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<chapter id="protocol">
	<title>The SMB/CIFS protocol</title>

	<!-- 
	Some parts shamelessly borrowed from myself. 
	Original on http://jelmer.vernstok.nl/publications/cifs-developments.pdf
	-->

	<para>
		"SMB" (also known as "CIFS") is a 
		file-sharing protocol that has been used since the mid-eighties. 
		Most people know SMB as the protocol behind the "Network Neighbourhood" 
		and remote printing in Windows.
	</para>

	<para>
		Several parts of the protocol are not discussed in this chapter, such 
		as mailslots, browsing and dfs, to prevent it from getting too complex. 
		CIFS internals are documented in detail in <citation>Hertel, 2003</citation>.
	</para>


	<sect1>
		<title>History</title>

		<sect2>
			<title>Invention by IBM</title>

			<para>
				SMB is not very old, but it has a long history of modifications and extensions.
				The original protocol was meant to run over ``NetBIOS'', which was the 
				name of the DOS interface to a very simple LAN system developed by IBM.
				NetBIOS was developed because SNA, IBM's other main 
				protocol at the time, was much too advanced for use in DOS.
			</para>

			<para>
				The NetBIOS API in these days (early eighties) was nothing more then the 
				interface to a very simple link-layer protocol 
				over which several protocols, including SMB, were used. It could do reads and 
				writes to services on remote hosts, which were identified by case-insensitive 
				names, and discover all available hosts and services.
			</para>

			<para>
				Dr. Barry Feigenbau, an IBM employee, invented the core of the original SMB protocol, 
				which he initially named after himself: ``BAF''. He later changed the name to 
				be ``SMB'' (for ``Server Message Block''). Every packet in the protocol 
				starts with a byte $0xFF$ and these three letters. 
			</para>

			<para>
				IBM, Microsoft, 3Com and Intel made up the rest of the initial protocol 
				together. The commands the protocol supported at this stage were basically
				a mirror of the DOS File IO API calls, which meant the protocol wasn't very 
				efficient. The protocol also lacked authentication support. Everybody on the 
				network could do reads and writes, which meant this protocol 
				wasn't very suitable for large enterprises.
			</para>

			<para>
				NetBIOS is an API that has had various implementations; there is 
				NetBIOS over TCP/IP (NBT), NetBIOS over IPX, NetBIOS over SNA and 
				even NetBIOS over DECNEt. Mostly used these days is
				NetBIOS over TCP (NBT). 
			</para>

			<para>
				This is also were things are starting to get hairy. Since NetBIOS identifies 
				hosts by their name, NetBIOS clients had to start doing IP broadcasts to 
				figure out the IP of the host they had to connect to. Several schemes were 
				introduced to do name lookups crossing subnet boundaries, using name servers, 
				etc. We're basically emulating a NetBIOS LAN in order to be able to run SMB.
			</para>

			<para>
				Doing NetBIOS over IP is not very sane, however, the NBT implementation itself 
				in Windows isn't very nice either. It has horrible 
				limits, special exceptions, several broken schemes for looking up 
				names (including two kinds of name servers). NetBIOS and NetBIOS over TCP/IP 
				are described in RFC1001 and RFC1002.
			</para>	
		</sect2>

		<sect2>
			<title>The various incarnations of SMB</title>

			<para>Over the years, several usage models for SMB have been developed. While SMB originally started out as a file sharing protocol, it was later extended to include support for network management and other network services 
				as well.</para>

			<para>
				One of the reasons for the various "upgrades" of the SMB 
				protocol is the fact that networks have become larger 
				and larger and with them the need for privilege separation 
				and scalability has increased.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>DOS</title>

				<para>
					The original model in which SMB was used was as a 
					simple file-sharing service in a NetBIOS-environment.
				</para>
				
				<para>
					File sharing worked basically by specifying a list of directories that had 
					to be shared and what name they had to be shared under ("shares"). Eventually, 
					one could password-protect a share. At most one password per share could be set.
				</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Windows For Workgroups</title>
				
				<para>
					After the ``CORE'' dialect, 
					IBM and Microsoft implemented a new dialect known as ``LANMAN''.
					This dialect was used by Windows for 
					Workgroups, OS/2 and Windows 9x which all know it under a different name. A 
					'virtual' file system was also added, which was used for doing remote function 
					calls (RAP, for ``Remote Administration Protocol'').
				</para>

				<para>
					Computers are grouped into "Workgroups" in this model. Everybody is equal to 
					the others and there is no central point of control.
				</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Windows NT</title>
				<para>
					For Windows NT, yet another dialect was added, named 'NT'. The NT dialect 
					had it's own set of file I/O functions (similar to the NT File I/O API) 
					and it had support for yet another way of doing remote function calls:
					DCE/RPC. RPC's are used for DCOM and several of the subsystems in NT
					that can be accessed remotely (registry, printing, user management, logging 
					on, etc).
				</para>

				<para>
					Windows NT works with a new concept for grouping computers called ``domains''<footnote>In the protocol, domains are actually an upgraded version of a workgroup</footnote>. Each computer is member of exactly one domain. There are several roles a computer can have in the domain: PDC (primary domain controller, the "manager" of the domain, that coordinates all authentication and authorization), BDC (Backup domain controller, in case the PDC goes down) or just a regular domain member. The PDC decides who is to be a member of the domain.
				</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Windows 2000</title>
				<para>
					In Windows NT 5 (marketing name: Windows 2000), NetBIOS-less SMB was
					introduced. This means SMB is used directly over TCP port 445 instead of 
					via NetBIOS over TCP/IP. DNS 
					is used for looking up machine names. 
				</para>

				<para>Windows 2000 was also the first operating system from Microsoft
					that had support for Active Directory. Active Directory is very 
					similar to the "domain" concept used by NT4, though it 
					is implemented differently (using modified open protocols), 
					and has some additional features (one of the most important ones being decentralized).
				</para>

				<para>
					Active directory no longer uses a central point of authority 
					and there are fewer limits to the size of a domain. Several 
					DC's can exist, so there is no longer a single point of 
					failure as well as better scalability. 
				</para>
			</sect3>
		</sect2>

		<sect2>
			<title>Samba versions and their support for the SMB models</title>

			<sect3>
				<title>Samba 2.2</title>

				<para>Full CORE and Workgroup support. Somewhat basic 
					NT4-style support.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Samba 3.0</title>

				<para>Full CORE and Workgroup support. Almost complete 
					NT4-style support.
				</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Samba 3.2</title>

				<para>FIXME</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Samba 4.0</title>
				
				<para>Full CORE, Workgroup, NT4 and ADS support.</para>

			</sect3>
		</sect2>
	</sect1>
</chapter>