Don Piven wrote:
Sez Christoph Peus:
Hi everybody,
I've joined a fileserver running samba 3.0.24 to an AD domain using
winbind and noticed that samba maps the users group SID
(5-1-5-32-545) to gid 1001 automatically. This seems to conflict with
one of ~2000 mappings I had to inject in
I am moving our Samba Server from Solaris to Linux on a new server. I
have the users moved the users home directories moved and showing up
correctly on the workstations. The Profiles are in the Users home directory.
Users profiles seem to be saving correctly and being read, however no
changes
I'm assuming that you've not shown us your full smb.conf. This does make
it tricky to figure out what you've got however.
In general, I believe that you need to give the world full access to the
profiles. Also, you haven't got a profile acls = Yes line in the part
of your smb.conf you've
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Is there some explanation for the panic in pwnam_r when a session
reconnects after a while?
This is an exagerated example. The user leaves on a Thursday,
comes back next Tuesday - bang!
My Samba 3.0.24 runs under a SuSE 10.1.
The passwd files are used for authentication.
[2007/03/15 17:27:44,
On Sun, Mar 25, 2007 at 10:57:14PM +0200, Dragan Krnic wrote:
Is there some explanation for the panic in pwnam_r when a session
reconnects after a while?
This is an exagerated example. The user leaves on a Thursday,
comes back next Tuesday - bang!
My Samba 3.0.24 runs under a SuSE 10.1.
I'm confused about how this works in Samba. Its been a while since I set
up a server and I've gotten myself confused.
The new server are Ubuntu AMD64 Linux with Samba 3.0.22 One of these is
the PDC. The legacy Servers are Solaris 8 running Samba 3.0.24. We are
using winbindd and local tdb
Gary Dale wrote:
The permissions I believe the world needs are rwx. You only seem to be
giving them rx, and only r in the create mask. I'd try getting less
fancy and keep your profiles down to:
[profiles]
comment = Windows Roaming Profiles
path = /home/%U/profile
read only =
On Sat, Mar 24, 2007 at 09:46:09PM +0700, sato x wrote:
Hi guys,
Just currious. Some questions:
1. Do you have winbind running in your smb2 server? If you don't, start
one.
yups, winbindd already running
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# ps ax | grep winbind
18823 ?Ss 0:07
Hi Wendel,
I've this in my smb.conf, and it works for any M$ windows in my domain
[global]
logon path =
logon home =
logon script = logon.bat
# logon path = \\%L\profiles\%U
# logon home = \\%L\%U\.9xprofile
# logon drive = H:
[netlogon]
comment =
Hi robin,
Perhaps this has nothing to do with your problem, but if I wasn't mistaken,
I've read somewhere, your ldap suffix must preceding other ldap parameters.
And then, try to use the simplest configuration if you want to trace for
trouble. Get rid all parameters that you don't really need.
I guess it means that your roaming profiles are not working. So each time
users logon to their workstation, windows makes a temporary profile, then
delete them when they log out. :)
sato
On 3/20/07, Jason Baker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have Samba 3.0.23d-30 running on CentOs 4 PDC using an
Hi guys... :)
I have a file server - FILE-SERV1 - that utilizes two seperated
harddisk/partition as a single share, [BIGSHARE]. This share has a path
path = /first_partition
Let's say, in the first partition I have directory, named dirA, and in the
second partition I have another
URL: http://build.samba.org/
--- /home/build/master/cache/broken_results.txt.old 2007-03-25
00:01:20.0 +
+++ /home/build/master/cache/broken_results.txt 2007-03-26 00:00:53.0
+
@@ -1,13 +1,13 @@
-Build status as of Sun Mar 25 00:00:01 2007
+Build status as of Mon Mar
Repair bug introduced by rev. 21960.
We need to do the initial strtok to set up the internal state.
maybe better to use strtok_r() instead? Samba3 now has strtok_r() in
lib/replace if the OS doesn't have it.
Cheers, Tridge
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