source: branches/samba-3.3.x/docs-xml/Samba3-HOWTO/TOSHARG-DomainMember.xml

Last change on this file was 217, checked in by Herwig Bauernfeind, 16 years ago

Import Samba 3.3 branch at 3.3.0 level docs-xml (psmedley's port)

File size: 59.6 KB
Line 
1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//Samba-Team//DTD DocBook V4.2-Based Variant V1.0//EN" "http://www.samba.org/samba/DTD/samba-doc">
3<chapter id="domain-member">
4
5<chapterinfo>
6 &author.jht;
7 &author.jeremy;
8 &author.jerry;
9 &author.tridge;
10 &author.jelmer;
11 <author>&person.gd;<contrib>LDAP updates</contrib></author>
12</chapterinfo>
13
14<title>Domain Membership</title>
15
16<para>
17<indexterm><primary>domain member</primary></indexterm>
18<indexterm><primary>machine trust account</primary></indexterm>
19<indexterm><primary>domain security</primary></indexterm>
20Domain membership is a subject of vital concern. Samba must be able to
21participate as a member server in a Microsoft domain security context, and
22Samba must be capable of providing domain machine member trust accounts;
23otherwise it would not be able to offer a viable option for many users.
24</para>
25
26<para>
27<indexterm><primary>domain membership</primary></indexterm>
28<indexterm><primary>misinformation</primary></indexterm>
29This chapter covers background information pertaining to domain membership,
30the Samba configuration for it, and MS Windows client procedures for joining a
31domain. Why is this necessary? Because both are areas in which there exists
32within the current MS Windows networking world, and particularly in the
33UNIX/Linux networking and administration world, a considerable level of
34misinformation, incorrect understanding, and lack of knowledge. Hopefully
35this chapter will fill the voids.
36</para>
37
38<sect1>
39<title>Features and Benefits</title>
40
41<para>
42<indexterm><primary>domain security</primary></indexterm>
43<indexterm><primary>single sign-on</primary></indexterm>
44<indexterm><primary>SSO</primary></indexterm>
45MS Windows workstations and servers that want to participate in domain security need to
46be made domain members. Participating in domain security is often called
47<emphasis>single sign-on</emphasis>, or <acronym>SSO</acronym> for short. This
48chapter describes the process that must be followed to make a workstation
49(or another server &smbmdash; be it an <application>MS Windows NT4/200x</application>
50server) or a Samba server a member of an MS Windows domain security context.
51</para>
52
53<para>
54<indexterm><primary>native member</primary></indexterm>
55<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
56<indexterm><primary>domain control</primary></indexterm>
57<indexterm><primary>Server Type</primary><secondary>Domain Member</secondary></indexterm>
58Samba-3 can join an MS Windows NT4-style domain as a native member server, an
59MS Windows Active Directory domain as a native member server, or a Samba domain
60control network. Domain membership has many advantages:
61</para>
62
63<itemizedlist>
64 <listitem><para>
65 <indexterm><primary>SAM</primary></indexterm>
66 MS Windows workstation users get the benefit of SSO.
67 </para></listitem>
68
69 <listitem><para>
70 <indexterm><primary>access rights</primary></indexterm>
71 <indexterm><primary>file ownership</primary></indexterm>
72 <indexterm><primary>access controls</primary></indexterm>
73 <indexterm><primary>SAM</primary></indexterm>
74 Domain user access rights and file ownership/access controls can be set
75 from the single Domain Security Account Manager (SAM) database
76 (works with domain member servers as well as with MS Windows workstations
77 that are domain members).
78 </para></listitem>
79
80 <listitem><para>
81 <indexterm><primary>domain members</primary></indexterm>
82 <indexterm><primary>network logon</primary></indexterm>
83 Only <application>MS Windows NT4/200x/XP Professional</application>
84 workstations that are domain members can use network logon facilities.
85 </para></listitem>
86
87 <listitem><para>
88 <indexterm><primary>domain member</primary></indexterm>
89 <indexterm><primary>policy files</primary></indexterm>
90 <indexterm><primary>NTConfig.POL</primary></indexterm>
91 <indexterm><primary>desktop profiles</primary></indexterm>
92 Domain member workstations can be better controlled through the use of
93 policy files (<filename>NTConfig.POL</filename>) and desktop profiles.
94 </para></listitem>
95
96 <listitem><para>
97 <indexterm><primary>logon script</primary></indexterm>
98 <indexterm><primary>transparent access</primary></indexterm>
99 <indexterm><primary>application servers</primary></indexterm>
100 Through the use of logon scripts, users can be given transparent access to network
101 applications that run off application servers.
102 </para></listitem>
103
104 <listitem><para>
105 <indexterm><primary>user access management</primary></indexterm>
106 <indexterm><primary>SAM</primary></indexterm>
107 <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
108 <indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
109 Network administrators gain better application and user access management
110 abilities because there is no need to maintain user accounts on any network
111 client or server other than the central domain database
112 (either NT4/Samba SAM-style domain, NT4 domain that is backend-ed with an
113 LDAP directory, or via an Active Directory infrastructure).
114 </para></listitem>
115</itemizedlist>
116
117</sect1>
118
119<sect1 id="machine-trust-accounts">
120<title>MS Windows Workstation/Server Machine Trust Accounts</title>
121
122<para>
123<indexterm><primary>Machine Trust Accounts</primary></indexterm>
124<indexterm><primary>authenticate</primary></indexterm>
125<indexterm><primary>domain controller</primary></indexterm>
126<indexterm><primary>rogue user</primary></indexterm>
127A Machine Trust Account is an account that is used to authenticate a client machine (rather than a user) to
128the domain controller server. In Windows terminology, this is known as a <quote>computer account.</quote> The
129purpose of the machine trust account is to prevent a rogue user and domain controller from colluding to gain
130access to a domain member workstation.
131</para>
132
133<para>
134<indexterm><primary>machine trust account</primary><secondary>password</secondary></indexterm>
135<indexterm><primary>shared secret</primary></indexterm>
136<indexterm><primary>unauthorized</primary></indexterm>
137<indexterm><primary>Windows NT/200x/XP Professional</primary></indexterm>
138<indexterm><primary>Windows 9x/Me/XP Home</primary></indexterm>
139The password of a Machine Trust Account acts as the shared secret for secure communication with the domain
140controller. This is a security feature to prevent an unauthorized machine with the same NetBIOS name from
141joining the domain, participating in domain security operations, and gaining access to domain user/group
142accounts. Windows NT/200x/XP Professional clients use machine trust accounts, but Windows 9x/Me/XP Home
143clients do not. Hence, a Windows 9x/Me/XP Home client is never a true member of a domain because it does not
144possess a Machine Trust Account, and, thus, has no shared secret with the domain controller.
145</para>
146
147<para>
148<indexterm><primary>Windows Registry</primary></indexterm>
149<indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
150<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
151<indexterm><primary>Machine Trust Account</primary></indexterm>
152A Windows NT4 PDC stores each Machine Trust Account in the Windows Registry.
153The introduction of MS Windows 2000 saw the introduction of Active Directory,
154the new repository for Machine Trust Accounts. A Samba PDC, however, stores
155each Machine Trust Account in two parts,
156as follows:
157
158<itemizedlist>
159 <listitem><para>
160 <indexterm><primary>domain security account</primary></indexterm>
161 <indexterm><primary>account information</primary></indexterm>
162 <indexterm><primary>backend database</primary></indexterm>
163 A domain security account (stored in the <smbconfoption name="passdb backend"/>) that has been configured in
164 the &smb.conf; file. The precise nature of the account information that is stored depends on the type of
165 backend database that has been chosen.
