Hi together, we have a Windows 2003 Active Directory Server, working together with Samba Version 3.0.2a-Debian. It seems everything (Kerberos authentication and so on) works fine. All the authentication is done by the windows 2003 server. My problem is, that I can't connect to a share via a windows xp client, when the share has an option "valid user" which defines a group of the domain. A simple user works - but a group entry for the "valid user" option doesn't.
I have read many articles and tried many different settings - but without success. Perhaps can somebody help me. Here are some outputs and configs from my system: neptun:/etc/init.d# wbinfo -g DomDomSchema-Admins Organisations-Admins DomDomDomRichtlinien-Ersteller-Besitzer DnsUpdateProxy GG_Entwicklung GG_Controlling GG_Geschaeftsfuehrung GG_Vertrieb GG_Sekretariat GG_Personal neptun:/etc/init.d# wbinfo -u Administrator Gast SATURN$ krbtgt host/neptun.amatec.local HOST/neptun testuser So testuser is a member of the global group GG_Entwicklung on the Windows 2003 Server. My smb.conf File: [global] log level = 2 workgroup = AMATEC netbios name = neptun server string = Fileserver Austausch wins server = 192.168.42.252 # winbind configuration winbind separator = + winbind use default domain = yes idmap uid = 10000-20000 idmap gid = 10000-20000 winbind enum users = yes winbind enum groups = yes template homedir = /home/%U template shell = /bin/bash # Activie directory joining security = ads encrypt passwords = true password server = saturn.amatec.local realm = AMATEC.LOCAL [Austausch] path = /austausch read only = no writable = yes # doesn't work #valid users = @AMATEC\"GG_Entwicklung" # doesn't work #valid users = @GG_Entwicklung # this one works valid users = testuser As you see the settings for a group access doesn't work. When i enter as user "testuser" everything works. Again - perhaps anybody can help me. Kind regards Franz Gsell -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: http://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba