21-1449123459-1407424037-3116680435-2004
Primary Group SID: S-1-5-21-1449123459-1407424037-3116680435-1201
Full Name: Melissa E Terpstra
Home Directory: \\frodo\met\Win9Profile
HomeDir Drive: H:
Logon Script: scripts\logon.bat
Profile Path: \\frodo\Profiles\met
Domain: &example.workgroup;
Account desc:
Workstations: melbelle
Munged dial:
Logon time: 0
Logoff time: Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
Kickoff time: Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
Password last set: Sat, 14 Dec 2002 14:37:03 GMT
Password can change: Sat, 14 Dec 2002 14:37:03 GMT
Password must change: Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
pdbedit
The pdbedit tool allows migration of authentication (account)
databases from one backend to another. For example: To migrate accounts from an
old smbpasswd database to a tdbsam
backend:
Set the tdbsam, smbpasswd.
Execute:
&rootprompt;pdbedit -i smbpasswd -e tdbsam
Now remove the smbpasswd from the passdb backend
configuration in &smb.conf;.
Password Backends
Samba offers the greatest flexibility in backend account database design of any SMB/CIFS server
technology available today. The flexibility is immediately obvious as one begins to explore this
capability.
It is possible to specify not only multiple different password backends, but even multiple
backends of the same type. For example, to use two different tdbsam databases:
tdbsam:/etc/samba/passdb.tdb tdbsam:/etc/samba/old-passdb.tdbPlaintext
Older versions of Samba retrieved user information from the UNIX user database
and eventually some other fields from the file /etc/samba/smbpasswd
or /etc/smbpasswd. When password encryption is disabled, no
SMB specific data is stored at all. Instead all operations are conducted via the way
that the Samba host OS will access its /etc/passwd database.
Linux systems For example, all operations are done via PAM.
smbpasswd &smbmdash; Encrypted Password DatabaseSAM backendsmbpasswd
Traditionally, when configuring yes in Samba's &smb.conf; file, user account
information such as username, LM/NT password hashes, password change times, and account
flags have been stored in the smbpasswd(5) file. There are several
disadvantages to this approach for sites with large numbers of users (counted
in the thousands).
The first problem 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 large sites. What is needed is an indexed approach
such as used in databases.
The second problem is that administrators who desire to replicate a smbpasswd file
to more than one Samba server were left to use external tools such as
rsync(1) and ssh(1) and wrote custom,
in-house scripts.
Finally, the amount of information that is stored in an smbpasswd entry leaves
no room for additional attributes such as a home directory, password expiration time,
or even a Relative Identifier (RID).
As a result of these deficiencies, 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 Samba CVS trees).
Samba provides an enhanced set of passdb backends that overcome the deficiencies
of the smbpasswd plain text database. These are tdbsam, ldapsam and xmlsam.
Of these, ldapsam will be of most interest to large corporate or enterprise sites.
tdbsamSAM backendtdbsam
Samba can store user and machine account data in a TDB (Trivial Database).
Using this backend does not require any additional configuration. This backend is
recommended for new installations that do not require LDAP.
As a general guide, the Samba Team does not recommend using the tdbsam backend for sites
that have 250 or more users. Additionally, tdbsam is not capable of scaling for use
in sites that require PDB/BDC implementations that require replication of the account
database. Clearly, for reason of scalability, the use of ldapsam should be encouraged.
The recommendation of a 250 user limit is purely based on the notion that this
would generally involve a site that has routed networks, possibly spread across
more than one physical location. The Samba Team has not at this time established
the performance based scalability limits of the tdbsam architecture.
ldapsamSAM backendldapsam
There are a few points to stress that the ldapsam does not provide. The LDAP
support referred to in this documentation does not include:
A means of retrieving user account information from
an Windows 200x Active Directory server.A means of replacing /etc/passwd.
The second item can be accomplished by using LDAP NSS and PAM modules. LGPL
versions of these libraries can be obtained from
PADL Software.
More information about the configuration of these packages may be found at
LDAP, System Administration; Gerald Carter by O'Reilly; Chapter 6: Replacing NIS."
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:
OpenLDAPSun iPlanet Directory Server
Two additional Samba resources which may prove to be helpful are:
The Samba-PDC-LDAP-HOWTO
maintained by Ignacio Coupeau.The NT migration scripts from IDEALX that are
geared to manage users and group in such a Samba-LDAP Domain Controller configuration.
Supported LDAP Servers
The LDAP ldapsam code has been developed and tested using the OpenLDAP 2.0 and 2.1 server and
client libraries. The same code should work with Netscape's Directory Server and client SDK.
However, there are bound to be compile errors and bugs. These should not be hard to fix.
Please submit fixes via the process outlined in Reporting Bugs chapter.
Schema and Relationship to the RFC 2307 posixAccount
Samba-3.0 includes the necessary schema file for OpenLDAP 2.0 in
examples/LDAP/samba.schema. The sambaSamAccount ObjectClass is given here:
ObjectClass (1.3.6.1.4.1.7165.2.2.6 NAME 'sambaSamAccount' SUP top AUXILIARY
DESC 'Samba-3.0 Auxiliary SAM Account'
MUST ( uid $ sambaSID )
MAY ( cn $ sambaLMPassword $ sambaNTPassword $ sambaPwdLastSet $
sambaLogonTime $ sambaLogoffTime $ sambaKickoffTime $
sambaPwdCanChange $ sambaPwdMustChange $ sambaAcctFlags $
displayName $ sambaHomePath $ sambaHomeDrive $ sambaLogonScript $
sambaProfilePath $ description $ sambaUserWorkstations $
sambaPrimaryGroupSID $ sambaDomainName ))
The samba.schema file has been formatted for OpenLDAP 2.0/2.1.
The Samba Team owns the OID space used by the above schema and recommends its use.
If you translate the schema to be used with Netscape DS, please submit the modified
schema file as a patch to jerry@samba.org.
Just as the smbpasswd file is meant to store information that provides information additional to a
user's /etc/passwd entry, so is the sambaSamAccount object
meant to supplement the UNIX user account information. A sambaSamAccount is a
AUXILIARY ObjectClass so it can be used to augment existing
user account information in the LDAP directory, thus providing information needed
for Samba account handling. However, there are several fields (e.g., uid) that overlap
with the posixAccount ObjectClass outlined in RFC2307. This is by design.
In order to store all user account information (UNIX and Samba) in the directory,
it is necessary to use the sambaSamAccount and posixAccount ObjectClass es 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.
OpenLDAP Configuration
To include support for the sambaSamAccount object in an OpenLDAP directory
server, first copy the samba.schema file to slapd's configuration directory.
The samba.schema file can be found in the directory examples/LDAP
in the Samba source distribution.
&rootprompt;cp samba.schema /etc/openldap/schema/
Next, include the samba.schema file in slapd.conf.
The sambaSamAccount object contains two attributes that depend on other schema
files. The uid attribute is defined in cosine.schema and
the displayName attribute is defined in the inetorgperson.schema
file. Both of these must be included before the samba.schema file.
## /etc/openldap/slapd.conf
## schema files (core.schema is required by default)
include /etc/openldap/schema/core.schema
## needed for sambaSamAccount
include /etc/openldap/schema/cosine.schema
include /etc/openldap/schema/inetorgperson.schema
include /etc/openldap/schema/nis.schema
include /etc/openldap/schema/samba.schema
....
