On 29.04.2023 10:35, Yvan Masson via samba wrote:> Hi Peter,
>
> Le 28/04/2023 ? 21:17, Peter Milesson via samba a ?crit?:
>> Hi folks,
>>
>> I have tried to get some information about what Samba version will be
>> the default one when Debian Bookworm gets released, but without luck.
>> Will it be 4.17, or 4.18? Or even 4.19.x? Will there be Samba
>> backports for Bookworm?
>>
>> I saw a post from Michael Tokarev in this list a while ago, that
>> there probably wont be a Samba 4.18 for Debian Bullseye. I also saw
>> another post about integration between MS Azure and Samba, and that
>> Samba 4.18 will be much easier to integrate with MS Azure than
>> previous Samba versions.
>>
>> I'm planning a project with MS Azure integration and I'm trying
to
>> look a bit into the future. Samba has served us very well so far, and
>> I'm very reluctant to give MS more than just a bare minimum of what
>> is absolutely necessary, and leave the rest to Samba AD (nothing
>> fancy or complex, just simple GPOs).
>>
>> So investing in Debian Bullseye probably isn't the most future
proof
>> way forward. And I don't want to compile Samba myself, preferring
to
>> use official packages as much as possible.
>>
>> I'm publishing this post here, as I'm not convinced I would get
>> better information in a Debian forum.
> I am sure you would also receive a good answer from
> debian-user at lists.debian.org.
>>
>> I would be most grateful for some relevant information.
> Looking https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/samba and knowing that Bookworm
> is currently frozen, Samba version will be 4.17.7. Maybe using
> Bookworm backport could be a solution for you?
>>
>> Best regards,
>>
>> Peter
>>
>
Hi Yvan,
Thanks for the information, really useful. Essentially, it means I need
to wait for the official release of Debian Bookworm, and then getting
the newest Samba packages from Bookworm backports. It's just a little
over a month away, so there is ample time for planning upgrades.
Best regards,
Peter