search for: accsse

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2013 Jan 20
1
Accsse Deny
Hello people, I'm newcomer these list and I hope someone can help me. I have an linux machine ( CentOS 5.4 ) that stops the ntlm authentication. I'm using that machie integrated with Windows Active Directory ( Win 2008 R2 ) when I run the command ntlm_auth --username myuser show me follow output Substituting charset 'UTF-8' for LOCALE password: lang_tdb_init:
2010 Feb 19
1
CentOS magic to Active Directory login?
I've been trying to follow samba, centos, ldap, and other documentation to try and get a CentOS 5 box to permit a user to log into an existing Windows 200x Active Directory domain without necessarily having the box as part of the domain. If it has to be part of the domain, that is fine. The user shall have no local account on the box - I want their active directory account to
2015 Dec 05
0
Functionality of Nmbd at Active Directory mode of Samba4 !
> There is nothing stopping you connecting directly to your shares, or using a domain member as a fileserver I agree, but for most of users T talked with, via friendly name (NetBios) but not quite long (DNS) is more comfortable. > In my personal opinion, you are risking trouble by still using XP, yes I know that sometimes you have to, but I would suggest that you start > making plans to
2015 Dec 01
5
Functionality of Nmbd at Active Directory mode of Samba4 !
> If you run 'nmbd' with 'samba' i.e. on an AD DC, you are duplicating the code in the 'nmb' component of the 'samba' deamon, this is definitely > not recommended. You could turn off 'nmb', but again this is not recommended, the rest of the 'samba' deamon relies on 'nmb' not the > external 'nmbd' . > Or to put it another
2015 Dec 05
1
Functionality of Nmbd at Active Directory mode of Samba4 !
On 05/12/15 11:45, CpServiceSPb . wrote: >> There is nothing stopping you connecting directly to your shares, or using a domain member as a fileserver > I agree, but for most of users T talked with, via friendly name > (NetBios) but not quite long (DNS) is more comfortable. > >> In my personal opinion, you are risking trouble by still using XP, yes I know that sometimes you