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joop gerritse wrote, On 03-08-2007 16:07:
I started just copying the smb.conf from the primary
controller, and setting the priority somewhat lower.
I assumed that it would just lose the election from
the PDC, and still stay present, and available.
No, that's not //just// like that. You need to
change a few options in order to get the PDC/BDC expected
behaviour.
I am aware of the difficulties of keeping the user
directories in sync; this would, in due course, require
LDAP, but for the moment I decided that the user
population is quite stable, so I just copy /etc/passwd
and /etc/shadow and smbpasswd over in the --rare-- event
that a user is added or removed.
In fact, filesystem sync and account sync are two
different problems, they are related but not dependent.
You could use vampire or tdbsam or winbind or LDAP to keep
accounts in sync.
1. It is quite hard to even make the second controller
visible. In fact, I had to include a remote announce =
Ip address of PDC/workgroup name line before it even
showed up in Network Environment. And I am quite unsure
whether this is the right way, it just worked, to some
extent.
No, it is not. You should use a WINS server,
probably on the PDC, and properly use other paramenters
in smb.conf like 'local master' and 'preferred master'.
2. I am not sure whether the backup domain controller
will function as such. How could I be?
Did you check the Official Samba HOWTO? Specially
the Domain Control chapter?
http://samba.org/samba/docs/man/Samba-HOWTO-Collection/ServerType.html#id327269
http://samba.org/samba/docs/man/Samba-HOWTO-Collection/samba-pdc.html
If I take down the primary I might find out, but the
server is too critical for the whole organization to
just try. How can I make sure that a BDC will work
without taking down the PDC?
First of all, you should use the right commands
and configuration options (man smb.conf) and you can
use a small network for the BDC, change a workstation
from PDC network to BDC one and see if it works.
3. And then there is the irregular behavior which I
mentioned before. Sometimes the host is visible, but
the shares are inaccessible; sometimes I can even get
a view of the shares, but I cannot access them. In
addition, i have a far simpler configuration at home,
where I can just read and write to the shares. So I
know it can be done, but what are the rules?
Samba needs some care and attention, specially
on special cases like PDC/BDC, the Samba By Example is
also a good read to understad real case scenarios.
http://samba.org/samba/docs/man/Samba-Guide/
And I am no Windows expert. I know quite a lot about
Linux, but the apparent (lack of) logic in Windows
baffles me.
That is the background. Maybe it helps to get the
right answers. thanks in advance for any attempts.
BTW I am quite happy with an RTFM answer, as long as
it's accompanied with a URL. I have read quite a few
FMs, but so far without real enlightenment...
This is not exactly a RTFM, but you will need to give
us more information if you really want help, smb.conf, logs
and better subject lines would be a great improvement.
Kind regards,
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Felipe Augusto van de Wiel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Coordenadoria de Tecnologia da Informação (CTI) - SEDU/PARANACIDADE
http://www.paranacidade.org.br/ Phone: (+55 41 3350 3300)
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