What is Samba and when do you need it?To make a long story short : The Samba project was started in 1992 by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is a set of tools to share files and printers with computers running Microsoft Windows. It implements the SMB network protocol (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Server_Message_Block), which is the heart of Windows networking.
Samba can be used to:
* Act as a server for Windows (or Samba) clients: share folders and printers, including PDF pseudo-printers so all the computers in your network may write PDF files.
* Act as a domain controller in a Windows network (authenticating users, etc.)
* Do some more complex things, such as using a Windows domain controller to authenticate the users of a Linux/UNIX machine.
Samba is freely available under the GNU General Public License. More information about Samba can be found at http://www.samba.org.
Do you need Samba?Samba is a metapackage and intended to be installed on servers. Clients do not need this metapackage.
The Samba metapackage is not necessary on clients to:
* Access shared folders, drives and printers on a Windows computer (that is, act as a client with Windows servers), you only need the smbfs plugin. MountWindowsSharesPermanently (https://help.ubuntu.com/community/MountWindowsSharesPermanentlySee)
* Have your Windows computer use (via a network) a printer that is attached to a Linux computer. CUPS can be configured to make the printer accessible to the network.
* Share directories between two Linux computers. You can use NFS or setup an SSH server on one computer and access it from other computers using an scp or sftp client, or Places > Connect to... > SSH in Ubuntu. See https://help.ubuntu.com/community/SSHHowto
What to installServerIf you wish your computer to act as a Samba server (act as a file or printer server) then install, by any method, Samba (see InstallingSoftware (https://help.ubuntu.com/community/InstallingSoftware)).
sudo apt-get install samba
ClientThe samba package is not needed on clients. Install smbfs instead (see below).
If you want to connect to a samba server (Windows server or an Ubuntu server running samba) you have two options, you can use the smbclient command or you can directly mount the samba file system via smbfs.
Command lineUbuntu will connect to a samba server out of the box via smbclient. smbclient is a similar to an ftp connection (once connected you can use commands such as ls, cd , put, and get).
smbfsThis package allows clients to mount samba file shares allowing them to act as local disks and thus Most people will prefer this method. Install, by any method, smbfs (see InstallingSoftware). This will install the tools to mount SMB shares.
sudo apt-get install smbfs
Configuring your computerStart the network configurator using the following menu:
System -> Administration -> Network (https://forum.ubuntu-tr.net/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fimg89.imageshack.us%2Fimg89%2F5928%2Fpicnetworksettingswf2.png&hash=0b13823c60f65022c3228dc9581fdc7a59e65fa8)
You will need the General tab, in the middle.
Fill in your settings:Host Settings
Hostname: <yourcomputer>
Domain name: <yourdomain>
Windows Networking
Tick Enable Windows networking
Description: <whateveryouwant>
Domain/Workgroup: <yourdomainorworkgroup>
On Feisty and Gutsy, these settings are in
System -> Administration -> Shared FoldersIt turns out that the Shared Folders setting is not necessarily available straight away on Hardy Heron (see e.g. http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?p=4616193). I've successfully followed the instructions at http://jngalloway.wordpress.com/2008/06/08/easy-file-sharing-in-ubuntu-no-editing-text-files/ to make a folder on a Ubuntu machine available to other Vista and XP machines.
If you want tick WINS server <thenameoripaddressofyourwinsserver>
Note: If you do not know, ask your network-administrator. Typical settings for the workgroup field are "mshome" or "workgroup".
The important settings here are your hostname, which should be filled in already, and the domain/workgroup. Press OK on both Windows and the first part of cooperating with Windows-machines is done.
You may also edit the file "/etc/samba/smb.conf" manually, and then use "/etc/init.d/samba" to stop and start the service again.
Note: It is possible to not include a "Windows Networking section and continue.
Browsing SMB sharesUbuntu and Gnome make it easy to access files on a Windows network share.
Open the Computer Menu, then click on "Network". You'll see a "Windows network" icon, open it. The next window shows all the domains/workgroups found in your network. Inside each domain/workgroup you get all the computers in it (that is, those sharing something !). Double-click on a computer icon to access its shares and files. Could it be easier ?
Before showing a computer's shares, your system may prompt you for a name and password. Fill in the form with the credentials of a valid user for the computer you are connecting to. You may additionally store that password in your keyring for convenience.
Note: The default installation of Samba does not synchronize passwords. You may have to run "smbpasswd" for each user that needs to have access to his Ubuntu home directory from Microsoft Windows.
Graphical ConfigurationThis section is for those preferring to use graphical tools. This section should allow you to "quick start" SMB shares between Ubuntu and either Ubuntu or Windows servers. The gui method, although easy, is less secure in that :
1- Shares are Public (ie browsable)
2- A password is not set for shares (they can be mounted by anyone).
