Andrew, Did anyone reply to you on this? By the sounds of things you are running a pair of E450's? We currently use Samba on about 6 or 7 Sun E450's and E250's, it scales very well. I have managed to have about 700-800 current clients connected from Windows 95 and 98, we also have the about 30-40 NT clients that connect regularly. I have found that Samba has scaled uniformly in it's system requirements. We use it to provide file services to around 5000 odd registered users via NIS, we also provide NFS services to other servers that require access to data shares that are shared via SMB. All works no problem. A couple of things, I would (me personally) reccomend having a dedicated wins server available to keep things running smoothly(Samba works fine, or NT if needed). Make sure that you run the Smbd and Nmbd as Daemons and NOT from inetd. I have currently got VERY stable servers running on both 2.6 and 2.7. They have been by far the most stable server that I have come across so far, also in the event of a dameon crash they can be restarted very quickly without a system reboot. (Try that with NT!) A script can be written to monitor the damons also if you really want to provide recovery in case of a problem. I would also reccomend that you compile them yourself using the latest version of Gcc if poss. I believe that there are a a few Solaris memory leak problems on older versions of gcc. Obviously the one major advantage you will get from doing this is nicely sychronised password databases, which is a major bonus. I am currently looking at LDAP for our setup and the Solaris extensions. Currently we have a pretty solid implementation of Netscape Directory Server on Solaris 7 doing the trick. Anyway hope this helps you with your decision. Scott. Date: Thu, 17 Aug 2000 13:01:04 -0400 (EST) From: To: samba@samba.org Subject: Large scale Samba installations Message-ID: <14748.6736.834918.934495@barneybox.bogus.domain> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Hello Samba folks- I'm currently in the position of trying to convince my IT management that using Samba to provide SMB services to our NT client base is a Good Thing. Our client/server situation is as follows: o An HA cluster of two quad-cpu (400MHz) Sun Enterprise servers, with IP address takeover on failover. o About 1000 Windows NT clients connecting via SMB o About 250 Solaris/SPARC clients connecting via NFS We're currently using a commerical product (which I will be kind enough not to name) which is proving to not scale well at all. This has less to do with the capabilities of our servers and network, and more to do with some serious design flaws in the product. As a result, I'm getting very close to convincing my superiors that Samba is the way to go, despite being an "unsupported freeware" product. At this point, the main concern is that we have only used Samba on a smaller scale, so we don't have direct evidence that it will fare any better once we scale it up to the level mentioned above. I'm pretty sure I can make Samba work in a symmetric failover situation by running two separate instances of Samba and bind only to the appropriate interface in each (the cluster does IP address takevoer in the event of a failover). My guess is that this is what HP does in their packaging of Samba for their HA servers. This would be a major selling point for Samba, since the commercial product can't do this (i.e. half of our cluster is basically sitting idle)... though of course they promise that it will be "supported in the next release" ;-) So, I'm looking for examples of successful Samba installations on this scale (or larger!). If anyone on this list has administered such an installation, I'd GREATLY appreciate it if you could provide some input regarding both the positives and the negatives you've encountered in your installation. I'd be especially interested in sites that use Samba on Solaris/SPARC servers, doubly so for HA environments. But other platforms would be of interest also -- I'm mostly interested in the scalability of Samba itself. Thanks! -Andrew -- __________________________________________________________________ Scott Lawson Systems Manager Department Of Information Services St. George's Hospital Medical School Tooting London SW17 0RE UK P: 44 (0)208 725 2896 F: 44 (0)208 725 3583 mailto:s.lawson@sghms.ac.uk http://www.sghms.ac.uk __________________________________________________________________