166 </para>
167
168 <para>
169 <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
170 <indexterm><primary>UNIX login ID</primary></indexterm>
171 <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
172 <indexterm><primary>LanMan</primary></indexterm>
173 <indexterm><primary>NT-encrypted password</primary></indexterm>
174 <indexterm><primary>UNIX user identifier</primary><see>UID</see></indexterm>
175 The older format of this data is the <filename>smbpasswd</filename> database
176 that contains the UNIX login ID, the UNIX user identifier (UID), and the
177 LanMan and NT-encrypted passwords. There is also some other information in
178 this file that we do not need to concern ourselves with here.
179 </para>
180
181 <para>
182 <indexterm><primary>database</primary></indexterm>
183 <indexterm><primary>ldapsam</primary></indexterm>
184 <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
185 <indexterm><primary>account controls</primary></indexterm>
186 The two newer database types are called ldapsam and tdbsam. Both store considerably more data than the older
187 <filename>smbpasswd</filename> file did. The extra information enables new user account controls to be
188 implemented.
189 </para></listitem>
190
191 <listitem><para>
192 <indexterm><primary>UNIX account</primary></indexterm>
193 <indexterm><primary>/etc/passwd</primary></indexterm>
194 A corresponding UNIX account, typically stored in <filename>/etc/passwd</filename>. Work is in progress to
195 allow a simplified mode of operation that does not require UNIX user accounts, but this has not been a feature
196 of the early releases of Samba-3, and is not currently planned for release either.
197 </para></listitem>
198</itemizedlist>
199</para>
200
201<?latex \newpage ?>
202<para>
203<indexterm><primary>Machine Trust Accounts</primary><secondary>creating</secondary></indexterm>
204There are three ways to create Machine Trust Accounts:
205</para>
206
207<itemizedlist>
208 <listitem><para>
209 <indexterm><primary>manual UNIX account creation</primary></indexterm>
210 Manual creation from the UNIX/Linux command line. Here, both the Samba and
211 corresponding UNIX account are created by hand.
212 </para></listitem>
213
214 <listitem><para>
215 <indexterm><primary>Server Manager</primary></indexterm>
216 <indexterm><primary>Nexus toolkit</primary></indexterm>
217 Using the MS Windows NT4 Server Manager, either from an NT4 domain member
218 server or using the Nexus toolkit available from the Microsoft Web site.
219 This tool can be run from any MS Windows machine as long as the user is
220 logged on as the administrator account.
221 </para></listitem>
222
223 <listitem><para>
224 <indexterm><primary>Machine Trust Account</primary></indexterm>
225 <indexterm><primary>joined client</primary></indexterm>
226 <quote>On-the-fly</quote> creation. The Samba Machine Trust Account is automatically
227 created by Samba at the time the client is joined to the domain.
228 (For security, this is the recommended method.) The corresponding UNIX
229 account may be created automatically or manually.
230 </para></listitem>
231</itemizedlist>
232
233<para>
234<indexterm><primary>enforcing</primary></indexterm>
235<indexterm><primary>machine trust account</primary><secondary>creation</secondary></indexterm>
236Neither MS Windows NT4/200x/XP Professional, nor Samba, provide any method for enforcing the method of machine
237trust account creation. This is a matter of the administrator's choice.
238</para>
239
240<sect2>
241<title>Manual Creation of Machine Trust Accounts</title>
242
243<para>
244<indexterm><primary>/etc/passwd</primary></indexterm>
245<indexterm><primary></primary></indexterm>
246<indexterm><primary>useradd</primary></indexterm>
247<indexterm><primary>vipw</primary></indexterm>
248The first step in manually creating a Machine Trust Account is to manually
249create the corresponding UNIX account in <filename>/etc/passwd</filename>.
250This can be done using <command>vipw</command> or another <quote>adduser</quote> command
251that is normally used to create new UNIX accounts. The following is an example for
252a Linux-based Samba server:
253<screen>
254&rootprompt;<userinput>/usr/sbin/useradd -g machines -d /var/lib/nobody \
255 -c <replaceable>"machine nickname"</replaceable> \
256 -s /bin/false <replaceable>machine_name</replaceable>$ </userinput>
257
258&rootprompt;<userinput>passwd -l <replaceable>machine_name</replaceable>$</userinput>
259</screen>
260</para>
261
262<para>
263<indexterm><primary>primary group</primary></indexterm>
264<indexterm><primary>GID</primary></indexterm>
265<indexterm><primary>machine accounts</primary></indexterm>
266In the example above there is an existing system group <quote>machines</quote> which is used
267as the primary group for all machine accounts. In the following examples the <quote>machines</quote> group
268numeric GID is 100.
269</para>
270
271<para>
272<indexterm><primary>chpass</primary></indexterm>
273<indexterm><primary>BSD</primary></indexterm>
274On *BSD systems, this can be done using the <command>chpass</command> utility:
275<screen>
276&rootprompt;<userinput>chpass -a \
277'<replaceable>machine_name</replaceable>$:*:101:100::0:0:Windows <replaceable>machine_name</replaceable>:/dev/null:/sbin/nologin'</userinput>
278</screen>
279</para>
280
281<para>
282<indexterm><primary>/etc/passwd</primary></indexterm>
283<indexterm><primary>$</primary></indexterm>
284<indexterm><primary>null shell</primary></indexterm>
285<indexterm><primary>home directory</primary></indexterm>
286The <filename>/etc/passwd</filename> entry will list the machine name
287with a <quote>$</quote> appended, and will not have a password, will have a null shell and no
288home directory. For example, a machine named <quote>doppy</quote> would have an
289<filename>/etc/passwd</filename> entry like this:
290<programlisting>
291doppy$:x:505:100:<replaceable>machine_nickname</replaceable>:/dev/null:/bin/false
292</programlisting>
293</para>
294
295<para>
296<indexterm><primary>machine_nickname</primary></indexterm>
297<indexterm><primary>machine_name</primary></indexterm>
298<indexterm><primary>Machine Trust Account</primary></indexterm>
299in which <replaceable>machine_nickname</replaceable> can be any
300descriptive name for the client, such as BasementComputer.
301<replaceable>machine_name</replaceable> absolutely must be the NetBIOS
302name of the client to be joined to the domain. The <quote>$</quote> must be
303appended to the NetBIOS name of the client or Samba will not recognize
304this as a Machine Trust Account.
305</para>
306
307<para>
308<indexterm><primary>UNIX account</primary></indexterm>
309<indexterm><primary>Samba account</primary></indexterm>
310<indexterm><primary>Machine Trust Account</primary><secondary>password</secondary></indexterm>
311Now that the corresponding UNIX account has been created, the next step is to create
312the Samba account for the client containing the well-known initial
313Machine Trust Account password. This can be done using the
314<command>smbpasswd</command> command
315as shown here:
316<screen>
317&rootprompt;<userinput>smbpasswd -a -m <replaceable>machine_name</replaceable></userinput>
318</screen>
319</para>
320
321<para>
322<indexterm><primary>machine_name</primary></indexterm>
323<indexterm><primary>NetBIOS name</primary></indexterm>
324<indexterm><primary>RID</primary></indexterm>
325<indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
326where <replaceable>machine_name</replaceable> is the machine's NetBIOS
327name. The RID of the new machine account is generated from the UID of
328the corresponding UNIX account.
329</para>
330
331<warning>
332<title>Join the client to the domain immediately</title>
333
334<para>
335<indexterm><primary>Machine Trust Account</primary></indexterm>
336<indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
337<indexterm><primary>Server Manager</primary></indexterm>
338<indexterm><primary>changes password</primary></indexterm>
339<indexterm><primary>NetBIOS name</primary></indexterm>
340Manually creating a Machine Trust Account using this method is the
341equivalent of creating a Machine Trust Account on a Windows NT PDC using
342<indexterm><primary>Server Manager</primary></indexterm>
343the <application>Server Manager</application>. From the time at which the
344account is created to the time the client joins the domain and
345changes the password, your domain is vulnerable to an intruder joining
346your domain using a machine with the same NetBIOS name. A PDC inherently
347trusts members of the domain and will serve out a large degree of user
348information to such clients. You have been warned!
349</para>
350</warning>
351</sect2>
352
353<sect2>
354<title>Managing Domain Machine Accounts using NT4 Server Manager</title>
355
356<para>
357<indexterm><primary>machine trust accounts</primary></indexterm>
358<indexterm><primary>automatic account creation</primary></indexterm>
359<indexterm><primary>Server Manager</primary></indexterm>
360A working <smbconfoption name="add machine script"/> is essential
361for machine trust accounts to be automatically created. This applies no matter whether
362you use automatic account creation or the NT4 Domain Server Manager.
363</para>
364
365<para>
366<indexterm><primary>SRVTOOLS.EXE</primary></indexterm>
367<indexterm><primary>SrvMgr.exe</primary></indexterm>
368<indexterm><primary>UsrMgr.exe</primary></indexterm>
369<indexterm><primary>domain management tools</primary></indexterm>
370If the machine from which you are trying to manage the domain is an
371<application>MS Windows NT4 workstation or MS Windows 200x/XP Professional</application>,
372the tool of choice is the package called <command>SRVTOOLS.EXE</command>.
373When executed in the target directory it will unpack <command>SrvMgr.exe</command>
374and <command>UsrMgr.exe</command> (both are domain management tools for MS Windows NT4 workstation).
375</para>
376
377<para>
378<indexterm><primary>Nexus.exe</primary></indexterm>
379<indexterm><primary>Microsoft Windows 9x/Me</primary></indexterm>
380If your workstation is a <application>Microsoft Windows 9x/Me</application> family product,
381 you should download the <command>Nexus.exe</command> package from the Microsoft Web site.
382When executed from the target directory, it will unpack the same tools but for use on
383this platform.
384</para>
385
386<para>
387Further information about these tools may be obtained from Knowledge Base articles
388<ulink url="http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;173673">173673</ulink>, and
389<ulink url="http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;172540">172540</ulink>
390</para>
391
392<para>
393<indexterm><primary>srvmgr.exe</primary></indexterm>
394<indexterm><primary>Server Manager for Domains</primary></indexterm>
395Launch the <command>srvmgr.exe</command> (Server Manager for Domains) and follow these steps:
396</para>
397
398<procedure>
399<title>Server Manager Account Machine Account Management</title>
400 <step><para>
401 From the menu select <guimenu>Computer</guimenu>.
402 </para></step>
403
404 <step><para>
405 Click <guimenuitem>Select Domain</guimenuitem>.
406 </para></step>
407
408 <step><para>
409 Click the name of the domain you wish to administer in the
410 <guilabel>Select Domain</guilabel> panel and then click
411 <guibutton>OK</guibutton>.
412 </para></step>
413
414 <step><para>
415 Again from the menu select <guimenu>Computer</guimenu>.
416 </para></step>
417
418 <step><para>
419 Select <guimenuitem>Add to Domain</guimenuitem>.
420 </para></step>
421
422 <step><para>
423 In the dialog box, click the radio button to
424 <guilabel>Add NT Workstation of Server</guilabel>, then
425 enter the machine name in the field provided, and click the
426 <guibutton>Add</guibutton> button.
427 </para></step>
428</procedure>
429
430</sect2>
431
432<sect2>
433<title>On-the-Fly Creation of Machine Trust Accounts</title>
434
435<para>
436<indexterm><primary>Machine Trust Account</primary><secondary>creation</secondary></indexterm>
437The third (and recommended) way of creating Machine Trust Accounts is simply to allow the Samba server to
438create them as needed when the client is joined to the domain.
439</para>
440
441<para>
442<indexterm><primary>Machine Trust Account</primary><secondary>UNIX account</secondary></indexterm>
443<indexterm><primary>UNIX account</primary></indexterm>
444<indexterm><primary>add machine script</primary></indexterm>
445Since each Samba Machine Trust Account requires a corresponding UNIX account, a method
446for automatically creating the UNIX account is usually supplied; this requires configuration of the
447add machine script option in &smb.conf;. This method is not required; however, corresponding UNIX
448accounts may also be created manually.
449</para>
450
451
452<para>
453<indexterm><primary>useradd</primary></indexterm>
454<indexterm><primary>Red Hat Linux</primary></indexterm>
455Here is an example for a Red Hat Linux system:
456<smbconfblock>
457<smbconfsection name="[global]"/>
458<smbconfoption name="add machine script">/usr/sbin/useradd -d /var/lib/nobody -g 100 -s /bin/false -M %u</smbconfoption>
459</smbconfblock>
460</para>
461
462</sect2>
463
464<sect2><title>Making an MS Windows Workstation or Server a Domain Member</title>
465
466<para>
467The procedure for making an MS Windows workstation or server a member of the domain varies
468with the version of Windows.
469</para>
470
471<sect3>
472 <title>Windows 200x/XP Professional Client</title>
473
474 <para>
475<indexterm><primary>domain member</primary></indexterm>
476<indexterm><primary>machine trust account</primary><secondary>create privilege</secondary></indexterm>
477<indexterm><primary>privileges</primary></indexterm>
478<indexterm><primary>root</primary></indexterm>
479 When the user elects to make the client a domain member, Windows 200x prompts for
480 an account and password that has privileges to create machine accounts in the domain.
481 A Samba administrator account (i.e., a Samba account that has <constant>root</constant> privileges on the
482 Samba server) must be entered here; the operation will fail if an ordinary user
483 account is given.
484 </para>
485
486 <para>
487<indexterm><primary>administrator account</primary></indexterm>
488<indexterm><primary>/etc/passwd</primary></indexterm>
489 For security reasons, the password for this administrator account should be set
490 to a password that is other than that used for the root user in <filename>/etc/passwd</filename>.
491 </para>
492
493 <para>
494<indexterm><primary>account</primary></indexterm>
495<indexterm><primary>create domain member</primary></indexterm>
496<indexterm><primary>root</primary></indexterm>
497<indexterm><primary>map</primary></indexterm>
498 The name of the account that is used to create domain member machine trust accounts can be
499 anything the network administrator may choose. If it is other than <constant>root</constant>,
500 then this is easily mapped to <constant>root</constant> in the file named in the &smb.conf; parameter
501 <smbconfoption name="username map">/etc/samba/smbusers</smbconfoption>.
502 </para>
503
504 <para>
505<indexterm><primary>administrator account</primary></indexterm>
506<indexterm><primary>encryption key</primary></indexterm>
507<indexterm><primary>machine trust account</primary></indexterm>
508 The session key of the Samba administrator account acts as an encryption key for setting the password of the machine trust
509 account. The Machine Trust Account will be created on-the-fly, or updated if it already exists.
510 </para>
511</sect3>
512
513<sect3>
514 <title>Windows NT4 Client</title>
515
516 <para>
517<indexterm><primary>Machine Trust Account</primary></indexterm>
518<indexterm><primary>Create a Computer Account</primary></indexterm>
519<indexterm><primary>join the machine</primary></indexterm>
520 If the Machine Trust Account was created manually, on the
521 Identification Changes menu enter the domain name, but do not
522 check the box <guilabel>Create a Computer Account in the Domain</guilabel>.
523 In this case, the existing Machine Trust Account is used to join the machine
524 to the domain.
525 </para>
526
527 <para>
528<indexterm><primary>Machine Trust Account</primary></indexterm>
529<indexterm><primary>on the fly</primary></indexterm>
530<indexterm><primary>Computer Account</primary></indexterm>
531<indexterm><primary>administrator account</primary></indexterm>
532 If the Machine Trust Account is to be created on the fly, on the Identification Changes menu enter the domain
533 name and check the box <guilabel>Create a Computer Account in the Domain</guilabel>. In this case, joining
534 the domain proceeds as above for Windows 2000 (i.e., you must supply a Samba administrator account when
535 prompted).
536 </para>
537</sect3>
538
539<sect3>
540 <title>Samba Client</title>
541
542 <para>
543<indexterm><primary></primary></indexterm>
544 Joining a Samba client to a domain is documented in <link linkend="domain-member-server">the next section</link>.
545 </para>
546</sect3>
547
548</sect2>
549</sect1>
550
551<sect1 id="domain-member-server">
552<title>Domain Member Server</title>
553
554<para>
555<indexterm><primary>domain security</primary></indexterm>
556<indexterm><primary>security context</primary></indexterm>
557<indexterm><primary>authentication regime</primary></indexterm>
558<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
559This mode of server operation involves the Samba machine being made a member
560of a domain security context. This means by definition that all user
561authentication will be done from a centrally defined authentication regime.
562The authentication regime may come from an NT3/4-style (old domain technology)
563server, or it may be provided from an Active Directory server (ADS) running on
564MS Windows 2000 or later.
565</para>
566
567<para>
568<emphasis>
569<indexterm><primary>authentication</primary><secondary>backend</secondary></indexterm>
570<indexterm><primary>distributed directory</primary></indexterm>
571<indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
572<indexterm><primary>OpenLDAP</primary></indexterm>
573<indexterm><primary>iPlanet</primary></indexterm>
574<indexterm><primary>Sun</primary></indexterm>
575<indexterm><primary>Novell</primary></indexterm>
576<indexterm><primary>e-Directory</primary></indexterm>
577Of course it should be clear that the authentication backend itself could be
578from any distributed directory architecture server that is supported by Samba.
579This can be LDAP (from OpenLDAP), or Sun's iPlanet, or Novell e-Directory
580Server, and so on.
581</emphasis>
582</para>
583
584<note><para>
585<indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
586<indexterm><primary>identity management</primary></indexterm>
587<indexterm><primary>machine authentication</primary></indexterm>
588When Samba is configured to use an LDAP or other identity management and/or
589directory service, it is Samba that continues to perform user and machine
590authentication. It should be noted that the LDAP server does not perform
591authentication handling in place of what Samba is designed to do.
592</para></note>
593
594<para>
595<indexterm><primary>create a domain machine account</primary></indexterm>
596<indexterm><primary>domain member server</primary></indexterm>
597<indexterm><primary>join the domain</primary></indexterm>
598Please refer to <link linkend="samba-pdc">Domain Control</link>, for more information regarding
599how to create a domain machine account for a domain member server as well as for
600information on how to enable the Samba domain member machine to join the domain
601and be fully trusted by it.
602</para>
603
604<sect2>
605<title>Joining an NT4-type Domain with Samba-3</title>
606
607<para><link linkend="assumptions">Assumptions</link> lists names that are used in the remainder of this chapter.</para>
608
609<table frame="all" id="assumptions"><title>Assumptions</title>
610 <tgroup cols="2">
611 <colspec align="right"/>
612 <colspec align="left"/>
613 <tbody>
614 <row>
615 <entry>Samba DMS NetBIOS name:</entry><entry>SERV1</entry>
616 </row>
617 <row>
618 <entry>Windows 200x/NT domain name:</entry><entry>&example.workgroup;</entry>
619 </row>
620 <row>
621 <entry>Domain's PDC NetBIOS name:</entry><entry>DOMPDC</entry>
622 </row>
623 <row>
624 <entry>Domain's BDC NetBIOS names:</entry><entry>DOMBDC1 and DOMBDC2</entry>
625 </row>
626 </tbody>
627 </tgroup>
628</table>
629
630<para>
631<indexterm><primary></primary></indexterm>
632First, you must edit your &smb.conf; file to tell Samba it should now use domain security.
633</para>
634
635<para>
636<indexterm><primary>security = user</primary></indexterm>
637<indexterm><primary>standalone server</primary></indexterm>
638<indexterm><primary>domain member server</primary></indexterm>
639<indexterm><primary>domain security</primary></indexterm>
640Change (or add) your <smbconfoption name="security"/> line in the [global] section
641of your &smb.conf; to read:
642<smbconfblock>
643<smbconfoption name="security">domain</smbconfoption>
644</smbconfblock>
645Note that if the parameter <parameter>security = user</parameter> is used, this machine would function as a
646standalone server and not as a domain member server. Domain security mode causes Samba to work within the
647domain security context.
648</para>
649
650<para>
651Next change the <smbconfoption name="workgroup"/> line in the <smbconfsection name="[global]"/>
652section to read:
653<smbconfblock>
654<smbconfoption name="workgroup">&example.workgroup;</smbconfoption>
655</smbconfblock>
656This is the name of the domain we are joining.
657</para>
658
659<para>
660<indexterm><primary>authenticate</primary></indexterm>
661<indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
662You must also have the parameter <smbconfoption name="encrypt passwords"/>
663set to <constant>yes</constant> in order for your users to authenticate to the NT PDC.
664This is the default setting if this parameter is not specified. There is no need to specify this
665parameter, but if it is specified in the &smb.conf; file, it must be set to <constant>Yes</constant>.
666</para>
667
668<para>
669<indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
670<indexterm><primary>BDC</primary></indexterm>
671<indexterm><primary>authenticate users</primary></indexterm>
672<indexterm><primary>domain controllers</primary></indexterm>
673Finally, add (or modify) a <smbconfoption name="password server"/> line in the [global]
674section to read:
675<smbconfblock>
676<smbconfoption name="password server">DOMPDC DOMBDC1 DOMBDC2</smbconfoption>
677</smbconfblock>
678These are the PDC and BDCs Samba
679will attempt to contact in order to authenticate users. Samba will
680try to contact each of these servers in order, so you may want to
681rearrange this list in order to spread out the authentication load
682among Domain Controllers.
683</para>
684
685<para>
686<indexterm><primary>list of domain controllers</primary></indexterm>
687<indexterm><primary>mechanism</primary></indexterm>
688<indexterm><primary>broadcast-based name resolution</primary></indexterm>
689<indexterm><primary>DNS name resolution</primary></indexterm>
690Alternatively, if you want smbd to determine automatically the list of domain controllers to use for
691authentication, you may set this line to be:
692<smbconfblock>
693<smbconfoption name="password server">*</smbconfoption>
694</smbconfblock>
695<indexterm><primary>WINS</primary></indexterm>
696This method allows Samba to use exactly the same mechanism that NT does. The
697method either uses broadcast-based name resolution, performs a WINS database
698lookup in order to find a domain controller against which to authenticate,
699or locates the domain controller using DNS name resolution.
700</para>
701
702<para>
703To join the domain, run this command:
704<indexterm><primary>net</primary><secondary>rpc</secondary><tertiary>join</tertiary></indexterm>
705<screen>
706&rootprompt;<userinput>net rpc join -S DOMPDC -U<replaceable>Administrator%password</replaceable></userinput>
707</screen>
708</para>
709
710<para>
711<indexterm><primary>NetBIOS name</primary></indexterm>
712<indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
713<indexterm><primary>WINS lookup</primary></indexterm>
714<indexterm><primary>NetBIOS broadcast</primary></indexterm>
715If the <option>-S DOMPDC</option> argument is not given, the domain name will be obtained from &smb.conf; and
716the NetBIOS name of the PDC will be obtained either using a WINS lookup or via NetBIOS broadcast based name
717look up.
718</para>
719
720<para>
721<indexterm><primary>joining the domain</primary></indexterm>
722<indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
723<indexterm><primary>Administrator%password</primary></indexterm>
724<indexterm><primary>Joined domain</primary></indexterm>
725The machine is joining the domain DOM, and the PDC for that domain (the only machine
726that has write access to the domain SAM database) is DOMPDC; therefore, use the <option>-S</option>
727option. The <replaceable>Administrator%password</replaceable> is the login name and
728password for an account that has the necessary privilege to add machines to the
729domain. If this is successful, you will see the following message in your terminal window.