Be warned you are installing a service (server) and you may wish to install a firewall to help prevent undesired access. See also the manual configuration sections below to learn how to "hide" your shares from browsing and set a password for access.
Ubuntu ServerThis section enables Ubuntu as a samba file server.
Sharing a FolderTo share a directory you must have permission to access the directory. Go to your home directory ( Places -> Home folder). Right click on the "Documents" directory and in the pop up menu select "Share Folder".
If samba is not installed you will get a pop up menu "Sharing services are not installed". Select "Install Windows networks support (SMB)" and deselect "Install Unix networks support (NFS)" -> then click "Install services".
If you get an error message that the samba .deb could not be found, open a terminal and update apt-get.
sudo apt-get update
Then again install SMB support. Ubuntu will download and install samba. After samba is installed again Right click on the "Documents" directory and in the pop up menu select "Share Folder". You will get a pop up menu "Share Folder". Select "Windows networks (SMB)" in the pull down menu and give your share a name in the "Name" box. Unselect the "Read only" check box if you want read/write access to the share. Click the "Share" button.
Windows XP ServerThis section enables Windows XP as a samba file server.
Sharing a Folder1. On the Windows server, browse in explorer ("My Computer") to the location of the folder you wish to share (C:\Documents and Settings for example). Next right click on the folder to share and select "Sharing ans Security...". In the pop-up dialog box click the "Sharing" tab. Click the "
Network Setup Wizard" to configure your network to allow shares. Work your way through the wizard. Note the default workgroup is
MSHOME. You may change this value if you like but all your computers should be in the same workgroup. Eventually you will be given the option to "Turn on file and printer sharing". This is the option you want, continue with the network wizard. You will have to restart your computer for the settings to take effect -> Restart Windows.
2. After rebooting, again open explorer ("My Computer") and navigate to the folder you wish to share. Again right click on the folder and select "Sharing ans Security...". In the pop-up dialog box click the "Sharing" tab. In the "Network sharing and security" box, tic (select with the mouse) the "Share this folder on the network" box. Give the folder a share name. This will give read only access to Ubuntu computers via samba. To allow read/write access tic (select with the mouse) the "Allow network users to change my files" box. Click the "Apply" button and close the dialog box.
Connect to a samba serverConfigure your Ubuntu or Windows XP samba server as above.
Ubuntu ClientOn the Ubuntu client using the menu at the top, go to "Places" -> "Network". You will see an icon "Windows network" and should be able to browse to your shared folder. You will be asked for a password, leave it blank. Click the "Connect button.
Alternate : From the menu at the top select "Location" -> "Connect to a server". In the "Service type" pull down select "Windows share". Enter the server ip address in the "Server:" box and the share name in the "Share:" box. Click "Connect" and then "Connect" again on the second dialog box (no need for a password).
If you would like to mount your SMB share using your (server) hostname rather than the IP Address, edit /etc/hosts and add your samba server (syntax IP Address hostname).
192.168.1.100 hostname
Where "hostname" = the name of your samba server.
Windows XP ClientOn Windows open "My Computer" and navigate to "My Network Places". Navigate to your Ubuntu server and your share will be available without a password.
Alternate : From the menu at the top select "Tools" -> "Map Network Drive". Select an available letter for your SMB share (Default is z: ). In the "Folder:" box enter \\samba_server_ipaddress\share. Tic (Select with the mouse) the option "Reconnect at login" if you want the share to be automatically mounted when you boot Windows. Click the "Finish" box. A dialog box will appear, enter your samba user name and password. Click "OK".
If you would like to mount your SMB share using your (server) hostname rather than the IP Address, edit C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\etc\hosts and add your samba server (syntax IP Address hostname).
192.168.1.100 hostname
Where "hostname" = the name of your samba server.
Samba Client Manual ConfigurationThis section covers how to manually configure and connect to a SMB file server from an Ubuntu client. smbclient is a command line tool similar to a ftp connection while smbfs allows you to mount a SMB file share. Once a SMB share is mounted it acts similar to a local hard drive (you can access the SMB share with your file browser (nautilus, konqueror, thunar, other).
Connecting to a Samba File ServerCommand lineConnecting from the command line is similar to a ftp connection.
List public SMB shares with
smbclient -L //server -U user
Connect to a SMB share with
smbclient //server/share -U user
Enter you user password.
You can connect directly with
smbclient //server/share -U user%password
but your password will show on the screen (less secure).
Once connected you will get a prompt that looks like this :
smb: \>
Type "help" , without quotes, at the prompt for a list of available commands.
