Yes this is what I thought and exactly what I would like to do. I am
looking for a decent guide on this and haven't found one. I'm willing to
write one and contribute back if I can get it working.
On 1/16/24 08:51, Stefan Kania via samba wrote:> If the server is an AD-member you can setup a NFS-server and give
> permissions to all the AD-users (as long as you have configured
> winbind on the server) to your NFs-share. So when a user logs in to a
> Linux-client with his AD-account and then mount the NFS-share he
> should have the permissions you gave to him on the NFS-share. The
> Linux-client must also be a AD-member. The user will get a
> kerberos-ticket during the login process and so you can configure NFS
> using Kerberos, but this is a different story ;-)
>
> Am 16.01.24 um 17:00 schrieb Peter Carlson via samba:
>> Stefan,
>>
>> That's an excellent point, thanks for the reminder and the
>> confirmation.? I had thought the same thing.? I dont think that will
>> be a requirement, (at least not that I have been told). Just multi
>> protocol access to the same server.
>>
>> Peter
>>
>> On 1/16/24 07:24, Stefan Kania via samba wrote:
>>> I don't know what you would like to do, but it is not a good
idea to
>>> let SMB and NFS share the same directory, because of the
>>> file-locking. NFS and SMB uses different file-locking. So if a user
>>> opens a file for writing via SMB in that directory and another user
>>> open the same file via NFS both could write. That's not what
you
>>> want ;-)
>>>
>>> Am 15.01.24 um 17:51 schrieb Peter Carlson via samba:
>>>> This is an off topic question
>>>>
>>>> I am trying to set up NFS4.2 server.? I already have samba fs,
>>>> samba ad, and windows, mac, linux clients working (all linux
>>>> machines are running ubuntu 22.04).? Now I want to add a NFS
server
>>>> that also uses AD for auth and for extended ACLs.? Can anyone
>>>> recommend a good guide on this?
>>>>
>>>> Peter
>>>
>>>
>
>
>