Oh and BTW I still have to add machine accounts manually in the
/etc/passwd file.
Jean-Rene Cormier
On Fri, 2003-10-31 at 11:51, Jean-Rene Cormier wrote:
> My smb.conf is pretty basic, I don't see anything else other than the
> domain admin group that would change that behaviour.
>
> Here's part
My smb.conf is pretty basic, I don't see anything else other than the
domain admin group that would change that behaviour.
Here's part of my smb.conf:
[global]
workgroup = DOMAIN
netbios name = SERVER
server string = SERVER
interfaces = 192.168.0.2 127.0.0.1
I'm glad it works for you :-)
can you give some configuration details of smb.conf?
I have: domain admin group = root ldaptest.
Werner
At 11:27 31/10/2003, Jean-Rene Cormier wrote:
I just reformatted a computer and I joined it with my regular username
which doesn't have uid=0 and is not mapped to
I just reformatted a computer and I joined it with my regular username
which doesn't have uid=0 and is not mapped to root either. I thought
that maybe it was because the machine account was already in LDAP so I
booted up another Windows in VMWare and removed it from the domain and
changed the compu
The user MUST be root, if you want to use another user map it to root in
smbusers.
regards.
thiago.
> I tried to add a computer to a Samba domain using another account
> (testuser) than root.
> I use LDAP for authentication and added the account
> (testuser) with uid=0
> in ldap. If I use t