CIFSCIFS is included in the smbfs package and is a replacement for smbfs (I know, the terminology here is a little confusing).
Reference : http://linux-cifs.samba.org/
As above, install by any method, smbfs.
Allow non-root users to mount SMB sharesBy default only root may mount SMB shares on the command line. To allow non-root users to mount SMB shares you could set the SUID, but I advise you configure sudo. You should configure sudo with
visudoYou may either allow the gruop "users" to mount SMB shares, or add a group, samba, and add users you wish to allow to mount SMB shares to the samba group.
sudo groupadd samba
sudo adduser user samba
Change "user" to the username you wish to add to the samba group.
sudo visudoIn the "group" section add your group you wish to allow to mount SMB shares
Add a line in the "group" section :
## Members of the admin group may gain root privileges
%admin ALL=(ALL) ALL
%samba ALL=(ALL) /bin/mount,/bin/umount,/sbin/mount.cifs,/sbin/umount.cifs
Change "%samba" to "%users" if you wish to allow members of the users group to mount SMB shares.
The following will mount the myshare folder on myserver to ~/mnt (it will be in your home directory):
mkdir ~/mnt
sudo mount -t cifs //myserver_ip_address/myshare ~/mnt -o username=samb_user,noexec
Note: "samba_user" = the user name on the samba server (may be different from your log-in name on the client).
The "noexec" option prevents executable scripts running from the SMB share.
You will be asked for BOTH your sudo and then your samba_user password.
To umount,
sudo umount ~/mnt
Automagically mount SMB sharesIn order to have a share mounted automatically every time you reboot, you need to do the following:
With any editor, create a file containing your Windows/Samba user account details:
gksu gedit /etc/samba/user
KDE users must use kdesu rather than gksu and instead of Gedit they can use Kwrite as editor.
... it should contain two lines as follows:
username=samba_user
password=samba_user_password
Note: "samba_user" = the user name on the samba server (may be different from your log-in name on the client). "samba_user_password" is the password you assigned to the samba_user on the samba server.
Save the file and exit gedit.
Change the permissions on the file for security:
sudo chmod 0400 /etc/samba/user # permissions of 0400 = read only
Now create a directory where you want to mount your share (e.g. /media/samba_share):
sudo mkdir /media/samba_share
Now, using any editor, and add a line to /etc/fstab for your SMB share as follows:
sudo cp /etc/fstab /etc/fstab.bak
gksu gedit /etc/fstab
Add a line for your SMB share:
//myserver_ip_address/myshare /media/samba_share cifs credentials=/etc/samba/user,noexec 0 0
The share will mount automatically when you boot. The "noexec" option prevents executable scripts running from the SMB share.
To mount the share now, without rebooting,
sudo mount /media/samba_share
You can unmount the share with :
sudo umount /media/samba_share
If you wish to increase security at the expense of convenience, use this line in /etc/fstab
//myserver_ip_address/myshare /media/samba_share cifs noauto,credentials=/etc/samba/user,noexec 0 0
The noexec" option prevents executable scripts running from the SMB share.
Edit /etc/samba/user, remove the password (leave just the samba user).
Now the share will NOT automatically mount when you boot and you will be asked for your samba password.
Mount the share with :
sudo mount /media/samba_share
SMBFSNote: This method still works, but as outlined under the "CIFS" section above is "deprecated" (no longer maintained and pending removal from the kernel).
Mounting a share on the local filesystem allows you to work around programs that do not yet use GnomeVFS to browse remote shares transparently. To mount a SMB share, first install smbfs:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install smbfs
To allow non root accounts to mount shares, change the permissions on the smbmnt program thus:
sudo chmod u+s /usr/bin/smbmnt /usr/bin/smbumount
Note: This may be a security risk as after setting the SUID bit anyone can mount a SMB share. I advise you configure sudo, as above.
The working line in /etc/sudoers is as follows (see CIFS section above):
%samba ALL=(ALL) /bin/mount,/bin/umount,/sbin/mount.cifs,/sbin/umount.cifs,/usr/bin/smbmount,/usr/bin/smbumount
This allows any user in the samba group to mount SMB shares (you will need to create a samba group and add users).
The following will mount the myshare folder on myserver to ~/mnt (it will be in your home directory):
mkdir ~/mnt
smbmount //myserver/myshare ~/mnt
To umount,
smbumount ~/mnt
In order to have a share mounted automatically every time you reboot, you need to do the following:
Open a shell as root
sudo -s
Create a file containing your Windows/Samba user account details:
vi /etc/samba/user
...it should contain two lines as follows:
username = george
password = secret
Change the permissions on the file for security:
chmod 0600 /etc/samba/user
Now create a directory where you want to mount your share (e.g. /mnt/data):
mkdir /mnt/data
Now edit the file system table (/etc/fstab) and add a line as follows:
//server/share /mnt/data smbfs credentials=/etc/samba/user,rw,uid=bob 0 0
...where 'bob' is the non-root user you log into ubuntu with, 'server' is the name or address of the Windows machine and 'share' is the name of the share.
