Hi Folks,
I've been trying to find a solution for this, but can't seem to find it
in the doumentation, nor in the lists.
We're running Samba-2.0.4b on Solaris 2.6. My smb.conf is included here:
[global]
server string = Test Server, Samba %v
workgroup = <Workgroup Name>
printing = sysv
browseable = yes
debuglevel = 2
netbios name = <Server name>
remote announce = <IP-Address of PDC>/<Domain name>
wins server = <IP-Address of WINS>
log file = /var/adm/samba/log.smb.%U
max log size = 50
security = user
encrypt passwords = no
update encrypted = yes
smb passwd file = /opt/samba/private/smbpasswd
include = /opt/samba/lib/smb.conf.%L
[homes]
comment = Home Directory
browseable = no
guest ok = no
read only = no
create mode = 0755
[printers]
postscript = Yes
printable = Yes
public = No
Samba was compiled with the options --prefix=/opt/samba-2.0.4b
--with-syslog, and I link /opt/samba to /opt/samba-2.0.4b (or more
accurately, the latest production version in use).
Our clients are all NT WS 4.0 (minimum SP3, upgrading all to SP4
shortly, with some SP5) in a domain, located across 2 subnets, the PDC
(which is also WINS) located in the subnet other than the Samba Servers.
When a user connects to a share (e.g. his home-directory, but it also
happens on other shares), NT will always prompt for a user-id/password
combination, even when that user-id and password are the same as on
Unix.
Is there a way around this? The only way out seems to be to have the
PDC/BDC validate the users, but that's something I'd like to avoid if
possible.
Also, I used to have security=share, and no encrypted passwords.
The security=user is OK by me, but if we could avoid the prompting with
plain-text passwords, that would be a benefit (although I think it isn't
possible if I interpreted everything correctly).
Thanks in advance for any input.
Kind regards,
Patrick.
--
______ Patrick Van de Casteele - UNIX & NT System Administrator
\ / Alcatel - Switching & Routing Division - VJ93
\ / F. Wellesplein 1, B-2018 Antwerp, Belgium
\/ Phone: +32-(0)3-240.44.62 Fax: +32-(0)3-240.99.49