It is recommended that you maintain some indices on some of the most useful attributes,
as in the following example, to speed up searches made on sambaSamAccount objectclasses
(and possibly posixAccount and posixGroup as well):
# Indices to maintain
## required by OpenLDAP
index objectclass eq
index cn pres,sub,eq
index sn pres,sub,eq
## required to support pdb_getsampwnam
index uid pres,sub,eq
## required to support pdb_getsambapwrid()
index displayName pres,sub,eq
## uncomment these if you are storing posixAccount and
## posixGroup entries in the directory as well
##index uidNumber eq
##index gidNumber eq
##index memberUid eq
index sambaSID eq
index sambaPrimaryGroupSID eq
index sambaDomainName eq
index default sub
Create the new index by executing:
&rootprompt;./sbin/slapindex -f slapd.conf
Remember to restart slapd after making these changes:
&rootprompt;/etc/init.d/slapd restartInitialize the LDAP Database
Before you can add accounts to the LDAP database you must create the account containers
that they will be stored in. The following LDIF file should be modified to match your
needs (DNS entries, and so on):
# Organization for Samba Base
dn: dc=quenya,dc=org
objectclass: dcObject
objectclass: organization
dc: quenya
o: Quenya Org Network
description: The Samba-3 Network LDAP Example
# Organizational Role for Directory Management
dn: cn=Manager,dc=quenya,dc=org
objectclass: organizationalRole
cn: Manager
description: Directory Manager
# Setting up container for users
dn: ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org
objectclass: top
objectclass: organizationalUnit
ou: People
# Setting up admin handle for People OU
dn: cn=admin,ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org
cn: admin
objectclass: top
objectclass: organizationalRole
objectclass: simpleSecurityObject
userPassword: {SSHA}c3ZM9tBaBo9autm1dL3waDS21+JSfQVz
# Setting up container for groups
dn: ou=Groups,dc=quenya,dc=org
objectclass: top
objectclass: organizationalUnit
ou: Groups
# Setting up admin handle for Groups OU
dn: cn=admin,ou=Groups,dc=quenya,dc=org
cn: admin
objectclass: top
objectclass: organizationalRole
objectclass: simpleSecurityObject
userPassword: {SSHA}c3ZM9tBaBo9autm1dL3waDS21+JSfQVz
# Setting up container for computers
dn: ou=Computers,dc=quenya,dc=org
objectclass: top
objectclass: organizationalUnit
ou: Computers
# Setting up admin handle for Computers OU
dn: cn=admin,ou=Computers,dc=quenya,dc=org
cn: admin
objectclass: top
objectclass: organizationalRole
objectclass: simpleSecurityObject
userPassword: {SSHA}c3ZM9tBaBo9autm1dL3waDS21+JSfQVz
The userPassword shown above should be generated using slappasswd.
The following command will then load the contents of the LDIF file into the LDAP
database.
&prompt;slapadd -v -l initldap.dif
Do not forget to secure your LDAP server with an adequate access control list
as well as an admin password.
Before Samba can access the LDAP server you need to store the LDAP admin password
into the Samba-3 secrets.tdb database by:
&rootprompt;smbpasswd -w secretConfiguring Samba
The following parameters are available in smb.conf only if your
version of Samba was built with LDAP support. Samba automatically builds with LDAP support if the
LDAP libraries are found.
LDAP related smb.conf options:
ldapsam:url,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
These are described in the &smb.conf; man
page and so will not be repeated here. However, a sample &smb.conf; file for
use with an LDAP directory could appear as shown below.
Configuration with LDAPuseryesMORIANOLDORldap related parametersdefine the DN to use when binding to the directory serversThe password for this DN is not stored in smb.conf. Rather itmust be set by using 'smbpasswd -w secretpw' to store thepassphrase in the secrets.tdb file. If the "ldap admin dn" valueschange, this password will need to be reset."cn=Manager,dc=quenya,dc=org"Define the SSL option when connecting to the directory('off', 'start tls', or 'on' (default))start tlssyntax: passdb backend = ldapsam:ldap://server-name[:port]ldapsam:ldap://frodo.quenya.orgsmbpasswd -x delete the entire dn-entrynothe machine and user suffix added to the base suffixwrote WITHOUT quotes. NULL suffixes by defaultou=Peopleou=Groupsou=ComputersTrust UNIX account information in LDAP (see the smb.conf man page for details) specify the base DN to use when searching the directorydc=quenya,dc=org generally the default ldap search filter is ok(uid=%u)Accounts and Groups ManagementUser ManagementUser AccountsAdding/Deleting
As user accounts are managed through the sambaSamAccount objectclass, you should
modify your existing administration tools to deal with sambaSamAccount attributes.
Machine accounts are managed with the sambaSamAccount objectclass, just
like users accounts. However, it is up to you to store those accounts
in a different tree of your LDAP namespace. You should use
ou=Groups,dc=quenya,dc=org to store groups and
ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org to store users. Just configure your
NSS and PAM accordingly (usually, in the /etc/openldap/sldap.conf
configuration file).