To mount the share now, just use the following command as root. It will mount automatically on subsequent reboots.
mount /mnt/data
to be continued...
Samba Server Manual ConfigurationConfiguration is performed by reading and editing /etc/samba/smb.conf, the configuration file for the samba server.
There are a few graphical tools available such as "kdenetwork-filesharing" and "Swat".
A fairly comprehensive graphical Samba configuration tool is available for KDE, by installing the "kdenetwork-filesharing" package. Once install, you can find it by launching the KDE Control Center. (Alt-F2 and then type kcontrol). Browse to Internet & Network > Samba. It is fairly easy to use.
A less friendly but also graphical tool is Swat, a web-based interface.
The following tips show how to do some basic things without installing additional software, using the command line. It is not difficult, just be careful with typos.
First open a terminal: Applications > System Tools > Terminal and open the file smb.conf
sudo nano -w /etc/samba/smb.conf
How to Save: To save in nano use "CTRL-O", then "CTRL-X". Tip: Replacing nano with gedit gives you a nice graphical editor.
The file *smb.conf* is divided in several sections:
Global Settings
Debugging/Accounting
Authentication
Printing
File sharing
Misc
Share Definitions
Comments may start with either a # or a ;
Global SettingsLet's start with Global Settings. Here you will see several lines, which you can also see in the graphical networktool like workgroup and wins server. If you changed everything to your liking already then you can skip this section, if not change to what you need. If you do not know what items mean, leave them be and read the relevant part in the real Samba-howto instead of randomly changing them. It will save you trouble-shooting later.
File Sharing (Basics)The important part for us is File sharing. Samba shares are named in brackets, [ ], and configured by adding options in the lines that follow. Most options are boolean (yes / no).
We need to change:
[homes]
comment = Home Directories
browseable = no
# By default, the home directories are exported read-only. Change next
# parameter to 'yes' if you want to be able to write to them.
writable = no
This describes your /home folder. Usually you want to share this folder in a home-environment, because these are the files you want to share. To do so, make the following changes:
[homes]
comment = Home Directories
browseable = yes
# By default, the home directories are exported read-only. Change next
# parameter to 'yes' if you want to be able to write to them.
writable = yes
This finishes sharing your /home folder. The last thing we need to do is fixing a user.
Add users who can access your shares with the 'smbpasswd' command.
sudo smbpasswd -a username
New SMB password:
Retype new SMB password:
Added user username.
NOTE: the username used here should be a real user setup on your PC/Server. Reload Samba for every change to users/passwords or 'smb.conf'
sudo /etc/init.d/samba reload
That's the basis of Samba file-sharing. Please leave your comments about what else is needed here.
- Can/should the SMB password be different from the user's system password? MartinSpacek - 2007-11-19
File Sharing (Advanced)We started with the base of Samba file-sharing. The above-mentioned items should be enough to get you started. Next we will add details that you might or might not need.
If you have more than one network card (or interface) then you have to define where you want Samba to run. In smb.conf under the [global] section, add:
"interfaces = 127.0.0.1, 192.168.0.31/24"
"bind interfaces only = yes"
The first address (127.0.0.1), is a loopback network connection (it's your own machine). The second address (192.168.0.31), is the address of the card you want Samba to run on, the second number (24) is the subnet default for a CLASS-C network. It may vary depending on your network.
With "bind interfaces only" you limit which interfaces on a machine will serve SMB requests.
You can limit which IP address can connect to your Samba server adding these lines:
"hosts allow = 127.0.0.1, 192.168.0.31, 192.168.0.32"
"hosts deny = 0.0.0.0/0"
The loopback address must be present in the first line. The second line deny access from all IP address not in the first line.
Private and public shares in same configFirst you'll want to set this up in the [global] section of your smb.conf
[global]
security = user
encrypt passwords = true
map to guest = bad user
guest account = nobody
security = user restricts logins to users on your server.
encrypt passwords = true is necessary for most modern versions of Windows to login to your shares.
map to guest = bad user will map login attempts with bad user names to the guest account you specify with
guest account = nobody. That is, if you attempt to login to the share with a user name not set up with smbpasswd the you will be logged in as the user nobody.
