john.nelson@teradyne.com wrote:
> >if I transfer this
> >file from this NT4TSE system to the linux box by ftp
> >md5sum are the same. So IMHO samba is involved.
> Well, maybe. But you still haven't said HOW "Samba" is
involved.
What> sequence of steps did you use to copy the file?
>From the windoze side box:
net use h: \\mimas\backup
copy priv.edb h:\exchange
===Samba box==
smb.conf
#
#======================= Global Settings
====================================[global]
# workgroup = NT-Domain-Name or Workgroup-Name, eg: LINUX2
workgroup = domain
# server string is the equivalent of the NT Description field
server string = Samba on Slackware Linux
;winbind separator = +
idmap uid = 10000-20000
idmap gid = 10000-20000
winbind enum users = yes
winbind enum groups = yes
# Security mode. Defines in which mode Samba will operate. Possible
# values are share, user, server, domain and ads. Most people will want
# user level security. See the HOWTO Collection for details.
security = domain
# This option is important for security. It allows you to restrict
# connections to machines which are on your local network. The
# following example restricts access to two C class networks and
# the "loopback" interface. For more examples of the syntax see
# the smb.conf man page
; hosts allow = 192.168.1. 192.168.2. 127.
# If you want to automatically load your printer list rather
# than setting them up individually then you'll need this
# load printers = yes
# you may wish to override the location of the printcap file
; printcap name = /etc/printcap
# on SystemV system setting printcap name to lpstat should allow
# you to automatically obtain a printer list from the SystemV spool
# system
; printcap name = lpstat
# It should not be necessary to specify the print system type unless
# it is non-standard. Currently supported print systems include:
# bsd, cups, sysv, plp, lprng, aix, hpux, qnx
; printing = cups
# Uncomment this if you want a guest account, you must add this to
/etc/passwd
# otherwise the user "nobody" is used
; guest account = pcguest
# this tells Samba to use a separate log file for each machine
# that connects
log file = /var/log/samba/samba.%m
# Put a capping on the size of the log files (in Kb).
max log size = 50000
# Use password server option only with security = server
# The argument list may include:
# password server = My_PDC_Name [My_BDC_Name] [My_Next_BDC_Name]
# or to auto-locate the domain controller/s
# password server = *
password server = srvnt1
# Use the realm option only with security = ads
# Specifies the Active Directory realm the host is part of
; realm = MY_REALM
# Backend to store user information in. New installations should
# use either tdbsam or ldapsam. smbpasswd is available for backwards
# compatibility. tdbsam requires no further configuration.
; passdb backend = tdbsam
# Using the following line enables you to customise your configuration
# on a per machine basis. The %m gets replaced with the netbios name
# of the machine that is connecting.
# Note: Consider carefully the location in the configuration file of
# this line. The included file is read at that point.
; include = /usr/local/samba/lib/smb.conf.%m
# Most people will find that this option gives better performance.
# See the chapter 'Samba performance issues' in the Samba HOWTO
Collection
# and the manual pages for details.
# You may want to add the following on a Linux system:
# SO_RCVBUF=8192 SO_SNDBUF=8192
socket options = TCP_NODELAY
# Configure Samba to use multiple interfaces
# If you have multiple network interfaces then you must list them
# here. See the man page for details.
; interfaces = 192.168.12.2/24 192.168.13.2/24
# Browser Control Options:
# set local master to no if you don't want Samba to become a master
# browser on your network. Otherwise the normal election rules apply
; local master = no
# OS Level determines the precedence of this server in master browser
# elections. The default value should be reasonable
; os level = 33
# Domain Master specifies Samba to be the Domain Master Browser. This
# allows Samba to collate browse lists between subnets. Don't use this
# if you already have a Windows NT domain controller doing this job
; domain master = yes
# Preferred Master causes Samba to force a local browser election on
startup
# and gives it a slightly higher chance of winning the election
; preferred master = yes
# Enable this if you want Samba to be a domain logon server for
# Windows95 workstations.
; domain logons = yes
# if you enable domain logons then you may want a per-machine or
# per user logon script
# run a specific logon batch file per workstation (machine)
; logon script = %m.bat
