On 21/06/2019 12:13, Andreas Habel via samba wrote:>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: samba <samba-bounces at lists.samba.org> On Behalf Of
Rowland penny via
>> samba
>> Sent: 21. juni 2019 12:44
>> To: samba at lists.samba.org
>> Subject: Re: [Samba] dual boot challenge
>>
>> On 21/06/2019 11:37, Andreas Habel via samba wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> my test setup currently consists of the following:
>>>
>>> 1 Linux AD DC
>>> 1 Linux file server as AD member
>>> 1 test pc with Win10/CentOS7 in dual boot mode
>>>
>>> Domain users have one home directory for each operating system (
>> /users/<username> for Windows and /users/<username>/Linux
for Linux) on
>> the file server. The corresponding fields in the user database
(homeDrive,
>> unixHomeDirectory, homeDirectory) are set.
>>> The Windows 10 installation works fine - the PC belongs to the
domain,
>> domain users can login, get their home drive mounted and have a roaming
>> profile.
>>> I am facing a problem with the CentOS installation. I installed
samba
>> according to the wiki
>> (https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Setting_up_Samba_as_a_Domain_Member).
>> After adding the CentOS installation to the domain, the Windows
>> installation - naturally - got kicked out of the domain and users were
no
>> longer able to log in due to a broken trusted relationship.
>>> Is there a way to solve this elegantly, i.e. using AD for
authentication
>> of (the same) users under Windows and Linux in a dual boot setup?
>> You say that you are 'dual booting', this means (as you can
only be
>> running one OS at once) that they should be treated as two separate
>> computers unless you have done something strange like using the same
>> short hostname for the Windows PC and the Unix PC.
>>
>> Rowland
>>
> Yes, you're right -- since it is the same hardware, we've always
used the same hostname.
>
> OK, I use a different hostname now -- how should this one be added to the
DNS? As a new A record or as a CNAME record? IP address is the same on Windows
and Linux.
>
> Andreas
>
Would you have two computers with the same short hostname & ipaddress on
the same subnet ?
No, I didn't think you would ;-)
I would set the two computers (that are actually the same computer) to
have different hostnames and IP's. Leave the domain and then join the
domain from each totally separate computer.
There is a further way you could do this, delete the Windows partition,
grow the Linux partitions to take up all the space and then reinstall
Windows in a VM on the Linux OS. then treat each as a separate computer.
Rowland