Next the private share [private]
comment = Private Share
path = /path/to/share/point
browseable = no
read only = no
If browsable is set to no the share will not show up on graphical browsers such a "My Network Places" on Windows or Places -> Network on Ubuntu.
path is the path to the directory that you want to share out.
browseable = no will have the share not show up when users browse the network.
read only = no will let you, as an authenticated user, write to the share.
Finally, the public share [public]
comment = Public Share
path = /path/to/share/point
read only = no
guest only = yes
guest ok = yes
Again, path is the path to the directory that you want to share out.
read only = no will allow users to write to this share.
guest only = yes and guest ok = yes will allow guest logins and also force users to login as guests. The user you specified with guest account in the [global] section must have write permissions on /path/to/share/point in order to write files to the share.
Note: When Windows attempts to access a SMB share it will use the current Windows user name and password. The map to guest = bad user trick above allows access to the public share only if you give Samba an incorrect user name. If you give it a valid user name, but a bad password, the login will fail and Windows will give you a password prompt when you try to access the share. If you have the same user name for your Windows machine and your Ubuntu machine, you could be unwittingly giving the Samba server a valid user name, but invalid password. To resolve this you will either have to change the Windows user name, or to remove that user name from the Samba password file with sudo smbpasswd -x [username].
Note: The above uses security = user. To access the private shares you will have to make sure the user exists in smbpasswd. These users must also already exist as normal users on your machine. You add users to smbpasswd simply by running sudo smbpasswd -a [username] and giving a password.
Setting permissionsTo set permissions of newly created documents / files edit /etc/samba/smb.conf and in the [global] section add :
create mask = 0644
directory mask = 0755
Sharing CUPS PrintersGraphical ConfigurationSetup Ubuntu Print Server
1. In your menu go to System -> Administration -> Printing
2. Under "Local Printers" on the left, select the printer you wish to share. Select the "Policies" tab on the right and make sure the "Shared" box is checked off.
Ubuntu Client
1. Again go to System -> Administration -> Printing
2. Click "New Printer" in the upper right. In the next menu select "Windows Printer via SAMBA". Now enter your Ubuntu Samba Print Server (set up as above) IP address in the box on the left titled "smb://". Click the "Browse" button.
3. Select the printer in the "SMB Browser" window (Click on the little arrows). Once you have selected your printer, check the "Authentication required" and enter your samba user name and password. Then click the "Verify" button. You should see confirmation that the share is available.
4. Click the "Forward" button and install the drivers for your printer as you would for any other printer.
Windows Client
1. Go to control panel -> Printers
2. Click "Add a printer" on the upper left. The printer wizard will start -> click forward. Select Network Printer and click "Next". Select "Browse for a printer" (Top button) and click "Next". In the next window, navigate to your Ubuntu Samba Print Server and click "Next". Continue with the printer and driver installation.
Manual Server ConfigurationIf You would like to share Your printers make the following changes to Samba:
If not already done create the Samba-user You want the share to be used by.
In smb.conf uncomment and change the lines ending up with the following configuration:
########## Printing ##########
# If you want to automatically load your printer list rather
# than setting them up individually then you'll need this
load printers = yes
# [...] // Some BSD printing stuff, do not edit if You do not need to
# CUPS printing. See also the cupsaddsmb(8) manpage in the
# cupsys-client package.
printing = cups
printcap name = cups
and in the Share Definitions section append and/or modify the [printers] part ending up like this:
# ======================= Share Definitions =======================
# [...] // File and Folder sharing, do not edit if You do not need to
[printers]
comment = All Printers
browseable = no
path = /tmp
printable = yes
public = yes
writable = no
create mode = 0700
printcap name = /etc/printcap
print command = /usr/bin/lpr -P%p -r %s
printing = cups
Some explanation what is done:
the [printers] part defines the default-behavior for all the printers that are mentioned in "printcap name". A sort of template how to create shares for these printers. This template is applied if "load printers" is set to true. For more detailed explanation refer to the Samba documentation.
And do not forget to reload Samba:
sudo /etc/init.d/samba reload
Securing SambaThis section was started to give some general advise on security considerations and is not an exhaustive review of samba security.
/etc/samba/smb.conf
1. Networking Section - use "hosts allow" and "hosts deny"
# hosts allow = 127.0.0.1 192.168.1.0/24
hostal allow = 127.0.0.1 192.168.1.1 192.168.1.2
hosts deny = 0.0.0.0/0
hosts deny 0.0.0.0/0 = all others.
2. Shares.
When defining a share, consider the following options :
browseable = no ~ Shares will not show up when browsing your network.
users = user1 user2 ~ List of users able to access the share
When setting up a Samba share, you can limit the users who have access to your share
[private]
comment = Private Share
path = /path/to/share/point
browseable = no
read only = no
users = user1 user2 user3
Now only samba users user1, user2, and user3 will have access to the share "private".
