similar to: ldb-tools stand alone different than built-in?

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 5000 matches similar to: "ldb-tools stand alone different than built-in?"

2016 Oct 03
2
ldb-tools stand alone different than built-in?
On Mon, Oct 3, 2016 at 12:10 PM, Sketch <smblist at rednsx.org> wrote: > > I would assume they would work if you built Samba against them so that > it's ldb modules were built for the same version. But that seems like a > lot of work when you can just use the CentOS ldb-tools package. > Well the ldb-tools package from COS doesn't work, as we've discussed
2016 Oct 03
2
ldb-tools stand alone different than built-in?
On Mon, Oct 3, 2016 at 10:39 AM, Sketch <smblist at rednsx.org> wrote: > > The standalone tools (as packaged by CentOS) don't have all of the > extensions that are built when you build a Samba DC. If you have already > rebuilt CentOS Samba packages with DC support, you need to add samba's ldb > modules to ldb's module path. > This is what I suspected.
2015 Feb 23
1
Samba 3.6 AD Domain Member
I'm playing around with Domain Membership to a WIndows 2012 AD Server. It appears I'm able to join the AD domain, but the domain member doesn't seem to authenticate anything against the DC once joined. Here is my smb.conf netbios name = Member workgroup = ZARTMAN security = ADS realm = ZARTMAN.LOCAL dedicated keytab file = /etc/krb5.keytab kerberos method = secrets and
2014 Oct 29
3
Samba4 provision, change private dir?
When you first provision an AD DC, is there a way to control where samba-tool puts all of the AD data files? -- Greg J. Zartman Board Member Koozali Foundation, Inc. 2755 19th Street SE Salem, Oregon 97302 Cell: 541-5218449 SME Server user and community member since 2000
2015 Feb 24
2
ADS Domain Member Workgroup vs Realm
I'm working to setup Samba as a domain member to a Windows Server active directory, and I keep hitting road blocks. There's some real terminology hurdles in the wiki. In a nutshell, my problem is this: I setup a Windows 2012 Essentials ADS domain and I ended up with zartman.local for my "domain" in Windows. So, I've got a dns zone in windows server that is domain.local
2014 Oct 25
4
Red Hat Implementation of Samba 4???
Does anyone know what Red Hat/Centos is going with Samba 4? I've looked at their packages in COS 6.5 and 7 and it doesn't make sense. They seems to be doing some kind of watered down or modified version of Samba 4 with some of the tools disabled. Are they still holding off from full AD implementation in their packages because of the MIT Kerberos issues identified in previous
2014 Dec 27
2
Samba 4 Active Directory Quotas
I've been messing around with disk quotas for users and have seen some who have extended the Samba 4 AD schema to include a quota attribute. For example, I found this schema extension here: http://fossies.org/linux/quota/ldap-scripts/quota.schema Is there a common method for doing this? -- Greg J. Zartman Board Member Koozali SME Server www.koozali.org SME Server user, contributor, and
2016 Sep 11
2
Samba DNS Listening IP
Is it possible to change the DNS listening IP? I'd like to run a dnscache service for primary LAN queries, but the only way to do this with Samba seems to be iptables preroute configuration to redirect port 53 requests. Thanks, -- Greg J. Zartman Board Member, and Developer Koozali SME Server www.koozali.org SME Server user, contributor, and community member since 2000
2014 Dec 28
1
Samba 4 Active Directory Quotas
On Sat, Dec 27, 2014 at 2:43 AM, Rowland Penny <rowlandpenny at googlemail.com> wrote: > Yes, samba4 comes with a script: oLschema2ldif > Humm... Not liking the errors in this method. Looking at the ldif, I think we could rework this so that one could modify the LDAP schema directly using LDAP syntax. In my case, I'm using Net::LDAP. Something more like this: dn:
2014 Nov 12
1
Query AD from commandline
I'm working on building some perl code to query a Samba AD and list various things. I'm wondering if there is something like samba-tool for query user from the AD other than just the username? I see that I can use and LDAP perl module to query the LDAP side of the AD, but wanted to see if Samba has a utility for doing this. Thanks! -- Greg J. Zartman Board Member Koozali Foundation,