In Samba-3, the group management system is based on POSIX
groups. This means that Samba makes use of the posixGroup objectclass.
For now, there is no NT-like group system management (global and local
groups). Samba-3 knows only about Domain Groups
and, unlike MS Windows 2000 and Active Directory, Samba-3 does not
support nested groups.
Security and sambaSamAccount
There are two important points to remember when discussing the security
of sambaSamAccount entries in the directory.
Never retrieve the SambaLMPassword or
SambaNTPassword attribute values over an unencrypted LDAP session.Never allow non-admin users to
view the SambaLMPassword or SambaNTPassword attribute values.
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
Account Information Database section of this chapter.
To remedy the first security issue, the &smb.conf; parameter defaults
to require an encrypted session (on) using
the default port of 636
when contacting the directory server. When using an OpenLDAP server, it
is possible to use the StartTLS LDAP extended operation in the place of
LDAPS. In either case, you are strongly discouraged to disable this security
(off).
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.
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 slapd.conf:
## allow the "ldap admin dn" access, but deny everyone else
access to attrs=SambaLMPassword,SambaNTPassword
by dn="cn=Samba Admin,ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org" write
by * none
LDAP Special Attributes for sambaSamAccounts The sambaSamAccount objectclass is composed of the attributes shown in next tables: Part A, and Part B.
Attributes in the sambaSamAccount objectclass (LDAP) &smbmdash; Part AsambaLMPasswordThe LANMAN password 16-byte hash stored as a character
representation of a hexadecimal string.sambaNTPasswordThe NT password hash 16-byte stored as a character
representation of a hexadecimal string.sambaPwdLastSetThe integer time in seconds since 1970 when the
sambaLMPassword and sambaNTPassword attributes were last set.
sambaAcctFlagsString of 11 characters surrounded by square brackets []
representing account flags such as U (user), W (workstation), X (no password expiration),
I (Domain trust account), H (Home dir required), S (Server trust account),
and D (disabled).sambaLogonTimeInteger value currently unusedsambaLogoffTimeInteger value currently unusedsambaKickoffTimeSpecifies the time (UNIX time format) when the user
will be locked down and cannot login any longer. If this attribute is omitted, then the account will never expire.
If you use this attribute together with `shadowExpire' of the `shadowAccount' objectClass, will enable accounts to
expire completely on an exact date.sambaPwdCanChangeSpecifies the time (UNIX time format) from which on the user is allowed to
change his password. If attribute is not set, the user will be free to change his password whenever he wants.sambaPwdMustChangeSpecifies the time (UNIX time format) since when the user is
forced to change his password. If this value is set to `0', the user will have to change his password at first login.
If this attribute is not set, then the password will never expire.sambaHomeDriveSpecifies the drive letter to which to map the
UNC path specified by sambaHomePath. 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.sambaLogonScriptThe sambaLogonScript 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 parameter in the
&smb.conf; man page for more information.sambaProfilePathSpecifies 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
parameter in the &smb.conf; man page for more information.sambaHomePathThe sambaHomePath property specifies the path of
the home directory for the user. The string can be null. If sambaHomeDrive is set and specifies
a drive letter, sambaHomePath 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; man page for more information.
Attributes in the sambaSamAccount objectclass (LDAP) &smbmdash; Part BsambaUserWorkstationsHere you can give a comma-separated list of machines
on which the user is allowed to login. You may observe problems when you try to connect to an Samba Domain Member.
Because Domain Members are not in this list, the Domain Controllers will reject them. Where this attribute is omitted,
the default implies no restrictions.
sambaSIDThe security identifier(SID) of the user.
The Windows equivalent of UNIX UIDs.sambaPrimaryGroupSIDThe Security IDentifier (SID) of the primary group
of the user.sambaDomainNameDomain the user is part of.
The majority of these parameters are only used when Samba is acting as a PDC of
a domain (refer to Domain Control, for details on
how to configure Samba as a Primary Domain Controller). The following four attributes
are only stored with the sambaSamAccount entry if the values are non-default values:
sambaHomePathsambaLogonScriptsambaProfilePathsambaHomeDrive
These attributes are only stored with the sambaSamAccount entry if
the values are non-default values. For example, assume MORIA has now been
configured as a PDC and that \\%L\%u was defined in
its &smb.conf; file. When a user named becky logons to the domain,
the string is expanded to \\MORIA\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 parameter is used in its place. Samba
will only write the attribute value to the directory entry if the value is
something other than the default (e.g., \\MOBY\becky).
Example LDIF Entries for a sambaSamAccount
The following is a working LDIF that demonstrates the use of the SambaSamAccount objectclass:
dn: uid=guest2, ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org
sambaLMPassword: 878D8014606CDA29677A44EFA1353FC7
sambaPwdMustChange: 2147483647
sambaPrimaryGroupSID: S-1-5-21-2447931902-1787058256-3961074038-513
sambaNTPassword: 552902031BEDE9EFAAD3B435B51404EE
sambaPwdLastSet: 1010179124
sambaLogonTime: 0
objectClass: sambaSamAccount
uid: guest2
sambaKickoffTime: 2147483647
sambaAcctFlags: [UX ]
sambaLogoffTime: 2147483647
sambaSID: S-1-5-21-2447931902-1787058256-3961074038-5006
sambaPwdCanChange: 0
The following is an LDIF entry for using both the sambaSamAccount and
posixAccount objectclasses:
dn: uid=gcarter, ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org
sambaLogonTime: 0
displayName: Gerald Carter
sambaLMPassword: 552902031BEDE9EFAAD3B435B51404EE
sambaPrimaryGroupSID: S-1-5-21-2447931902-1787058256-3961074038-1201
objectClass: posixAccount
objectClass: sambaSamAccount
sambaAcctFlags: [UX ]
userPassword: {crypt}BpM2ej8Rkzogo
uid: gcarter
uidNumber: 9000
cn: Gerald Carter
loginShell: /bin/bash
logoffTime: 2147483647
gidNumber: 100
sambaKickoffTime: 2147483647
sambaPwdLastSet: 1010179230
sambaSID: S-1-5-21-2447931902-1787058256-3961074038-5004
homeDirectory: /home/moria/gcarter
sambaPwdCanChange: 0
sambaPwdMustChange: 2147483647
sambaNTPassword: 878D8014606CDA29677A44EFA1353FC7
Password Synchronization
Samba-3 and later can update the non-samba (LDAP) password stored with an account. When
using pam_ldap, this allows changing both UNIX and Windows passwords at once.
The options can have the values shown in
the next table.
Possible ldap passwd sync valuesValueDescriptionyesWhen the user changes his password, update
SambaNTPassword, SambaLMPassword
and the password fields.noOnly update SambaNTPassword and SambaLMPassword.onlyOnly update the LDAP password and let the LDAP server worry about the other fields.
This option is only available on some LDAP servers. Only when the LDAP server
supports LDAP_EXOP_X_MODIFY_PASSWD.
More information can be found in the &smb.conf; man page.MySQLSAM backendmysqlsam
Every so often someone will come along with a great new idea. Storing user accounts in a
SQL backend is one of them. Those who want to do this are in the best position to know what the
specific benefits are to them. This may sound like a cop-out, but in truth we cannot attempt
to document every little detail why certain things of marginal utility to the bulk of
Samba users might make sense to the rest. In any case, the following instructions should help
the determined SQL user to implement a working system.
Creating the Database
You 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 examples/pdb/mysql/mysql.dump
contains the correct queries to create the required tables. Use the command:
&prompt;mysql -uusername -hhostname -ppassword \
databasename < /path/to/samba/examples/pdb/mysql/mysql.dumpConfiguringThis plug-in lacks some good documentation, but here is some brief information. Add the following to the
variable in your &smb.conf;:
[other-plugins] mysql:identifier [other-plugins]The identifier can be any string you like, as long as it does not collide with
the identifiers of other plugins or other instances of pdb_mysql. If you
specify multiple pdb_mysql.so entries in , you also need to
use different identifiers.
Additional options can be given through the &smb.conf; file in the section.
Refer to the following table.