730Where the older NT4-style domain architecture is used:
731<screen>
732<computeroutput>Joined domain DOM.</computeroutput>
733</screen>
734</para>
735
736<para>
737<indexterm><primary>net</primary><secondary>ads</secondary><tertiary>join</tertiary></indexterm>
738<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
739<indexterm><primary>join the ADS domain</primary></indexterm>
740Where Active Directory is used, the command used to join the ADS domain is:
741<screen>
742&rootprompt; net ads join -U<replaceable>Administrator%password</replaceable>
743</screen>
744And the following output is indicative of a successful outcome:
745<screen>
746<computeroutput>Joined SERV1 to realm MYREALM.</computeroutput>
747</screen>
748</para>
749
750<para>
751Refer to the <command>net</command> man page and to <link linkend="NetCommand">the chapter on remote
752administration</link> for further information.
753</para>
754
755<para>
756<indexterm><primary>join the domain</primary></indexterm>
757<indexterm><primary>create machine trust account</primary></indexterm>
758<indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
759This process joins the server to the domain without separately having to create the machine
760trust account on the PDC beforehand.
761</para>
762
763<para>
764<indexterm><primary>machine account password</primary><secondary>change protocol</secondary></indexterm>
765<indexterm><primary>random machine account password</primary></indexterm>
766<indexterm><primary>/usr/local/samba/private/secrets.tdb</primary></indexterm>
767<indexterm><primary>/etc/samba/secrets.tdb</primary></indexterm>
768This command goes through the machine account password change protocol, then writes the new (random) machine
769account password for this Samba server into a file in the same directory in which a smbpasswd file would be
770normally stored. The trust account information that is needed by the DMS is written into the file
771<filename>/usr/local/samba/private/secrets.tdb</filename> or <filename>/etc/samba/secrets.tdb</filename>.
772</para>
773
774<para>
775<indexterm><primary>domain-level security</primary></indexterm>
776<indexterm><primary>shadow password file</primary></indexterm>
777This file is created and owned by root and is not readable by any other user. It is
778the key to the domain-level security for your system and should be treated as carefully
779as a shadow password file.
780</para>
781
782<para>
783<indexterm><primary>Samba daemons</primary></indexterm>
784<indexterm><primary>distribution</primary></indexterm>
785<indexterm><primary>/etc/init.d/samba</primary></indexterm>
786Finally, restart your Samba daemons and get ready for clients to begin using domain
787security. The way you can restart your Samba daemons depends on your distribution,
788but in most cases the following will suffice:
789<screen>
790&rootprompt;/etc/init.d/samba restart
791</screen>
792</para>
793
794</sect2>
795
796<sect2>
797<title>Why Is This Better Than <parameter>security = server</parameter>?</title>
798
799<para>
800<indexterm><primary>domain security</primary></indexterm>
801<indexterm><primary>UNIX users</primary></indexterm>
802<indexterm><primary>authentication</primary></indexterm>
803Currently, domain security in Samba does not free you from having to create local UNIX users to represent the
804users attaching to your server. This means that if domain user <constant>DOM\fred</constant> attaches to your
805domain security Samba server, there needs to be a local UNIX user fred to represent that user in the UNIX file
806system. This is similar to the older Samba security mode <smbconfoption
807name="security">server</smbconfoption>, where Samba would pass through the authentication request to a Windows
808NT server in the same way as a Windows 95 or Windows 98 server would.
809</para>
810
811<para>
812<indexterm><primary>winbind</primary></indexterm>
813<indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
814<indexterm><primary>GID</primary></indexterm>
815Please refer to <link linkend="winbind">Winbind: Use of Domain Accounts</link>, for information on a system
816to automatically assign UNIX UIDs and GIDs to Windows NT domain users and groups.
817</para>
818
819<para>
820<indexterm><primary>domain-level</primary></indexterm>
821<indexterm><primary>authentication</primary></indexterm>
822<indexterm><primary>RPC</primary></indexterm>
823The advantage of domain-level security is that the authentication in domain-level security is passed down the
824authenticated RPC channel in exactly the same way that an NT server would do it. This means Samba servers now
825participate in domain trust relationships in exactly the same way NT servers do (i.e., you can add Samba
826servers into a resource domain and have the authentication passed on from a resource domain PDC to an account
827domain PDC).
828</para>
829
830<para>
831<indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
832<indexterm><primary>BDC</primary></indexterm>
833<indexterm><primary>connection resources</primary></indexterm>
834In addition, with <smbconfoption name="security">server</smbconfoption>, every Samba daemon on a server has to
835keep a connection open to the authenticating server for as long as that daemon lasts. This can drain the
836connection resources on a Microsoft NT server and cause it to run out of available connections. With
837<smbconfoption name="security">domain</smbconfoption>, however, the Samba daemons connect to the PDC or BDC
838only for as long as is necessary to authenticate the user and then drop the connection, thus conserving PDC
839connection resources.
840</para>
841
842<para>
843<indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
844<indexterm><primary>authentication reply</primary></indexterm>
845<indexterm><primary>SID</primary></indexterm>
846<indexterm><primary>NT groups</primary></indexterm>
847Finally, acting in the same manner as an NT server authenticating to a PDC means that as part of the
848authentication reply, the Samba server gets the user identification information such as the user SID, the list
849of NT groups the user belongs to, and so on.
850</para>
851
852<note>
853<para>
854Much of the text of this document was first published in the Web magazine
855<ulink url="http://www.linuxworld.com"><emphasis>LinuxWorld</emphasis></ulink> as the article <ulink
856url="http://www.linuxworld.com/linuxworld/lw-1998-10/lw-10-samba.html"/>
857<emphasis>Doing the NIS/NT Samba</emphasis>.
858</para>
859</note>
860
861</sect2>
862</sect1>
863
864<sect1 id="ads-member">
865<title>Samba ADS Domain Membership</title>
866
867<para>
868<indexterm significance="preferred"><primary>Active Directory</primary></indexterm>
869<indexterm significance="preferred"><primary>ADS</primary><see>Active Directory</see></indexterm>
870<indexterm><primary>KDC</primary></indexterm>
871<indexterm><primary>Kerberos</primary></indexterm>
872This is a rough guide to setting up Samba-3 with Kerberos authentication against a
873Windows 200x KDC. A familiarity with Kerberos is assumed.
874</para>
875
876<sect2>
877<title>Configure &smb.conf;</title>
878
879<para>
880You must use at least the following three options in &smb.conf;:
881</para>
882
883<smbconfblock>
884<smbconfoption name="realm">your.kerberos.REALM</smbconfoption>
885<smbconfoption name="security">ADS</smbconfoption>
886<smbconfcomment>The following parameter need only be specified if present.</smbconfcomment>
887<smbconfcomment>The default setting if not present is Yes.</smbconfcomment>
888<smbconfoption name="encrypt passwords">yes</smbconfoption>
889</smbconfblock>
890
891<para>
892<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
893<indexterm><primary>realm</primary></indexterm>
894<indexterm><primary>DNS</primary></indexterm>
895<indexterm><primary>ADS DC</primary></indexterm>
896<indexterm><primary>password server</primary></indexterm>
897In case samba cannot correctly identify the appropriate ADS server using the realm name, use the
898<smbconfoption name="password server"/> option in &smb.conf;:
899<smbconfblock>
900<smbconfoption name="password server">your.kerberos.server</smbconfoption>
901</smbconfblock>
902The most common reason for which Samba may not be able to locate the ADS domain controller is a consequence of
903sites maintaining some DNS servers on UNIX systems without regard for the DNS requirements of the ADS
904infrastructure. There is no harm in specifying a preferred ADS domain controller using the <parameter>password
905server</parameter>.