# run a specific logon batch file per username
; logon script = %U.bat
# Where to store roving profiles (only for Win95 and WinNT)
# %L substitutes for this servers netbios name, %U is username
# You must uncomment the [Profiles] share below
; logon path = \\%L\Profiles\%U
# Windows Internet Name Serving Support Section:
# WINS Support - Tells the NMBD component of Samba to enable it's WINS
Server
; wins support = yes
# WINS Server - Tells the NMBD components of Samba to be a WINS Client
# Note: Samba can be either a WINS Server, or a WINS Client, but NOT
both
wins server = 172.18.1.10
# WINS Proxy - Tells Samba to answer name resolution queries on
# behalf of a non WINS capable client, for this to work there must be
# at least one WINS Server on the network. The default is NO.
; wins proxy = yes
# DNS Proxy - tells Samba whether or not to try to resolve NetBIOS names
# via DNS nslookups. The default is NO.
dns proxy = no
# These scripts are used on a domain controller or stand-alone
# machine to add or delete corresponding unix accounts
; add user script = /usr/sbin/useradd %u
; add group script = /usr/sbin/groupadd %g
; add machine script = /usr/sbin/adduser -n -g machines -c Machine -d
/dev/null -s /bin/false %u
; delete user script = /usr/sbin/userdel %u
; delete user from group script = /usr/sbin/deluser %u %g
; delete group script = /usr/sbin/groupdel %g
#============================ Share Definitions
=============================#[homes]
# comment = Home Directories
# browseable = no
# writable = yes
# Un-comment the following and create the netlogon directory for Domain
Logons
; [netlogon]
; comment = Network Logon Service
; path = /usr/local/samba/lib/netlogon
; guest ok = yes
; writable = no
; share modes = no
# Un-comment the following to provide a specific roving profile share
# the default is to use the user's home directory
;[Profiles]
; path = /usr/local/samba/profiles
; browseable = no
; guest ok = yes
# NOTE: If you have a BSD-style print system there is no need to
# specifically define each individual printer
#[printers]
# comment = All Printers
# path = /var/spool/samba
# browseable = no
# Set public = yes to allow user 'guest account' to print
# guest ok = no
# writable = no
# printable = yes
# This one is useful for people to share files
[tmp]
comment = Temporary file space
path = /tmp
read only = no
public = yes
# A publicly accessible directory, but read only, except for people in
# the "staff" group
;[public]
; comment = Public Stuff
; path = /home/samba
; public = yes
; writable = yes
; printable = no
; write list = @staff
# Other examples.
#
# A private printer, usable only by fred. Spool data will be placed in
fred's
# home directory. Note that fred must have write access to the spool
directory,
# wherever it is.
;[fredsprn]
; comment = Fred's Printer
; valid users = fred
; path = /homes/fred
; printer = freds_printer
; public = no
; writable = no
; printable = yes
# A private directory, usable only by fred. Note that fred requires
write
# access to the directory.
;[fredsdir]
; comment = Fred's Service
; path = /usr/somewhere/private
; valid users = fred
; public = no
; writable = yes
; printable = no
# a service which has a different directory for each machine that
connects
# this allows you to tailor configurations to incoming machines. You
could
# also use the %U option to tailor it by user name.
# The %m gets replaced with the machine name that is connecting.
;[pchome]
; comment = PC Directories
; path = /usr/pc/%m
; public = no
; writable = yes
# A publicly accessible directory, read/write to all users. Note that
all files
# created in the directory by users will be owned by the default user,
so
# any user with access can delete any other user's files. Obviously this
# directory must be writable by the default user. Another user could of
course
# be specified, in which case all files would be owned by that user
instead.
;[public]
; path = /usr/somewhere/else/public
; public = yes
; only guest = yes
; writable = yes
; printable = no
# The following two entries demonstrate how to share a directory so that
two
# users can place files there that will be owned by the specific users.
In this
# setup, the directory should be writable by both users and should have
the
# sticky bit set on it to prevent abuse. Obviously this could be
extended to
# as many users as required.
;[myshare]
; comment = Mary's and Fred's stuff
; path = /usr/somewhere/shared
; valid users = mary fred
; public = no
; writable = yes
; printable = no
; create mask = 0765
[backup]
comment = Backup Folder
path = /mnt/data/backup
read only = no
public = yes
browseable = no
samba start script:
#!/bin/sh
#
# /etc/rc.d/rc.samba
#
# Start/stop/restart the Samba SMB file/print server.
#
# To make Samba start automatically at boot, make this
# file executable: chmod 755 /etc/rc.d/rc.samba
#
samba_start() {
if [ -x /usr/sbin/smbd -a -x /usr/sbin/nmbd -a -r
/etc/samba/smb.conf ]; then
echo "Starting Samba: /usr/sbin/smbd -D"
/usr/sbin/smbd -D
echo " /usr/sbin/nmbd -D"
/usr/sbin/nmbd -D
fi
}
samba_stop() {
killall smbd nmbd
}
samba_restart() {
samba_stop
sleep 2
samba_start
}
case "$1" in
'start')
samba_start
;;
'stop')
samba_stop
;;
'restart')
samba_restart
;;
*)
# Default is "start", for backwards compatibility with previous
# Slackware versions. This may change to a 'usage' error someday.
samba_start
esac
Samba build script:
#!/bin/sh
# Build samba for Slackware.
CWD=`pwd`
TMP=/tmp
PKG=$TMP/package-samba
rm -rf $PKG
mkdir -p $PKG VERSION=3.0.4
ARCH=${ARCH:-i486}
BUILD=1 cd $TMP
rm -rf samba-$VERSION
tar xjvf $CWD/samba-$VERSION.tar.bz2
cd samba-$VERSION
chown -R root.root .
find . -perm 775 | xargs chmod 755
find . -perm 664 | xargs chmod 644 ## CUPS is a standard package now, so
we *like* this dependency. :-)
#if [ -r /usr/lib/libcups.so ]; then
# echo
# echo "We've found libcups on your system."
# echo
# echo "Hit enter to build a version of samba with CUPS support"
# echo -n "(and with a CUPS dependency): "
# read foo
# CUPS="--enable-cups"
#fi ## NOTE (2003-03-07): libcrypto no longer defines crypt(), so these
## patches are probably no longer needed (but also likely don't hurt
anything) ## We must define LIBS with -lcrypt first, or we will end up
using
## the crypt() from libcrypto, which doesn't support MD5.
#zcat $CWD/samba.ssl.diff.gz |
patch -p1 --verbose --backup --suffix=.orig ## Same story. Building
with CUPS will put SSL ahead of -lcrypt if we
## don't patch it. Thanks to Peter Christy for reporting this problem
## and helping to figure out a workaround.
#zcat $CWD/samba.cups.diff.gz |
patch -p1 --verbose --backup --suffix=.orig cd source
if [ "$ARCH" = "i386" ]; then
SLKCFLAGS="-O2 -march=i386 -mcpu=i686"
elif [ "$ARCH" = "i486" ]; then
SLKCFLAGS="-O2 -march=i486 -mcpu=i686"
elif [ "$ARCH" = "s390" ]; then
SLKCFLAGS="-O2"
elif [ "$ARCH" = "x86_64" ]; then
SLKCFLAGS="-O2"
fi # CRUFT: options no longer supported since Samba 3.0:
# --with-sambabook=/usr/share/swat/using_samba
# --with-ssl
# --with-sslinc=/usr/include/openssl
# --with-ssllib=/usr
# --with-msdfs
# --with-vfs # Some of these options could be auto-detected, but
declaring them
# here doesn't hurt and helps document what features we're trying to
# build in.
CFLAGS="$SLKCFLAGS" ./configure \
--enable-cups \
--with-fhs \
--with-acl-support \
--with-automount \
--prefix=/usr \
--localstatedir=/var \
--bindir=/usr/bin \
--sbindir=/usr/sbin \
--with-lockdir=/var/cache/samba \
--sysconfdir=/etc \
--with-configdir=/etc/samba \
--with-privatedir=/etc/samba/private \
--with-swatdir=/usr/share/swat \
--with-smbmount \
--with-quotas \
--with-syslog \
--with-utmp \
--with-libsmbclient \
--with-winbind \
$ARCH-slackware-linux # -j options don't seem to work...
make mkdir -p \
$PKG/usr/doc/samba-$VERSION/swat \
$PKG/var/spool/samba \
$PKG/var/log/samba \
$PKG/etc/samba/private \
$PKG/var/cache/samba
chmod 700 $PKG/etc/samba/private
chmod 1777 $PKG/var/spool/samba make install DESTDIR=$PKG # Install
libnss_win* libraries:
mkdir -p $PKG/lib
cp -a nsswitch/libnss_winbind.so $PKG/lib/libnss_winbind.so.2
cp -a nsswitch/libnss_wins.so $PKG/lib/libnss_wins.so.2
( cd $PKG/lib
ln -sf libnss_winbind.so.2 libnss_winbind.so
ln -sf libnss_wins.so.2 libnss_wins.so
) # I almost think this is cruft. Almost.
mkdir -p $PKG/sbin
( cd $PKG/sbin
rm -f mount.smbfs
ln -sf /usr/bin/smbmount mount.smbfs
chown -R root.bin .
) # Make sure libsmbclient gets installed:
if [ -r bin/libsmbclient.so ]; then
cp -a bin/libsmbclient.so $PKG/usr/lib/libsmbclient.so.0.0
chown root.root $PKG/usr/lib/libsmbclient.so.0.0
chmod 755 $PKG/usr/lib/libsmbclient.so.0.0
( cd $PKG/usr/lib
rm -f libsmbclient.so.0 libsmbclient.so libsmbclient.a
ln -sf libsmbclient.so.0.0 libsmbclient.so.0
ln -sf libsmbclient.so.0.0 libsmbclient.so )
mkdir -p $PKG/usr/include
cp -a include/libsmbclient.h $PKG/usr/include/libsmbclient.h
chown root.root $PKG/usr/include/libsmbclient.h
chmod 644 $PKG/usr/include/libsmbclient.h
fi cat $CWD/smb.conf.default > $PKG/etc/samba/smb.conf-sample if [ ! -r
$PKG/usr/bin/smbget ]; then
rm -f $PKG/usr/share/man/man1/smbget.1
rm -f $PKG/usr/share/swat/help/smbget.1.html
fi # We'll add rc.samba to the init directory, but chmod 644 so that it
doesn't
# start by default:
mkdir -p $PKG/etc/rc.d
cat $CWD/rc.samba > $PKG/etc/rc.d/rc.samba.new
chmod 644 $PKG/etc/rc.d/rc.samba.new mv $PKG/usr/share/man $PKG/usr
gzip -9 $PKG/usr/man/man?/*.?
chown -R root.bin $PKG/usr/bin $PKG/usr/sbin
( cd $PKG
find . | xargs file | grep "executable" | grep ELF | cut -f 1 -d : |
xargs strip --strip-unneeded 2> /dev/null
find . | xargs file | grep "shared object" | grep ELF | cut -f 1 -d
:
| xargs strip --strip-unneeded 2> /dev/null
) cd ..
cp -a COPYING Manifest README Read-Manifest-Now Roadmap WHATSNEW.txt
docs examples \
$PKG/usr/doc/samba-$VERSION
# These are installed elsewhere:
rm -rf $PKG/usr/doc/samba-$VERSION/docs/htmldocs \
$PKG/usr/doc/samba-$VERSION/docs/manpages
( cd $PKG/usr/doc/samba-$VERSION/docs
ln -sf /usr/share/swat/using_samba .
ln -sf /usr/share/swat/help htmldocs
)
# I'm sorry, but when all this info is included in HTML, adding 7MB
worth of
# PDF files just to have extra artwork is more fluff than I'll agree to.
rm -f $PKG/usr/doc/samba-$VERSION/docs/*.pdf
# Also redundant also:
rm -rf $PKG/usr/doc/samba-$VERSION/docs/docbook
mkdir -p $PKG/install
cat $CWD/slack-desc > $PKG/install/slack-desc
zcat $CWD/doinst.sh.gz > $PKG/install/doinst.sh cat << EOF *** Be sure
the package contains: drwx------ 2 root root 1024 Mar 12
13:21 /etc/samba/private
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 May 3 15:46 /var/cache/samba/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 48 Aug 29 13:06 /var/log/samba/
drwxrwxrwt 2 root root 1024 Mar 12 13:21 /var/spool/samba/
EOF cd $PKG
makepkg -l y -c n $TMP/samba-$VERSION-$ARCH-$BUILD.tgz
> Were there any user visible error messages?
No :-((
> Were there any messages in the samba log files?
No. Perhaps I need to increase log level.
> You still haven't given enough information for anyone to really
> understand your problem.
I hope now you have.
One other info. md5sum are identical when coping the file from
a Windoze 2000 system to the same samba box.
> Let me take another wild guess (on too little information). I'm
guessing> that you aren't using "Samba" at all - you're using
"smbfs".
No. I'm copy from windows to linux. I'm not mounting any windows share
on linux.
PS: Samba was builded from source on Slackware Linux 9.1
(gcc 3.2.3 glibc 2.3.2) + vanilla kernel 2.4.26