Hello I am currently testing Fedora Core 6 i386 on a moderately sized network (with the permission of the system administrator), with 150 or so computers, some running Mac OSX and others running NT 4.0. As to the storage of personal files and authentication, there is both a NT 4.0 server (for the NT 4.0 machines to authenticate to) and a Mac OSX server (for the Mac OS X machines to authenticate to). Having *never really done all that much networking before*, I am having problems detecting the Apple Mac servers. I am able to use konqueror to access smb:/ and browse the Windows server quite easily (even though I have not yet set up smb.conf; why is this, by the way?), and authenticating to the NT4.0 server, using the Samba-howto and winbind, would not prove too difficult, I think. However, the NT 4.0 server is due to be replaced some time this year, and so I would like to be able to authenticate to the OSX server instead. Nonetheless, though documentation for authenticating to Windows servers on the internet is excellent (samba howto, etc.) I can find very little about connecting to OSX networks. Can anyone tell me where I can find some documentation, etc., or give me a head start? At the moment, as I've already said, I don't even know how to detect the OS X server (it may be password protected, by the way). Secondly, seeing as OS X is unix and is distantly related to Linux, (I know this is a strange question to ask on a Samba mailing list) but is there anyway I could authenticate to the Apple server without using Samba? I would like to be able to have the /home partitions on the server, and I know Samba has problems with this due to the sockets that KDE / etc. uses Thanks, LS _________________________________________________________________ Windows Liveā¢ Messenger has arrived. Click here to download it for free! http://imagine-msn.com/messenger/launch80/?locale=en-gb
On 12/12/06, Luke Sharkey <lukesharkey@hotmail.co.uk> wrote:> Hello > > I am currently testing Fedora Core 6 i386 on a moderately sized network > (with the permission of the system administrator), with 150 or so computers, > some running Mac OSX and others running NT 4.0. > > As to the storage of personal files and authentication, there is both a NT > 4.0 server (for the NT 4.0 machines to authenticate to) and a Mac OSX server > (for the Mac OS X machines to authenticate to). > > Having *never really done all that much networking before*, I am having > problems detecting the Apple Mac servers. I am able to use konqueror to > access smb:/ and browse the Windows server quite easily (even though I have > not yet set up smb.conf; why is this, by the way?), and authenticating to > the NT4.0 server, using the Samba-howto and winbind, would not prove too > difficult, I think. > > However, the NT 4.0 server is due to be replaced some time this year, and so > I would like to be able to authenticate to the OSX server instead. > Nonetheless, though documentation for authenticating to Windows servers on > the internet is excellent (samba howto, etc.) I can find very little about > connecting to OSX networks. > > Can anyone tell me where I can find some documentation, etc., or give me a > head start? At the moment, as I've already said, I don't even know how to > detect the OS X server (it may be password protected, by the way).The OS X Server manuals are all online here: http://www.apple.com/support/manuals/macosxserver/ You probably should take a look at the Open Directory manual and the User Management manual at least.> Secondly, seeing as OS X is unix and is distantly related to Linux, (I know > this is a strange question to ask on a Samba mailing list) but is there > anyway I could authenticate to the Apple server without using Samba?Yes. OS X Server supports lots of different authentication methods. See mnuals above.> I would like to be able to have the /home partitions on the server, and I know > Samba has problems with this due to the sockets that KDE / etc. usesAnother good resource is the os-x-server mailing list: http://lists.apple.com/mailman/listinfo/macos-x-server -- James Peach | jorgar@gmail.com