906</para>
907
908<note><para>
909<indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
910<indexterm><primary>authenticated</primary></indexterm>
911You do <emphasis>not</emphasis> need an smbpasswd file, and older clients will be authenticated as
912if <smbconfoption name="security">domain</smbconfoption>, although it will not do any harm and
913allows you to have local users not in the domain.
914</para></note>
915
916</sect2>
917
918<sect2>
919<title>Configure <filename>/etc/krb5.conf</filename></title>
920
921<para>
922<indexterm><primary>/etc/krb5.conf</primary></indexterm>
923<indexterm><primary>Kerberos</primary><secondary>/etc/krb5.conf</secondary></indexterm>
924<indexterm><primary>MIT</primary></indexterm>
925<indexterm><primary>Heimdal</primary></indexterm>
926With both MIT and Heimdal Kerberos, it is unnecessary to configure the <filename>/etc/krb5.conf</filename>,
927and it may be detrimental.
928</para>
929
930<para>
931<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
932<indexterm><primary>SRV records</primary></indexterm>
933<indexterm><primary>DNS zon</primary></indexterm>
934<indexterm><primary>KDC</primary></indexterm>
935<indexterm><primary>_kerberos.REALM.NAME</primary></indexterm>
936Microsoft ADS automatically create SRV records in the DNS zone
937<parameter>_kerberos._tcp.REALM.NAME</parameter> for each KDC in the realm. This is part
938of the installation and configuration process used to create an Active Directory domain.
939A KDC is a Kerberos Key Distribution Center and forms an integral part of the Microsoft
940active directory infrastructure.
941</para>
942
943<para>
944<indexterm><primary>kinit</primary></indexterm>
945<indexterm><primary>DES-CBC-MD5</primary></indexterm>
946<indexterm><primary>DES-CBC-CRC</primary></indexterm>
947<indexterm><primary>encryption types</primary></indexterm>
948<indexterm><primary>kerberos</primary></indexterm>
949<indexterm><primary>Windows 2000</primary></indexterm>
950UNIX systems can use kinit and the DES-CBC-MD5 or DES-CBC-CRC encryption types to authenticate to the Windows
9512000 KDC. For further information regarding Windows 2000 ADS kerberos interoperability please refer to the
952Microsoft Windows 2000 Kerberos <ulink
953url="http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/techinfo/planning/security/kerbsteps.asp">Interoperability</ulink>
954guide. Another very useful document that may be referred to for general information regarding Kerberos
955interoperability is <ulink url="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1510.txt?number=1510">RFC1510</ulink>. This RFC
956explains much of the magic behind the operation of Kerberos.
957</para>
958
959<para>
960<indexterm><primary>MIT</primary></indexterm>
961<indexterm><primary>KRB5</primary></indexterm>
962<indexterm><primary>SRV records</primary></indexterm>
963<indexterm><primary>krb5.conf</primary></indexterm>
964<indexterm><primary>DNS lookup</primary></indexterm>
965<indexterm><primary>libraries</primary></indexterm>
966MIT's, as well as Heimdal's, recent KRB5 libraries default to checking for SRV records, so they will
967automatically find the KDCs. In addition, <filename>krb5.conf</filename> only allows specifying
968a single KDC, even there if there may be more than one. Using the DNS lookup allows the KRB5
969libraries to use whichever KDCs are available.
970</para>
971
972<para>
973<indexterm><primary>krb5.conf</primary></indexterm>
974When manually configuring <filename>krb5.conf</filename>, the minimal configuration is:
975<screen>
976[libdefaults]
977 default_realm = YOUR.KERBEROS.REALM
978
979[realms]
980 YOUR.KERBEROS.REALM = {
981 kdc = your.kerberos.server
982 }
983
984[domain_realms]
985 .kerberos.server = YOUR.KERBEROS.REALM
986</screen>
987</para>
988
989<para>
990<indexterm><primary>Heimdal</primary></indexterm>
991When using Heimdal versions before 0.6, use the following configuration settings:
992<screen>
993[libdefaults]
994 default_realm = YOUR.KERBEROS.REALM
995 default_etypes = des-cbc-crc des-cbc-md5
996 default_etypes_des = des-cbc-crc des-cbc-md5
997
998[realms]
999 YOUR.KERBEROS.REALM = {
1000 kdc = your.kerberos.server
1001 }
1002
1003[domain_realms]
1004 .kerberos.server = YOUR.KERBEROS.REALM
1005</screen>
1006</para>
1007
1008<para>
1009<indexterm><primary>KDC</primary></indexterm>
1010<indexterm><primary>kinit</primary></indexterm>
1011Test your config by doing a <userinput>kinit
1012<replaceable>USERNAME</replaceable>@<replaceable>REALM</replaceable></userinput> and
1013making sure that your password is accepted by the Win2000 KDC.
1014</para>
1015
1016<para>
1017<indexterm><primary>Heimdal</primary></indexterm>
1018<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
1019<indexterm><primary>KDC</primary></indexterm>
1020<indexterm><primary>Windows 2003</primary></indexterm>
1021With Heimdal versions earlier than 0.6.x you can use only newly created accounts
1022in ADS or accounts that have had the password changed once after migration, or
1023in case of <constant>Administrator</constant> after installation. At the
1024moment, a Windows 2003 KDC can only be used with Heimdal releases later than 0.6
1025(and no default etypes in krb5.conf). Unfortunately, this whole area is still
1026in a state of flux.
1027</para>
1028
1029<note><para>
1030<indexterm><primary>realm</primary></indexterm>
1031<indexterm><primary>uppercase</primary></indexterm>
1032<indexterm><primary>KDC</primary></indexterm>
1033The realm must be in uppercase or you will get a <quote><errorname>Cannot find KDC for
1034requested realm while getting initial credentials</errorname></quote> error (Kerberos
1035is case-sensitive!).
1036</para></note>
1037
1038<note><para>
1039<indexterm><primary>synchronize</primary></indexterm>
1040<indexterm><primary>credentials</primary></indexterm>
1041<indexterm><primary>time difference</primary></indexterm>
1042<indexterm><primary>clock skew</primary></indexterm>
1043Time between the two servers must be synchronized. You will get a <quote><errorname>kinit(v5): Clock skew too
1044great while getting initial credentials</errorname></quote> if the time difference (clock skew) is more than five minutes.
1045</para></note>
1046
1047<para>
1048<indexterm><primary>clock skew</primary></indexterm>
1049<indexterm><primary>Kerberos</primary></indexterm>
1050Clock skew limits are configurable in the Kerberos protocols. The default setting is five minutes.
1051</para>
1052
1053<para>
1054<indexterm><primary>DNS</primary></indexterm>
1055<indexterm><primary>KDC</primary></indexterm>
1056<indexterm><primary>hostname</primary></indexterm>
1057<indexterm><primary>realm</primary></indexterm>
1058You also must ensure that you can do a reverse DNS lookup on the IP address of your KDC. Also, the name that
1059this reverse lookup maps to must either be the NetBIOS name of the KDC (i.e., the hostname with no domain
1060attached) or it can be the NetBIOS name followed by the realm.
1061</para>
1062
1063<para>
1064<indexterm><primary>/etc/hosts</primary></indexterm>
1065<indexterm><primary>KDC</primary></indexterm>
1066<indexterm><primary>realm</primary></indexterm>
1067The easiest way to ensure you get this right is to add a <filename>/etc/hosts</filename> entry mapping the IP
1068address of your KDC to its NetBIOS name. If you do not get this correct, then you will get a <errorname>local
1069error</errorname> when you try to join the realm.
1070</para>
1071
1072<para>
1073<indexterm><primary>Kerberos</primary></indexterm>
1074<indexterm><primary>Create the Computer Account</primary></indexterm>
1075<indexterm><primary>Testing Server Setup</primary></indexterm>
1076<indexterm><primary></primary></indexterm>
1077If all you want is Kerberos support in &smbclient;, then you can skip directly to <link
1078linkend="ads-test-smbclient">Testing with &smbclient;</link> now. <link
1079linkend="ads-create-machine-account">Create the Computer Account</link> and <link
1080linkend="ads-test-server">Testing Server Setup</link> are needed only if you want Kerberos support for &smbd;
1081and &winbindd;.
1082</para>
1083
1084</sect2>
1085
1086<sect2 id="ads-create-machine-account">
1087<title>Create the Computer Account</title>
1088
1089<para>
1090<indexterm><primary>write permission</primary></indexterm>
1091<indexterm><primary>Samba private directory</primary></indexterm>
1092<indexterm><primary>Administrator account</primary></indexterm>
1093<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
1094As a user who has write permission on the Samba private directory (usually root), run:
1095<screen>
1096&rootprompt; <userinput>net ads join -U Administrator%password</userinput>
1097</screen>
1098The Administrator account can be any account that has been designated in the ADS domain security settings with
1099permission to add machines to the ADS domain. It is, of course, a good idea to use an account other than Administrator.
1100On the UNIX/Linux system, this command must be executed by an account that has UID=0 (root).
1101</para>
1102
1103<para>
1104<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
1105<indexterm><primary>machine trust account</primary></indexterm>
1106<indexterm><primary>organizational unit</primary></indexterm>
1107<indexterm><primary>ADS manager</primary></indexterm>
1108<indexterm><primary>kinit</primary></indexterm>
1109<indexterm><primary>net</primary><secondary>ads</secondary><tertiary>join</tertiary></indexterm>
1110When making a Windows client a member of an ADS domain within a complex organization, you
1111may want to create the machine trust account within a particular organizational unit. Samba-3 permits
1112this to be done using the following syntax:
1113<screen>
1114&rootprompt; <userinput>kinit Administrator@your.kerberos.REALM</userinput>
1115&rootprompt; <userinput>net ads join createcomputer="organizational_unit"</userinput>
1116</screen>
1117Your ADS manager will be able to advise what should be specified for the "organizational_unit" parameter.
1118</para>
1119
1120<para>
1121<indexterm><primary>organizational directory</primary></indexterm>
1122<indexterm><primary>machine trust account</primary></indexterm>
1123<indexterm><primary>container</primary></indexterm>
1124<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
1125For example, you may want to create the machine trust account in a container called <quote>Servers</quote>
1126under the organizational directory <quote>Computers/BusinessUnit/Department,</quote> like this:
1127<screen>
1128&rootprompt; <userinput>net ads join "Computers/BusinessUnit/Department/Servers"</userinput>
1129</screen>
1130This command will place the Samba server machine trust account in the container
1131<literal>Computers/BusinessUnit/Department/Servers</literal>. The container should exist in the ADS directory
1132before executing this command. Please note that forward slashes must be used, because backslashes are both
1133valid characters in an OU name and used as escapes for other characters. If you need a backslash in an OU
1134name, it may need to be quadrupled to pass through the shell escape and ldap escape.
1135</para>
1136
1137<sect3>
1138<title>Possible Errors</title>
1139
1140<para>
1141<variablelist>
1142 <varlistentry><term><errorname>ADS support not compiled in</errorname></term>
1143 <listitem><para>
1144 <indexterm><primary>config.cache</primary></indexterm>
1145 <indexterm><primary>Kerberos</primary></indexterm>
1146 <indexterm><primary>headers files</primary></indexterm>
1147 Samba must be reconfigured (remove config.cache) and recompiled (make clean all install) after the
1148 Kerberos libraries and headers files are installed.
1149 </para></listitem></varlistentry>
1150
1151 <varlistentry><term><errorname>net ads join prompts for user name</errorname></term>
1152 <listitem><para>
1153 <indexterm><primary>kinit</primary></indexterm>
1154 <indexterm><primary>rights</primary></indexterm>
1155 You need to log in to the domain using <userinput>kinit
1156 <replaceable>USERNAME</replaceable>@<replaceable>REALM</replaceable></userinput>.
1157 <replaceable>USERNAME</replaceable> must be a user who has rights to add a machine to the domain.
1158 </para></listitem></varlistentry>
1159
1160 <varlistentry><term>Unsupported encryption/or checksum types</term>
1161 <listitem><para>
1162 <indexterm><primary>/etc/krb5.conf</primary></indexterm>
1163 <indexterm><primary>unsupported encryption</primary></indexterm>
1164 <indexterm><primary>Kerberos</primary></indexterm>
1165 Make sure that the <filename>/etc/krb5.conf</filename> is correctly configured
1166 for the type and version of Kerberos installed on the system.
1167 </para></listitem></varlistentry>
1168</variablelist>
1169</para>
1170
1171</sect3>
1172
1173</sect2>
1174
1175<sect2 id="ads-test-server">
1176<title>Testing Server Setup</title>
1177
1178<para>
1179<indexterm><primary>successful join</primary></indexterm>
1180<indexterm><primary>computer account</primary></indexterm>
1181<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
1182If the join was successful, you will see a new computer account with the
1183NetBIOS name of your Samba server in Active Directory (in the <quote>Computers</quote>
1184folder under Users and Computers.
1185</para>
1186
1187<para>
1188<indexterm><primary>Windows 2000</primary></indexterm>
1189<indexterm><primary>net</primary><secondary>use</secondary></indexterm>
1190<indexterm><primary>DES-CBC-MD5</primary></indexterm>
1191On a Windows 2000 client, try <userinput>net use * \\server\share</userinput>. You should
1192be logged in with Kerberos without needing to know a password. If this fails, then run
1193<userinput>klist tickets</userinput>. Did you get a ticket for the server? Does it have
1194an encryption type of DES-CBC-MD5?
1195</para>
1196
1197<note><para>
1198<indexterm><primary>DES-CBC-MD5</primary></indexterm>
1199<indexterm><primary>ARCFOUR-HMAC-MD5</primary></indexterm>
1200<indexterm><primary>encoding</primary></indexterm>
1201Samba can use both DES-CBC-MD5 encryption as well as ARCFOUR-HMAC-MD5 encoding.
1202</para></note>
1203
1204</sect2>
1205
1206<sect2 id="ads-test-smbclient">
1207<title>Testing with &smbclient;</title>
1208
1209<para>
1210<indexterm><primary>smbclient</primary></indexterm>
1211<indexterm><primary>Kerberos</primary></indexterm>
1212<indexterm><primary>Kerberos authentication</primary></indexterm>
1213On your Samba server try to log in to a Windows 2000 server or your Samba
1214server using &smbclient; and Kerberos. Use &smbclient; as usual, but
1215specify the <option>-k</option> option to choose Kerberos authentication.
1216</para>
1217
1218</sect2>
1219
1220<sect2>
1221<title>Notes</title>
1222
1223<para>
1224<indexterm><primary>administrator password</primary></indexterm>
1225<indexterm><primary>change password</primary></indexterm>
1226<indexterm><primary>encryption types</primary></indexterm>
1227You must change the administrator password at least once after installing a domain controller,
1228to create the right encryption types.
1229</para>
1230
1231<para>
1232<indexterm><primary>_kerberos._udp</primary></indexterm>
1233<indexterm><primary>_ldap._tcp</primary></indexterm>
1234<indexterm><primary>default DNS setup</primary></indexterm>
1235Windows 200x does not seem to create the <parameter>_kerberos._udp</parameter> and
1236<parameter>_ldap._tcp</parameter> in the default DNS setup. Perhaps this will be fixed later in service packs.
