--- Scott Wrosch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > A question I'm sure has been answered before, but > I'm > still relatively new to Samba, and having just > moved, > have not been able to locate any of my Samba > reference > materials. > > Anyways, I'm running a small Samba server at work > using RedHat Linux 7.3. I did not set up Samba > during > the RedHat installation, but rather downloaded it > and > installed it afterwards. > > Anyways, the network uses a Windows 2000 Server as > the > PDC. And we have various groups set up in the > server. > What I want to do is set up a share that can be > accessible only by the members of a specific group > that's already created in the Active Directory > setup. > Can this be done?
It should be possible using Winbind if your 2000 server is running in mixed mode. Follow the directions here: http://us6.samba.org/samba/docs/Samba-HOWTO-Collection.html#WINBIND I installed RedHat 7.3 and used the samba rpm downloaded from a samba FTP site. I had to add winbind to the nsswitch.conf, then I added the winbind settings to smb.conf, and then I started the winbind service. That was about it. I tested it with getent group, which showed all of our NT groups. Good. Then I could run this: chown -R 'DOMAIN\USER'.'DOMAIN\GROUP' /share/point find /share/point -type d -printf "\"%p\"\n" | xargs chmod 770 # Isn't there a better way to do this??? find /share/point -type f -printf "\"%p\"\n" | xargs chmod 660 We implemented ACLs into the kernel and Samba but despite the claims of the authors, we're not sure if they are stable (we might be having other problems, though, and are trying to track them down). ACLs allow you to add more than one NT global group to a file. Good luck, /dev/idal __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Y! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your web site http://webhosting.yahoo.com/ -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: http://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba