| [274] | 1 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
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 | 2 | <!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//Samba-Team//DTD DocBook V4.2-Based Variant V1.0//EN" "http://www.samba.org/samba/DTD/samba-doc">
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 | 3 | <chapter id="passdb">
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 | 4 | <chapterinfo>
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 | 5 |         &author.jelmer;
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 | 6 |         &author.jht;
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 | 7 |         &author.jerry;
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 | 8 |         &author.jeremy;
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 | 9 |         <author>&person.gd;<contrib>LDAP updates</contrib></author>
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 | 10 |         <author>
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 | 11 |                 <firstname>Olivier (lem)</firstname><surname>Lemaire</surname>
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 | 12 |                 <affiliation>
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 | 13 |                         <orgname>IDEALX</orgname>
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 | 14 |                         <address><email>olem@IDEALX.org</email></address>
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 | 15 |                 </affiliation>
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 | 16 |         </author>
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 | 17 | 
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 | 18 |         <pubdate>May 24, 2003</pubdate>
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 | 19 | </chapterinfo>
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 | 20 | <title>Account Information Databases</title>
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 | 21 | 
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 | 22 | <para>
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 | 23 | <indexterm><primary>account backends</primary></indexterm>
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 | 24 | <indexterm><primary>password backends</primary></indexterm>
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 | 25 | <indexterm><primary>scalability</primary></indexterm>
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 | 26 | <indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
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 | 27 | Early releases of Samba-3 implemented new capability to work concurrently with multiple account backends. This
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 | 28 | capability was removed beginning with release of Samba 3.0.23. Commencing with Samba 3.0.23 it is possible to
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 | 29 | work with only one specified passwd backend.
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 | 30 | </para>
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 | 31 | 
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 | 32 | <para>
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 | 33 | <indexterm><primary>passdb backend</primary></indexterm>
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 | 34 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
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 | 35 | <indexterm><primary>tdbsam</primary></indexterm>
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 | 36 | <indexterm><primary>ldapsam</primary></indexterm>
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 | 37 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
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 | 38 | <indexterm><primary>single repository</primary></indexterm>
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 | 39 | The three passdb backends that are fully maintained (actively supported) by the Samba Team are:
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 | 40 | <literal>smbpasswd</literal> (being obsoleted), <literal>tdbsam</literal> (a tdb-based binary file format),
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 | 41 | and <literal>ldapsam</literal> (LDAP directory).  Of these, only the <literal>ldapsam</literal> backend
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 | 42 | stores both POSIX (UNIX) and Samba user and group account information in a single repository. The
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 | 43 | <literal>smbpasswd</literal> and <literal>tdbsam</literal> backends store only Samba user accounts.
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 | 44 | </para>
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 | 45 | 
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 | 46 | <para>
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 | 47 | In a strict sense, there are three supported account storage and access systems. One of these is considered
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 | 48 | obsolete (smbpasswd). It is recommended to use the <literal>tdbsam</literal> method for all simple systems. Use
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 | 49 | <literal>ldapsam</literal> for larger and more complex networks.
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 | 50 | </para>
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 | 51 | 
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 | 52 | <para>
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 | 53 | <indexterm><primary>passdb backend</primary></indexterm>
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 | 54 | <indexterm><primary>account storage mechanisms</primary></indexterm>
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 | 55 | <indexterm><primary>account storage system</primary></indexterm>
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 | 56 | <indexterm><primary>user and trust accounts</primary></indexterm>
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 | 57 | <indexterm><primary>machine trust accounts</primary></indexterm>
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 | 58 | <indexterm><primary>computer accounts</primary></indexterm>
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 | 59 | <indexterm><primary>interdomain trust accounts</primary></indexterm>
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 | 60 | In a strict and literal sense, the passdb backends are account storage mechanisms (or methods) alone. The choice
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 | 61 | of terminology can be misleading, however we are stuck with this choice of wording. This chapter documents the
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 | 62 | nature of the account storage system with a focus on user and trust accounts. Trust accounts have two forms,
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 | 63 | machine trust accounts (computer accounts) and interdomain trust accounts. These are all treated as user-like
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 | 64 | entities.
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 | 65 | </para>
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 | 66 | 
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 | 67 | <sect1>
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 | 68 | <title>Features and Benefits</title>
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 | 69 | 
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 | 70 | <para>
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 | 71 | Samba-3 provides for complete backward compatibility with Samba-2.2.x functionality
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 | 72 | as follows:
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 | 73 | <indexterm><primary>SAM backend</primary><secondary>smbpasswd</secondary></indexterm>
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 | 74 | <indexterm><primary>SAM backend</primary><secondary>ldapsam_compat</secondary></indexterm>
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 | 75 | <indexterm><primary>encrypted passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 76 | </para>
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 | 77 | 
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 | 78 | <sect2>
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 | 79 |         <title>Backward Compatibility Account Storage Systems</title>
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 | 80 | 
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 | 81 | <variablelist>
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 | 82 |         <varlistentry><term>Plaintext</term>
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 | 83 |                 <listitem>
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 | 84 |                         <para>
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 | 85 | <indexterm><primary>plaintext</primary></indexterm>
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 | 86 | <indexterm><primary>plaintext authentication</primary></indexterm>
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 | 87 | <indexterm><primary>/etc/passwd</primary></indexterm>
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 | 88 | <indexterm><primary>/etc/shadow</primary></indexterm>
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 | 89 | <indexterm><primary>PAM</primary></indexterm>
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 | 90 |                         This isn't really a backend at all, but is listed here for simplicity.  Samba can be configured to pass
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 | 91 |                         plaintext authentication requests to the traditional UNIX/Linux <filename>/etc/passwd</filename> and
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 | 92 |                         <filename>/etc/shadow</filename>-style subsystems.  On systems that have Pluggable Authentication Modules
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 | 93 |                         (PAM) support, all PAM modules are supported. The behavior is just as it was with Samba-2.2.x, and the
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 | 94 |                         protocol limitations imposed by MS Windows clients apply likewise. Please refer to <link
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 | 95 |                         linkend="passdbtech">Technical Information</link>, for more information regarding the limitations of plaintext
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 | 96 |                         password usage.
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 | 97 |                         </para>
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 | 98 |                 </listitem>
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 | 99 |         </varlistentry>
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 | 100 | 
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 | 101 |         <varlistentry><term>smbpasswd</term>
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 | 102 |                 <listitem>
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 | 103 |                         <para>
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 | 104 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
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 | 105 | <indexterm><primary>LanMan passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 106 | <indexterm><primary>NT-encrypted passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 107 | <indexterm><primary>SAM</primary></indexterm>
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 | 108 |                         This option allows continued use of the <filename>smbpasswd</filename>
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 | 109 |                         file that maintains a plain ASCII (text) layout that includes the MS Windows
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 | 110 |                         LanMan and NT-encrypted passwords as well as a field that stores some
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 | 111 |                         account information. This form of password backend does not store any of
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 | 112 |                         the MS Windows NT/200x SAM (Security Account Manager) information required to
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 | 113 |                         provide the extended controls that are needed for more comprehensive
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 | 114 |                         interoperation with MS Windows NT4/200x servers.
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 | 115 |                         </para>
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 | 116 | 
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 | 117 |                         <para>
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 | 118 |                         This backend should be used only for backward compatibility with older
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 | 119 |                         versions of Samba. It may be deprecated in future releases.
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 | 120 |                         </para>
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 | 121 |                 </listitem>
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 | 122 |         </varlistentry>
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 | 123 | 
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 | 124 |         <varlistentry><term>ldapsam_compat (Samba-2.2 LDAP Compatibility)</term>
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 | 125 |                 <listitem>
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 | 126 |                         <para>
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 | 127 | <indexterm><primary>ldapsam_compat</primary></indexterm>
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 | 128 | <indexterm><primary>Samba-2.2.x LDAP schema</primary></indexterm>
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 | 129 | <indexterm><primary>OpenLDAP backend</primary></indexterm>
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 | 130 |                         There is a password backend option that allows continued operation with
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 | 131 |                         an existing OpenLDAP backend that uses the Samba-2.2.x LDAP schema extension.
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 | 132 |                         This option is provided primarily as a migration tool, although there is
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 | 133 |                         no reason to force migration at this time. This tool will eventually
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 | 134 |                         be deprecated.
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 | 135 |                         </para>
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 | 136 |                 </listitem>
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 | 137 |         </varlistentry>
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 | 138 | </variablelist>
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 | 139 | 
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 | 140 | </sect2>
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 | 141 | 
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 | 142 | <sect2>
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 | 143 | <title>New Account Storage Systems</title>
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 | 144 | 
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 | 145 | <para>
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 | 146 | Samba-3 introduces a number of new password backend capabilities.