1237</para>
1238
1239</sect2>
1240</sect1>
1241
1242<sect1>
1243<title>Sharing User ID Mappings between Samba Domain Members</title>
1244
1245<para>
1246<indexterm><primary>maps UNIX users and groups</primary></indexterm>
1247<indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
1248<indexterm><primary>GID</primary></indexterm>
1249<indexterm><primary>SID</primary></indexterm>
1250Samba maps UNIX users and groups (identified by UIDs and GIDs) to Windows users and groups (identified by SIDs).
1251These mappings are done by the <parameter>idmap</parameter> subsystem of Samba.
1252</para>
1253
1254<para>
1255<indexterm><primary>mappings</primary></indexterm>
1256<indexterm><primary>CIFS</primary></indexterm>
1257<indexterm><primary>NFS</primary></indexterm>
1258In some cases it is useful to share these mappings between Samba domain members,
1259so <emphasis>name->id</emphasis> mapping is identical on all machines.
1260This may be needed in particular when sharing files over both CIFS and NFS.
1261</para>
1262
1263<para>
1264<indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
1265<indexterm><primary>ldap idmap suffix</primary></indexterm>
1266To use the <emphasis>LDAP</emphasis> <parameter>ldap idmap suffix</parameter>, set:
1267</para>
1268
1269<smbconfblock>
1270<smbconfoption name="ldap idmap suffix">ou=Idmap</smbconfoption>
1271</smbconfblock>
1272
1273<para>
1274See the &smb.conf; man page entry for the <smbconfoption name="ldap idmap suffix"></smbconfoption>
1275parameter for further information.
1276</para>
1277
1278<para>
1279<indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
1280<indexterm><primary>LDAP administrative password</primary></indexterm>
1281<indexterm><primary>secrets.tdb</primary></indexterm>
1282Do not forget to specify also the <smbconfoption name="ldap admin dn"/>
1283and to make certain to set the LDAP administrative password into the <filename>secrets.tdb</filename> using:
1284<screen>
1285&rootprompt; smbpasswd -w ldap-admin-password
1286</screen>
1287In place of <literal>ldap-admin-password</literal>, substitute the LDAP administration password for your
1288system.
1289</para>
1290
1291</sect1>
1292
1293<sect1>
1294<title>Common Errors</title>
1295
1296<para>
1297<indexterm><primary>domain member</primary></indexterm>
1298<indexterm><primary>machine trust accounts</primary></indexterm>
1299In the process of adding/deleting/re-adding domain member machine trust accounts, there are
1300many traps for the unwary player and many <quote>little</quote> things that can go wrong.
1301It is particularly interesting how often subscribers on the Samba mailing list have concluded
1302after repeated failed attempts to add a machine account that it is necessary to <quote>reinstall</quote>
1303MS Windows on the machine. In truth, it is seldom necessary to reinstall because of this type
1304of problem. The real solution is often quite simple, and with an understanding of how MS Windows
1305networking functions, it is easy to overcome.
1306</para>
1307
1308<sect2>
1309<title>Cannot Add Machine Back to Domain</title>
1310
1311<para>
1312<indexterm><primary>machine trust account</primary></indexterm>
1313<indexterm><primary>already exists</primary></indexterm>
1314<quote>A Windows workstation was reinstalled. The original domain machine trust
1315account was deleted and added immediately. The workstation will not join the domain if I use
1316the same machine name. Attempts to add the machine fail with a message that the machine already
1317exists on the network &smbmdash; I know it does not. Why is this failing?</quote>
1318</para>
1319
1320<para>
1321<indexterm><primary>NetBIOS name cache</primary></indexterm>
1322<indexterm><primary>nbtstat</primary></indexterm>
1323The original name is still in the NetBIOS name cache and must expire after machine account
1324deletion before adding that same name as a domain member again. The best advice is to delete
1325the old account and then add the machine with a new name. Alternately, the name cache can be flushed and
1326reloaded with current data using the <command>nbtstat</command> command on the Windows client:
1327<screen>
1328&dosprompt; nbtstat -R
1329</screen>
1330</para>
1331
1332</sect2>
1333
1334<sect2>
1335<title>Adding Machine to Domain Fails</title>
1336
1337<para>
1338<indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
1339<indexterm><primary>fails</primary></indexterm>
1340<quote>Adding a Windows 200x or XP Professional machine to the Samba PDC Domain fails with a
1341message that says, <errorname>"The machine could not be added at this time, there is a network problem.
1342Please try again later."</errorname> Why?</quote>
1343</para>
1344
1345<para>
1346<indexterm><primary>check logs</primary></indexterm>
1347You should check that there is an <smbconfoption name="add machine script"/> in your &smb.conf;
1348file. If there is not, please add one that is appropriate for your OS platform. If a script
1349has been defined, you will need to debug its operation. Increase the <smbconfoption name="log level"></smbconfoption>
1350in the &smb.conf; file to level 10, then try to rejoin the domain. Check the logs to see which
1351operation is failing.
1352</para>
1353
1354<para>
1355Possible causes include:
1356</para>
1357
1358<itemizedlist>
1359 <listitem><para>
1360<indexterm><primary>script</primary></indexterm>
1361<indexterm><primary>path specified</primary></indexterm>
1362 The script does not actually exist, or could not be located in the path specified.
1363 </para>
1364
1365 <para>
1366<indexterm><primary>UNIX system account</primary></indexterm>
1367<indexterm><primary>Samba SAM account</primary></indexterm>
1368 <emphasis>Corrective action:</emphasis> Fix it. Make sure when run manually
1369 that the script will add both the UNIX system account and the Samba SAM account.
1370 </para></listitem>
1371
1372 <listitem><para>
1373<indexterm><primary>UNIX system account</primary></indexterm>
1374<indexterm><primary>/etc/passwd</primary></indexterm>
1375 The machine could not be added to the UNIX system accounts file <filename>/etc/passwd</filename>.
1376 </para>
1377
1378 <para>
1379<indexterm><primary>legal UNIX system account name</primary></indexterm>
1380<indexterm><primary>uppercase</primary></indexterm>
1381 <emphasis>Corrective action:</emphasis> Check that the machine name is a legal UNIX
1382 system account name. If the UNIX utility <command>useradd</command> is called,
1383 then make sure that the machine name you are trying to add can be added using this
1384 tool. <command>Useradd</command> on some systems will not allow any uppercase characters
1385 nor will it allow spaces in the name.
1386 </para></listitem>
1387</itemizedlist>
1388
1389<para>
1390<indexterm><primary>backend database</primary></indexterm>
1391<indexterm><primary>UNIX system account</primary></indexterm>
1392<indexterm><primary>Samba backend database</primary></indexterm>
1393The <smbconfoption name="add machine script"/> does not create the
1394machine account in the Samba backend database; it is there only to create a UNIX system
1395account to which the Samba backend database account can be mapped.
1396</para>
1397
1398</sect2>
1399
1400<sect2>
1401 <title>I Can't Join a Windows 2003 PDC</title>
1402
1403 <para>
1404<indexterm><primary>SMB signing</primary></indexterm>
1405<indexterm><primary>SMB</primary></indexterm>
1406<indexterm><primary>Windows 2003</primary></indexterm>
1407<indexterm><primary>SMB/CIFS</primary></indexterm>
1408 Windows 2003 requires SMB signing. Client-side SMB signing has been implemented in Samba-3.0.
1409 Set <smbconfoption name="client use spnego">yes</smbconfoption> when communicating
1410 with a Windows 2003 server. This will not interfere with other Windows clients that do not
1411 support the more advanced security features of Windows 2003 because the client will simply
1412 negotiate a protocol that both it and the server suppport. This is a well-known fall-back facility
1413 that is built into the SMB/CIFS protocols.
1414 </para>
1415
1416</sect2>
1417
1418</sect1>
1419</chapter>
Note: See TracBrowser for help on using the repository browser.