Basic smb.conf options for MySQL passdb backendFieldContentsmysql hostHost name, defaults to `localhost'mysql passwordmysql userDefaults to `samba'mysql databaseDefaults to `samba'mysql portDefaults to 3306tableName of the table containing the users
Since the password for the MySQL user is stored in the &smb.conf; file, you should make the &smb.conf; file
readable only to the user who runs Samba. This is considered a security bug and will soon be fixed.
Names of the columns are given in the next table.
The default column names can be found in the example table dump.
MySQL field names for MySQL passdb backendFieldTypeContentslogon time columnint(9)UNIX time stamp of last logon of userlogoff time columnint(9)UNIX time stamp of last logoff of userkickoff time columnint(9)UNIX time stamp of moment user should be kicked off workstation (not enforced)pass last set time columnint(9)UNIX time stamp of moment password was last setpass can change time columnint(9)UNIX time stamp of moment from which password can be changedpass must change time columnint(9)UNIX time stamp of moment on which password must be changedusername columnvarchar(255)UNIX usernamedomain columnvarchar(255)NT domain user belongs tont username columnvarchar(255)NT usernamefullname columnvarchar(255)Full name of userhome dir columnvarchar(255)UNIX homedir path (equivalent of the parameter.dir drive columnvarchar(2)Directory drive path (e.g., H:)logon script columnvarchar(255)Batch file to run on client side when logging onprofile path columnvarchar(255)Path of profileacct desc columnvarchar(255)Some ASCII NT user dataworkstations columnvarchar(255)Workstations user can logon to (or NULL for all)unknown string columnvarchar(255)Unknown stringmunged dial columnvarchar(255)Unknownuser sid columnvarchar(255)NT user SIDgroup sid columnvarchar(255)NT group SIDlanman pass columnvarchar(255)Encrypted lanman passwordnt pass columnvarchar(255)Encrypted nt passwdplain pass columnvarchar(255)Plaintext passwordacct ctrl columnint(9)NT user dataunknown 3 columnint(9)Unknownlogon divs columnint(9)Unknownhours len columnint(9)Unknownbad password count columnint(5)Number of failed password tries before disabling an accountlogon count columnint(5)Number of logon attemptsunknown 6 columnint(9)Unknown
You can put a colon (:) after the name of each column, which
should specify the column to update when updating the table. One can also specify nothing behind the colon, in which case the field data will not be updated. Setting a column name to NULL means the field should not be used.
An example configuration looks like:
Example configuration for the MySQL passdb backendmysql:foosambaabmassambadomain name is static and can't be changed'MYWORKGROUP':The fullname column comes from several other columnsCONCAT(firstname,' ',surname):Samba should never write to the password columnslm_pass:nt_pass:The unknown 3 column is not storedNULLUsing Plaintext Passwords or Encrypted Passwordencrypted passwords
I strongly discourage the use of plaintext passwords, however, you can use them.
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.
If you use encrypted passwords, set the 'identifier:plain pass
column' to 'NULL' (without the quotes). This is the default.
Getting Non-Column Data from the Table
It is possible to have not all data in the database by making some `constant'.
For example, you can set `identifier:fullname column' to
something like CONCAT(Firstname,' ',Surname)
Or, set `identifier:workstations column' to:
NULLSee the MySQL documentation for more language constructs.XMLSAM backendxmlsam
This module requires libxml2 to be installed.The usage of pdb_xml is fairly straightforward. To export data, use:
pdbedit$ pdbedit -e xml:filename
(where filename is the name of the file to put the data in)
To import data, use:
$ pdbedit -i xml:filenameCommon ErrorsUsers Cannot LogonI've installed Samba, but now I can't log on with my UNIX account! Make sure your user has been added to the current Samba .
Read the section Account Management Tools for details.Users Being Added to the Wrong Backend Database
A few complaints have been received from users that just moved to Samba-3. The following
&smb.conf; file entries were causing problems, new accounts were being added to the old
smbpasswd file, not to the tdbsam passdb.tdb file:
...smbpasswd, tdbsam...
Samba will add new accounts to the first entry in the passdb backend
parameter entry. If you want to update to the tdbsam, then change the entry to:
[globals]
...
tdbsam, smbpasswd
...
Configuration of auth methods
When explicitly setting an parameter,
guest must be specified as the first entry on the line,
for example, guest sam.