We've used slave ldap servers as our "local office" solution, it seems
like PITA at first, but really its not much trouble... we redistribute
old Optiplex GX100's with bigger IDE drives as the local pdc.
Chris Smith
Tomasz Chmielewski wrote:
Michael Gasch schrieb:
you could set up openldap
Larry McElderry schrieb:
I was just visiting the opwrt site and noticed the open ldap is in their
download section.
It's the clients only + libs; no server.
Anyway, I think it's not that hard to compile OpenLDAP server for it.
The problem would be to authenticate the users against it - in ot
: [Samba] Samba LDAP caching when LDAP server unavailable -possible?
ANTHONY JOSEPH MESSINA schrieb:
> ok, i'll go with you on this. so this mini-router, does it have a hard
> drive or a place that it could dynamically write data, because it seems
> to me that samba will need to write da
ANTHONY JOSEPH MESSINA schrieb:
ok, i'll go with you on this. so this mini-router, does it have a hard
drive or a place that it could dynamically write data, because it seems
to me that samba will need to write data at will and for sure, ldap with
syncrepl or any caching program will need to w
ok, i'll go with you on this. so this mini-router, does it have a hard
drive or a place that it could dynamically write data, because it seems
to me that samba will need to write data at will and for sure, ldap with
syncrepl or any caching program will need to write new data that is not
static
ANTHONY JOSEPH MESSINA schrieb:
i guess the real question here is what is your interest? are you more
interested in having the login functionality when the network link is
down or are you more interested in toying with the notion of having
samba run on a mini box?
Of course, being able to lo
i guess the real question here is what is your interest? are you more
interested in having the login functionality when the network link is
down or are you more interested in toying with the notion of having
samba run on a mini box?
i can certainly help you with the former if you wish. i hav
It's a solution for a small office.
this solution also applies to a small office :)
i know, you´re looking for caching, but as long as there´s no productive
way with samba and caching (creds) you should go for a BDC
greez
--
Michael Gasch
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
D
Michael Gasch schrieb:
you could set up openldap to do syncrepl and have a full copy of your
samba domain stuff that's in ldap. if the connection goes down, the
ldap stuff is there and if you have it set up like a bdc, you can
still login, etc.
Yep, that's how it's normally done.
what abo
you could set up openldap to do syncrepl and have a full copy of your
samba domain stuff that's in ldap. if the connection goes down, the
ldap stuff is there and if you have it set up like a bdc, you can
still login, etc.
Yep, that's how it's normally done.
what about setting up a BDC in the
ANTHONY JOSEPH MESSINA schrieb:
could you set up a small instance of an ldap server along with samba on
this small box and have it act like a bdc?
That would be great indeed - the problem is, there is no OpenLDAP server
port to that thingy yet :)
you could set up openldap to
do syncrepl an
could you set up a small instance of an ldap server along with samba on
this small box and have it act like a bdc? you could set up openldap to
do syncrepl and have a full copy of your samba domain stuff that's in
ldap. if the connection goes down, the ldap stuff is there and if you
have it s
Andrew Bartlett schrieb:
On Tue, 2006-01-17 at 10:16 -0500, William Burns wrote:
Tomasz:
I had heard that some people were interested in caching passwords (which
could be stored in NIS, or LDAP) on linux laptops so that a user could
log in even when disconnected from their LDAP or NIS domain
On Tue, 2006-01-17 at 10:16 -0500, William Burns wrote:
> Tomasz:
>
> I had heard that some people were interested in caching passwords (which
> could be stored in NIS, or LDAP) on linux laptops so that a user could
> log in even when disconnected from their LDAP or NIS domain.
> The theory was
On Tue, 17 Jan 2006, Chris St. Pierre wrote:
> nscd?
nscd is known to cause problems with Samba.
Regards,
--martin
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Tomasz:
I had heard that some people were interested in caching passwords (which
could be stored in NIS, or LDAP) on linux laptops so that a user could
log in even when disconnected from their LDAP or NIS domain.
The theory was that the nss (name service switch) and nscd (name service
cache da
nscd?
Chris St. Pierre
Unix Systems Administrator
Nebraska Wesleyan University
On Tue, 17 Jan 2006, Tomasz Chmielewski wrote:
> I've been using Samba with OpenLDAP with great success on normal servers.
>
> Recently however, it appeared to us that for remote locations it is more
> economically vi
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