Hi, that sounds nice.... i will try this... -----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht----- Von: samba <samba-bounces at lists.samba.org> Im Auftrag von Paul Leiber via samba Gesendet: Montag, 7. August 2023 23:28 An: samba at lists.samba.org Betreff: Re: [Samba] Raspberry as AD Server Am 07.08.2023 um 11:45 schrieb samba at laurenz.ws:> excatly > > -----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht----- > Von: samba <samba-bounces at lists.samba.org> Im Auftrag von Rowland > Penny via samba > Gesendet: Montag, 7. August 2023 10:13 > An: samba at lists.samba.org > Cc: Rowland Penny <rpenny at samba.org> > Betreff: Re: [Samba] Raspberry as AD Server > > > > On 07/08/2023 08:52, Michael Tokarev via samba wrote: >> 06.08.2023 15:25, Dirk Laurenz via samba wrote: >> ... >>> So time to upgrade my production from 32 bit Debian 10 to 64 Bit >>> Debian 11 >> >> Out of curiosity, why not to Debian 12? >> >> /mjt >> > > Probably because Raspberry pi OS is still on Bullseye, they haven't upgraded yet. > > Rowland >Just to point out the available options how to get newer Samba packages on a Raspberry Pi (apologies if all that is common knowledge): It is possible to install plain Debian, not Raspbian, on a Raspbery Pi. I have it running on a RPi4B, and the installation process following https://forums.raspberrypi.com/viewtopic.php?t=282839 was not really complicated. I am not sure if the same is possible for earlier RPi versions, as there seems to be a difference in the boot sequence (something with the bootloader in the GPU or so). I have a Samba AD-DC running on Debian 12 on a Raspberry Pi 4B right now. (To be very precise, Samba is currently running in a Debian 12 VM on Xen on the Raspberry Pi. But that shouldn't make any difference, as the first step when installing Xen was installing Debian 12 on the Raspberry Pi, as described above. I didn't try to install Samba on the bare metal Debian system, but I wouldn't expect any issues doing that, once Debian is running.) Paul -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba
Hi all, I'll try either, as my last tries (1 year ago) to make an RPI4 a Samba AD-DC have all failed because of missing dependencies. Thanks Electronico NEW-CALEDONIA (South Pacific) Le 09/08/2023 ? 15:54, Dirk Laurenz via samba a ?crit?:> Hi, > > that sounds nice.... i will try this... > > -----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht----- > Von: samba <samba-bounces at lists.samba.org> Im Auftrag von Paul Leiber via samba > Gesendet: Montag, 7. August 2023 23:28 > An: samba at lists.samba.org > Betreff: Re: [Samba] Raspberry as AD Server > > Am 07.08.2023 um 11:45 schrieb samba at laurenz.ws: >> excatly >> >> -----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht----- >> Von: samba <samba-bounces at lists.samba.org> Im Auftrag von Rowland >> Penny via samba >> Gesendet: Montag, 7. August 2023 10:13 >> An: samba at lists.samba.org >> Cc: Rowland Penny <rpenny at samba.org> >> Betreff: Re: [Samba] Raspberry as AD Server >> >> >> >> On 07/08/2023 08:52, Michael Tokarev via samba wrote: >>> 06.08.2023 15:25, Dirk Laurenz via samba wrote: >>> ... >>>> So time to upgrade my production from 32 bit Debian 10 to 64 Bit >>>> Debian 11 >>> Out of curiosity, why not to Debian 12? >>> >>> /mjt >>> >> Probably because Raspberry pi OS is still on Bullseye, they haven't upgraded yet. >> >> Rowland >> > Just to point out the available options how to get newer Samba packages on a Raspberry Pi (apologies if all that is common knowledge): It is possible to install plain Debian, not Raspbian, on a Raspbery Pi. I have it running on a RPi4B, and the installation process following > https://forums.raspberrypi.com/viewtopic.php?t=282839 was not really complicated. > > I am not sure if the same is possible for earlier RPi versions, as there seems to be a difference in the boot sequence (something with the bootloader in the GPU or so). > > I have a Samba AD-DC running on Debian 12 on a Raspberry Pi 4B right now. > > (To be very precise, Samba is currently running in a Debian 12 VM on Xen on the Raspberry Pi. But that shouldn't make any difference, as the first step when installing Xen was installing Debian 12 on the Raspberry Pi, as described above. I didn't try to install Samba on the bare metal Debian system, but I wouldn't expect any issues doing that, once Debian is running.) > > Paul >
Am 09.08.2023 um 06:54 schrieb samba at laurenz.ws:> Hi, > > that sounds nice.... i will try this... > > -----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht----- > Von: samba <samba-bounces at lists.samba.org> Im Auftrag von Paul Leiber via samba > Gesendet: Montag, 7. August 2023 23:28 > An: samba at lists.samba.org > Betreff: Re: [Samba] Raspberry as AD Server > > Am 07.08.2023 um 11:45 schrieb samba at laurenz.ws: >> excatly >> >> -----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht----- >> Von: samba <samba-bounces at lists.samba.org> Im Auftrag von Rowland >> Penny via samba >> Gesendet: Montag, 7. August 2023 10:13 >> An: samba at lists.samba.org >> Cc: Rowland Penny <rpenny at samba.org> >> Betreff: Re: [Samba] Raspberry as AD Server >> >> >> >> On 07/08/2023 08:52, Michael Tokarev via samba wrote: >>> 06.08.2023 15:25, Dirk Laurenz via samba wrote: >>> ... >>>> So time to upgrade my production from 32 bit Debian 10 to 64 Bit >>>> Debian 11 >>> >>> Out of curiosity, why not to Debian 12? >>> >>> /mjt >>> >> >> Probably because Raspberry pi OS is still on Bullseye, they haven't upgraded yet. >> >> Rowland >> > > Just to point out the available options how to get newer Samba packages on a Raspberry Pi (apologies if all that is common knowledge): It is possible to install plain Debian, not Raspbian, on a Raspbery Pi. I have it running on a RPi4B, and the installation process following > https://forums.raspberrypi.com/viewtopic.php?t=282839 was not really complicated.As there seems to be interest, let me try to save your time by highlighting one difference I had to make to the installation process described in the link. I didn't succeed with Rufus (on Windows) creating the installation partition, there were some strange issues with the source partition not mounted during the Debian installation process. Instead, I created an ESP partition of 850 MB size, rsynced the content of the ARM64 Debian image on it, and extracted the contents of the EFI zip file onto the same partition. Then the installation process went very smoothly.