[Samba] From LDAP to tdbsam
We are scaling back our Samba service, and no longer need the server to act as a domain controller or do general LDAP authentication. Since we are also going to move the service to a different piece of hardware, I would like to simplify the setup by removing LDAP from the operation on the new machine. The only problem I see will be the existing user base. Is there an easy way to move the lm and nt hashes from the LDAP database to a passdb.tdb file? Mike [PS. Of course, if I am making a mistake here, and the LDAP setup has some advantage that I am overlooking, let me know...] -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba
[Samba] Re: Migrating W2K Workstation to Samba Domain
My message dated: Mon, 12 Dec 2005 10:16:14 EST I am replacing a W2K AD server with a Samba server. The server has a single W2K Workstation client, in a public area and used by a dozen or so different users. When I join the workstation to the Samba domain, it complains that it cannot load a roaming profile (in the W2K AD domain, it used local profiles), and it does not create a new local profile, instead using a temporary profile. Obviously a permission problem somewhere. What is the exact problem, and what is the solution? I am still at sea on this. To clarify things a bit more, users of this workstation (under the W2K server) have local profiles, not floating profiles. I would like to let them continue to have local profiles, even if it proves impossible to let them use their old ones due to permission problems. However, even removing their directories from C:\Documents and Settings does not help - Windows does not create a new one for them (as all the documentation I have read led me to believe it would).o logon path= logon home= does not seem to affect this situation. It still seems to try to get a floating profile, fails, and then makes a local profile in TEMP. Hasn't anyone performed this sort of migration before? What other information can I provide (or try to glean from log files) to get this sorted out? -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba
[Samba] Migrating W2K Workstation to Samba Domain
I am replacing a W2K AD server with a Samba server. The server has a single W2K Workstation client, in a public area and used by a dozen or so different users. When I join the workstation to the Samba domain, it complains that it cannot load a roaming profile (in the W2K AD domain, it used local profiles), and it does not create a new local profile, instead using a temporary profile. Obviously a permission problem somewhere. What is the exact problem, and what is the solution? Mike -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba
[Samba] Replacing a W2K Server?
We have a Windows 2000 server with Terminal Services. It is an Active Directory master server for a microscopic network comprising itself and one Windows 2000 Workstation client. It is part of a network consisting of Unix machines: several Solaris 8 systems, a handful of Linux boxes, and a Mac OS X workstation. User authentication and other login information on this network is provided by NIS running on Solaris - but see below. Some of the Unix boxes are running Samba 3 to share files to Windows workstations. The services the W2K server provides are: file sharing to Windows workstations (these live in a different Active Directory domain); Windows applications for Unix users via Terminal Services and rdesktop; and authentication for the Samba servers. User NIS password changes are reflected from the Unix systems to W2K using Microsoft's services for Unix (in particular, MS provides a PAM module that sends password changes to the W2K server), so using W2K for authentication allows users to use their NIS passwords when connecting to Samba, rather than some Samba-only password. Our goal in life is to get rid of the W2K system. We don't want to be in the business of W2K server sysadmin, and the box running it is old and takes up a lot of space and energy. This would mean moving its files to a new Samba server. Is there a straightforward way to get the new server, as well as the existing ones, to authenticate in such a way that its passwords can be identical with the NIS/Unix passwords? Does this require some kind of Kerberos/LDAP infrastructure we do not now use? How would this be set up. I have read several documents, but it seems to me that: 1. Samba can authenticate with PAM, but this uses cleartext passwords. 2. Samba can authenticate from its own LDAP or file password database, but there is no obvious way to keep this synchronized with Unix passwords. 3. We could set up a Kerberos system, but I do not see any way of making Samba refer to Kerberos for password authentication. Any suggestions, please? -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba
[Samba] Problem: Files becoming directories
List: I am encountering a problem with files on my samba mounted directories accessed from Windows shares. The shares are normally accessed from a Windows 98 machine (but I've used XP, and the problem is still present). The problem: When accessing files from a samba-mounted directory through Windows, some of the files become directories. I can create a text file named, say, test.txt. At a later time, that text file appears as a directory, named test.txt, in Windows Explorer. Checking the file at the command line on the host system, the file has actually become a directory...any data stored within that file is gone. The problem is random, and checking the samba-related log files yields no clues. I have samba running on two different machines: 1) Red Hat 7.3, samba version 2.2.8, and 2) HP-UX 10, samba version 2.2.3a, and the problem appears on both machines. Both machines connect to a Windows NT Server (version 4, sp6a), and are using share level security. Not sure if this is a samba-related problem, or a feature of Windows (but I suspect the latter). I have searched the mailing-list archives and have not found anything similar to this problem. Any clues on where to look would be appreciated. Thanks, Mike [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: http://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba