They use a daemon called winbindd that knows to talk to the nt server to
authenticate users/groups. It works fine on linux, but it has some kinks as
far as working for solaris (i.e., does not show all nt groups, requires a
work-around to have passwd command not whine about the winbind entry put
into nsswitch.conf). You would put in smb.conf if your nt domain was INS,
for example, valid users = INS+Kosborne or something like valid groups
@"INS+Domain Users". On my Solaris box, Domain Users is one of the
groups
that does not work with winbind. I made another group and added users I
wanted to give access to so I could specify nt groups that would be allowed
access to one of my shares. There is a few annoying setup steps involved
with getting it to work that are not well documented (e.g., force compile
stuff in source/nsswitch to make .so share libraries, cp or link them into
/usr/lib with .1 and .2 endings on them, etc.).
David
-----Original Message-----
From: Kristyan Osborne [mailto:kris@longhill.brighton-hove.sch.uk]
Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2002 11:13 AM
To: Samba (E-mail)
Subject: [Samba] Samba 3.0 No user accounts
Hi,
After reading the notes on Samba 3.0, I noticed that it said unix user
accounts do not have to be created, as samba can handle that. Did I read
this correctly? If so does anyone have any details on how this is going to
work.
Cheers
-------------
Kristyan Osborne IT Assistant Manager
Longhill High School
------
Computers are like airconditioners: They stop working properly if you open
windows.
Win95: A 32-bit patch for a 16-bit GUI shell running on top of an
8-bit operating system written for a 4-bit processor by a
2-bit company who cannot stand 1 bit of competition.
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