wbinfo
1
wbinfo
Query information from winbind daemon
wbinfo
-u
-g
-h name
-i ip
-n name
-s sid
-U uid
-G gid
-S sid
-Y sid
-t
-m
-r user
-a user%password
-A user%password
DESCRIPTION
This tool is part of the
Samba suite.
The wbinfo program queries and returns information
created and used by the
winbindd(8) daemon.
The winbindd(8) daemon must be configured
and running for the wbinfo program to be able
to return information.
OPTIONS
-u
This option will list all users available
in the Windows NT domain for which the winbindd(8)
daemon is operating in. Users in all trusted domains
will also be listed. Note that this operation does not assign
user ids to any users that have not already been seen by
winbindd(8).
-g
This option will list all groups available
in the Windows NT domain for which the winbindd(8)
daemon is operating in. Groups in all trusted domains
will also be listed. Note that this operation does not assign
group ids to any groups that have not already been seen by
winbindd(8).
-h name
The -h option
queries winbindd(8) to query the WINS
server for the IP address associated with the NetBIOS name
specified by the name parameter.
-i ip
The -i option
queries winbindd(8) to send a node status
request to get the NetBIOS name associated with the IP address
specified by the ip parameter.
-n name
The -n option
queries winbindd(8) for the SID
associated with the name specified. Domain names can be specified
before the user name by using the winbind separator character.
For example CWDOM1/Administrator refers to the Administrator
user in the domain CWDOM1. If no domain is specified then the
domain used is the one specified in the smb.conf
workgroup parameter.
-s sid
Use -s to resolve
a SID to a name. This is the inverse of the -n
option above. SIDs must be specified as ASCII strings
in the traditional Microsoft format. For example,
S-1-5-21-1455342024-3071081365-2475485837-500.
-U uid
Try to convert a UNIX user id to a Windows NT
SID. If the uid specified does not refer to one within
the winbind uid range then the operation will fail.
-G gid
Try to convert a UNIX group id to a Windows
NT SID. If the gid specified does not refer to one within
the winbind gid range then the operation will fail.
-S sid
Convert a SID to a UNIX user id. If the SID
does not correspond to a UNIX user mapped by
winbindd(8) then the operation will fail.
-Y sid
Convert a SID to a UNIX group id. If the SID
does not correspond to a UNIX group mapped by
winbindd(8) then the operation will fail.
-t
Verify that the workstation trust account
created when the Samba server is added to the Windows NT
domain is working.
-m
Produce a list of domains trusted by the
Windows NT server winbindd(8) contacts
when resolving names. This list does not include the Windows
NT domain the server is a Primary Domain Controller for.
-r username
Try to obtain the list of UNIX group ids
to which the user belongs. This only works for users
defined on a Domain Controller.
-a username%password
Attempt to authenticate a user via winbindd.
This checks both authenticaion methods and reports its results.
-A username%password
Store username and password used by winbindd
during session setup to a domain controller. This enables
winbindd to operate in a Windows 2000 domain with Restrict
Anonymous turned on (a.k.a. Permissions compatiable with
Windows 2000 servers only).
EXIT STATUS
The wbinfo program returns 0 if the operation
succeeded, or 1 if the operation failed. If the winbindd(8)
daemon is not working wbinfo will always return
failure.
VERSION
This man page is correct for version 2.2 of
the Samba suite.
SEE ALSO
winbindd(8)
AUTHOR
The original Samba software and related utilities
were created by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed
by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar
to the way the Linux kernel is developed.
wbinfo and winbindd
were written by Tim Potter.
The conversion to DocBook for Samba 2.2 was done
by Gerald Carter