FirewallConfigure your firewall (iptables) to limit access to your server. Samba uses ports
UDP ports 137 and 138
TCP ports 139 and 445
Troubleshooting SambaA common problem when attempting to access a SMB share from a Windows computer is "System Error 53" after attempting to "Net Use".
The first thing you should do, before looking into your conf files, is ensure that the directory you are sharing actually exists.
If you are having problems with Samba users, look into the command pdbedit
This is a very excellent and in-depth guide to Samba troubleshooting.
http://www.linuxhomenetworking.com/wiki/index.php/Quick_HOWTO_:_Ch12_:_Samba_Security_and_Troubleshooting
Tips / PermissionsSamba permissions are sometimes a little tricks.
Server side1. The name of your samba share is the word on the [ ]
[private] = share name of "private".
[secret] = share name of "secret".
2. To be able to mount the samba share, samba users on the server must have permission to access the directory.
If /path/to/share/point in "path = /path/to/share/point" is owned by root.root with permissions of 770 , only root will be able to mount the share.
Client side1. If you do not user a credentials file, do not forget to specify your samba_user at the time of mounting ( -o username=samba_user ).
2. Permissions on a samba share depend on the Server.
Linux servers will honor full Linux permissions.
Windows shares do not support Linux permissions. Set permissions at the time of mounting the samba share with the options file_mode=660 and dir_mode=770 (these are permissions and not umask values):
file_mode=arg
If the server does not support the CIFS Unix extensions this over‐
rides the default file mode.
dir_mode=arg
If the server does not support the CIFS Unix extensions this over‐
rides the default mode for directories.
These options will be used for all files and directories on the (Windows) samba share and can not be changed.
3. Permissions of new files on the samba share are set by your umask.
4. To mount your samba shares via (server) hostname rather than IP Address, add an entry for your server in /etc/hosts (C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\etc\hosts for Windows).
LinksSettingUpSambaPDC
http://www.Samba.org/ The Samba web site
http://us1.samba.org/samba/docs/man/Samba-HOWTO-Collection/ 900+ pg pdf document, seems to be updated daily
http://us1.samba.org/samba/docs/using_samba/toc.html "Using Samba", by Ts, Eckstein, and Collier-Brown (O'Reilly)
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2389 "HOW TO: Setup Samba Over A Linux Network." (Ubuntu Forums)
http://ubuntuguide.org/wiki/Ubuntu_Edgy#Samba_Server Samba Server: How to install Samba Server, How to add network users, How to share group folders with read/write permissions, etc.
http://doc.gwos.org/index.php/Share_files_using_Samba "How to share files using Samba (the more secure way)"
http://www.linuxhomenetworking.com/wiki/index.php/Quick_HOWTO_:_Ch12_:_Samba_Security_and_Troubleshooting "Samba Troubleshooting on linuxhomenetworking.com"
Active Directory Integrated File ServerPurpose of DocumentThe purpose of this document is to provide a guide to configuring Samba on Ubuntu to act as a file server in a Windows environment integrated into Active Directory. The goal is to create a file server that is as close to a one to one replacement for a Microsoft Windows file server as possible from the client's perspective.
BackgroundIt is important to keep in mind that the Samba developers have to play detective to try to basically reverse engineer the Microsoft implementation of the SMB protocol. The end result is that there are occasional issues that must be worked around if a bug fix does not exist. With the instructions below, expected behavior should be acceptable in most corporate environments.
Samba allows for a great deal of flexibility in how shares behave on a per-share basis. It is outside the scope of this document to cover each configuration setting and how they behave. It would be very beneficial to first read the smb.conf documentation found at the Samba web page. There are quite a few settings in the documentation, but getting a general feel of what they are and what they do will help in understanding this document and how you can take a step beyond by changing settings for your own tastes and environment.
PrerequisitesThis document is written based on Edgy 6.10, and the original author has also successfully configured Dapper 6.06 using almost these exact steps. Note that security updates need to be enabled for not only the main repository, but for the universe repository as well (as now documented below). If this is not done, any security updates for the main (supported) packages create failed dependencies for the relevant universe packages. If all packages listed are installed correctly, either 6.10 or 6.06 should behave the same.
Here is the list of prerequisites specific to this document:
- Ubuntu 6.10 Server default installation
- Windows 2003 Native Domain (mixed-mode not tested, but may work)
- Ample hard drive space to accommodate packages and shares
- Proper IP DNS settings configured so that internal names can be resolved
- root account enabled and all actions performed as root
InstallationIn order to make this guide easier to understand, I'll make the following assumptions:
domain name: DOMAIN
full domain: DOMAIN.LOCAL
domain admin account: jsmith
backup user account: backup1
share name: common
primary domain controller: PDC1
file server name: SMB1
primary subnet: 192.168.1.0/24
remote subnet: 192.168.0.0/24
Simply substitute your own domain and user information in the steps below.
1 Edit /etc/apt/sources.list to uncomment the Universe section: vi /etc/apt/sources.list
deb http://us.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ edgy universe
deb-src http://us.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ edgy universe
deb http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu edgy-security universe
deb-src http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu edgy-security universe
2 Update apt packages. apt-get update
3 Install the necessary packages. apt-get install krb5-user winbind samba acl attr
4 Set file system to mount with ACL and Extended DOS attributes enabled. vi /etc/fstab
<main file system> / ext3 defaults,acl,user_xattr,errors=remount-ro 0 1
5 Reboot. shutdown -r now
6 Create Samba directory and shares. Repeat for all desired shares. mkdir /share
chmod 770 /share
mkdir /share/common
chmod 770 /share/common7 Edit /etc/krb5.conf to match the following: [logging]
default = FILE:/var/log/krb5libs.log
kdc = FILE:/var/log/krb5kdc.log
admin_server = FILE:/var/log/kadmind.log
[libdefaults]
ticket_lifetime = 24000
default_realm = DOMAIN.LOCAL
dns_lookup_realm = true
default_tkt_enctypes = des3-hmac-sha1 des-cbc-crc
default_tgs_enctypes = des3-hmac-sha1 des-cbc-crc
[realms]
DOMAIN.LOCAL = {
kdc = PDC1
admin-server = PDC1
default_domain = DOMAIN.LOCAL
}
[domain_realm]
.domain.local = DOMAIN.LOCAL
domain.local = DOMAIN.LOCAL
[kdc]
profile = /var/kerberos/krb5kdc/kdc.conf
[appdefaults]
pam = {
debug = false
ticket_lifetime = 36000
renew_lifetime = 36000
forwardable = true
krb4_convert = false
}
8 Edit /etc/samba/smb.conf to match the following: #Global Settings
[global]
# Settings
kernel oplocks = yes
client use spnego = yes
server signing = auto
client signing = auto
template shell = /bin/bash
nt acl support = yes
change notify timeout = 0
# Share Behavior
inherit permissions = yes
inherit acls = yes
map acl inherit = yes
acl compatibility = auto
dos filemode = yes
dos filetimes = yes
dos filetime resolution = yes
map archive = yes
map system = no
map hidden = no
ea support = yes
force create mode = 0760
# Domain Settings
workgroup = DOMAIN
server string = SMB1
os level = 0
preferred master = no
announce as = NT Server
announce version = 4.9
browse list = yes
domain master = no
local master = no
enhanced browsing = yes
idmap uid = 16777216-33554431
idmap gid = 16777216-33554431
winbind use default domain = no
winbind enum groups = yes
winbind enum users = yes
winbind separator = +
realm = DOMAIN.LOCAL
# Security
hosts allow = 192.168.1. 192.168.0. 127.
security = ads
password server = *
encrypt passwords = yes
# Printers
printcap name = /etc/printcap
load printers = yes
printing = cups
cups options = raw
# Logging
log file = /var/log/samba/%m.log
log level = 3
max log size = 500
# Network Settings
remote announce = 192.168.0.
disable netbios = no
netbios name = SMB1
# Network Shares
[common]
comment = comments on the share
path = /share/common
guest ok = no
read only = no
writeable = yes
create mask = 0760
directory mask = 0760
acl group control = yes
store dos attributes = yes
9 Edit /etc/nsswitch.conf to match the following: passwd: compat winbind
group: compat winbind
shadow: compat
hosts: files dns wins
networks: files
protocols: db files
services: db files
ethers: db files
rpc: db files
netgroup: nis
10 Edit /etc/pam.d/common-account to match the following: account sufficient pam_winbind.so
account required pam_unix.so
11 Edit /etc/pam.d/common-auth to match the following: auth sufficient pam_winbind.so
auth required pam_unix.so nullok_secure use_first_pass
12 Edit /etc/pam.d/common-password to match the following; password required pam_unix.so nullok obscure min=4 max=50 md5
13 Edit /etc/pam.d/common-session to match the following: session required pam_unix.so
session optional pam_foreground.so
session required pam_mkhomedir.so umask=0022 skel=/etc/skel
14 Initialize Kerberos. kinit jsmith@DOMAIN.LOCAL
15 Join your Samba server to the domain. net ads join -U jsmith@DOMAIN.LOCAL
16 Reboot shutdown -r now
17 Copy all files and folders to their proper shares. You can use whatever method you wish, however note that the shares are NOT accessible via Samba yet (permissions). 18 Configure permissions for all files and folders. Repeat for all shares and appropriate groups/permissions. Even if you plan to backup the shares using some other method (eg: local rsync), you most likely want to run the "group" commands below so that domain admins and domain users have access to the shares.