2014 Dec 23
2
Samba 4: Modify group members with LDAP
I'm wanting to change group members by writing to the Active Directory using perl Net::LDAP. I noticed that AD groups have the LDAP objects "member" to list the user who is a member of this group. The user object then has the LDAP object "memberOf" to record the groups the user is a member of. I'm wondering if their is a mechanism in Samba AD that sets on of these if
2016 Aug 17
2
Storing Quotas in Active Directory
What is the best way to store file system quotas for users in the Active Directory? I'm not seeing any standard attributes for this, so it looks like the best way is to extend the schema. Is this correct? Thanks, Greg -- Greg J. Zartman Board Member Koozali SME Server www.koozali.org SME Server user, contributor, and community member since 2000
2016 Aug 19
1
Storing Quotas in Active Directory
On Thu, Aug 18, 2016 at 7:07 AM, Rowland Penny via samba < samba at lists.samba.org> wrote: > > Hi Greg, I take it what we discussed last time didn't work. > I did in fact create some custom schema mods that can store the quota information, but it just seems to be an odd way to do it. I am surprised that others uses Samba 4 on *nix file servers don't talk about this
2016 Oct 03
0
ldb-tools stand alone different than built-in?
On Sun, 2 Oct 2016, Greg Zartman via samba wrote: > I'm working with the Centos 7 packages for Samba 4.2.10 and I note that the > stock packages don't include the ldb tools (eg, ldbmodify, ldbsearch, etc). > > However, the stand along tools don't seem to be aware of the Active > Directory schema. For example, if I try to use these tools to add an > attribute to the
2016 Oct 03
0
ldb-tools stand alone different than built-in?
On Mon, 3 Oct 2016 09:49:32 -0700 Greg Zartman <gzartman at koozali.org> wrote: > To clarify, the ldb tools I built work. The ones in the ltb-tools > package in the centos repos does not work > As I said, Centos doesn't (yet) have packages from which you can create an AD DC, it therefore seems likely that the ldb-tools package you found, do not have the code to connect to a
2014 Nov 12
2
Samba 4 "Trigger" when user is created???
I am working to deploy Samba4 on the SME Server: A customized version of Centos with a web management GUI and configuration API. One of the challenges we see is how we synchronize our SME Server configuration API with users who are created using tools outside of *nix. For example if a user were created using the windows administration tools. Are there any triggers in Samba that could be set to
2014 Dec 01
5
uidNumber. ( Was: What is --rfc2307-from-nss ??)
On Mon, Dec 1, 2014 at 11:09 AM, Rowland Penny <rowlandpenny at googlemail.com> wrote: > NO NO I can't take anymore :-D > > Please read the rest of the thread, it will explain all. People seriously use this in a production environment? The lack of documentation and confusion surrounding pretty basic posix auth is extremely surprising. I'm no noob at *nix admin and
2015 Feb 24
1
idmap_ad and UID vs UIDnumber
I note from the man pages, that idmap_ad will only map users/groups IF you set the UIDnumber in the active directory. In lookin in my active directory, there is a "Unix Attributes" tab with "UID" in that tab that you can set. There is also and "Attributes Editor" tap where you can look at all attributes and edit the "UIDnumber" I just want to verify that
2014 Nov 11
2
Sernet-samba + Kerebros???
I'm installing sernet samba4 packages with active directory support on RHEL 6. Is it required that I install kerebros packages seperately? Kerebros does t seem to be an Install require . I wasn't sure if sernet had somehow rolled sernet with kerebros??.?. Any help greatly appreciated. Greg
2014 Dec 01
3
uidNumber. ( Was: What is --rfc2307-from-nss ??)
Greg, > Unfortunately, these attributes do not exist as standard, so you would > either have to add a user with ADUC or manually add them yourselves with > ldbedit. As standard on windows, they both start at '10000', though you > can set them to whatever you require, just make sure that they do not > interfere with any local Unix users. If you like to manage Unix users