setfacl -R -m group:"DOMAIN+domain admins":rwx /share
setfacl -R -m group:"DOMAIN+domain users":rwx /share/common
setfacl -R -m user:"DOMAIN+backup1":rwx /share
setfacl -R -m user:"DOMAIN+backup1":rwx /share/common
19 Configure DOS Extended attributes for all files and folder to have archive bit set /usr/bin/find /share/ -name '*' -exec setfattr -n user.DOSATTRIB -v \"0x20\" {} \;
20 Perform initial full backup. 21 Configure backup software to do incremental backups and reset archive bit. 22 Create a cron to set the archive bit for certain files. touch /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
chmod 700 /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
vi /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
(scheduled time) /usr/bin/find /share/ -name '*' -mtime 0 -exec setfattr -n user.DOSATTRIB -v \"0x20\" {} \;
Installation NotesWhile the reboots are not necessary, it is an easy and expedient way to apply the configuration changes. It does guarantee that the proper services will be restarted in the correct order to minimize the opportunity for failure.
The reason for the cron to manipulate the archive bit is that some programs such as Microsoft Word and some database applications will modify files but the archive bit will not be set. This is important if your backup software relies on the archive bit to know what files to copy. If your backup software relies stricly on date last modified, this is not an issue. The cron job sets the archive bit for files modified within the last 24 hours. If you need this functionality, allow at least one hour for this to run before your backup software kicks off. I have heard that the latest Samba packages (3.0.23d as of this writing) fix this archive bit issue. I have not tested this theory. Currently, Ubuntu packages use Samba 3.0.22.
You can have more than one user or group configured with ACL permissions. Setting permissions to rwx is the same as full control. You should provide full controll (rwx) to the domain account your backup software uses as in step 18.
With this configuration, you should be able to have nested groups. I have heard some people have trouble with this. I currently believe this to be a corruption of Active Directory that causes improper group membership to be reported to Samba.
If you have multiple subnets (i.e. remote offices), you MUST put them in the hosts allow section. If you do not, they will be denied access. If your Samba server is having problems resolving the name of the primary domain controller, you can add a line to /etc/hosts in order to manually resolve the address.
These instructions are valid as of 1/1/2007 with all security patches applied via apt-get upgrade. Since the package krb5-user is outside the scope of regular security patches of the main branch, the longevity of this guide cannot be guaranteed. As can be seen with 6.06, security upgrades can break the installation process if you are not careful. Regardless, if you can install all packages listed successfully, these instructions should work properly.
Basic Debugging CommandsTrue debugging is well outside the scope of this document, however the following commands will get you started and looking in the right direction.
Kerberos IssuesTo get a list valid kerberos tickets, use the command:
klist
The detail itself is outside the scope of this document, however klist will tell you if you have a valid kerberos ticket, what it believes to be the default principal, and where it is looking for the ticket cache.
Domain IssuesTo test to see if the local machine is joined to the domain, use the command:
net ads testjoin
You should get back "Join is OK" if all is well.
ConfiguringAll necessary configuration for basic operation is provide in the installation guide. You can tweak settings further using the smb.conf documentation found on the Samba web page. Read the documentation carefully before making changes. Some settings may not do what you think they will based on the name.
Adding SharesCopying the template above in the smb.conf and pasting it in with the proper share name and path settings is all that is needed to create new shares. Alternatively, you can use the web based tool swat to add and manipulate shares. If I get time, I will add documentation here how to do that.
SecurityThe hosts allow setting prevents computers outside authorized subnets from accessing shares. You can get even more fine grained and use specific IP addresses if your environment calls for it. There are scripts that have been written that allow access logs to be dumped to a mysql database to track who accesses files. I am in the process of testing this and will write documentation on it when I get the time.
BackupsYou can use any backup software you want. This configuration has been tested and validated to work with Computer Associates Brightstor ARCserve Backup 11.5 SP1. Theoretically, any software should work. You could also use the rsync utility.
Final ThoughtsSamba can be a great way to cut licensing costs as there is no per-user licensing fee. It also allows a high level of per-share flexibility. Being able to store access logs in a mysql database can be great for quickly answering questions from management. I do not know what implications this could have on regulations such as Sarbanes-Oxley. Such questions are outside the scope of this document and outside my knowledge.
Please feel free to correct any mistakes found here.
Source: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/SettingUpSamba