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 | 147 | <indexterm><primary>SAM backend</primary><secondary>tdbsam</secondary></indexterm>
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 | 148 | <indexterm><primary>SAM backend</primary><secondary>ldapsam</secondary></indexterm>
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 | 149 | </para>
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 | 150 | 
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 | 151 | <variablelist>
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 | 152 |         <varlistentry><term>tdbsam</term>
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 | 153 |                 <listitem>
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 | 154 |                         <para>
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 | 155 | <indexterm><primary>rich database backend</primary></indexterm>
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 | 156 | <indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
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 | 157 | <indexterm><primary>BDC</primary></indexterm>
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 | 158 |                         This backend provides a rich database backend for local servers. This
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 | 159 |                         backend is not suitable for multiple domain controllers (i.e., PDC + one
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 | 160 |                         or more BDC) installations.
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 | 161 |                         </para>
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 | 162 | 
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 | 163 |                         <para>
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 | 164 | <indexterm><primary>extended SAM</primary></indexterm>
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 | 165 | <indexterm><primary>TDB</primary></indexterm>
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 | 166 | <indexterm><primary>binary format TDB</primary></indexterm>
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 | 167 | <indexterm><primary>trivial database</primary></indexterm>
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 | 168 | <indexterm><primary>system access controls</primary></indexterm>
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 | 169 | <indexterm><primary>MS Windows NT4/200x</primary></indexterm>
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 | 170 |                         The <emphasis>tdbsam</emphasis> password backend stores the old <emphasis>
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 | 171 |                         smbpasswd</emphasis> information plus the extended MS Windows NT/200x
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 | 172 |                         SAM information into a binary format TDB (trivial database) file.
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 | 173 |                         The inclusion of the extended information makes it possible for Samba-3
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 | 174 |                         to implement the same account and system access controls that are possible
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 | 175 |                         with MS Windows NT4/200x-based systems.
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 | 176 |                         </para>
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 | 177 | 
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 | 178 |                         <para>
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 | 179 | <indexterm><primary>simple operation</primary></indexterm>
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 | 180 | <indexterm><primary>OpenLDAP</primary></indexterm>
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 | 181 | <indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
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 | 182 |                         The inclusion of the <emphasis>tdbsam</emphasis> capability is a direct
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 | 183 |                         response to user requests to allow simple site operation without the overhead
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 | 184 |                         of the complexities of running OpenLDAP. It is recommended to use this only
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 | 185 |                         for sites that have fewer than 250 users. For larger sites or implementations,
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 | 186 |                         the use of OpenLDAP or of Active Directory integration is strongly recommended.
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 | 187 |                         </para>
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 | 188 |                 </listitem>
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 | 189 |         </varlistentry>
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 | 190 | 
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 | 191 |         <varlistentry><term>ldapsam</term>
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 | 192 |                 <listitem>
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 | 193 |                         <para>
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 | 194 | <indexterm><primary>rich directory backend</primary></indexterm>
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 | 195 | <indexterm><primary>distributed account</primary></indexterm>
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 | 196 |                         This provides a rich directory backend for distributed account installation.
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 | 197 |                         </para>
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 | 198 | 
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 | 199 |                         <para>
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 | 200 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
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 | 201 | <indexterm><primary>OpenLDAP</primary></indexterm>
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 | 202 | <indexterm><primary>Samba schema</primary></indexterm>
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 | 203 | <indexterm><primary>schema file</primary></indexterm>
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 | 204 | <indexterm><primary>examples/LDAP</primary></indexterm>
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 | 205 |                         Samba-3 has a new and extended LDAP implementation that requires configuration
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 | 206 |                         of OpenLDAP with a new format Samba schema. The new format schema file is
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 | 207 |                         included in the <filename class="directory">examples/LDAP</filename> directory of the Samba distribution.
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 | 208 |                         </para>
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 | 209 | 
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 | 210 |                         <para>
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 | 211 | <indexterm><primary>expands control abilities</primary></indexterm>
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 | 212 | <indexterm><primary>profile</primary></indexterm>
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 | 213 | <indexterm><primary>home directories</primary></indexterm>
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 | 214 | <indexterm><primary>account access controls</primary></indexterm>
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 | 215 | <indexterm><primary>greater scalability</primary></indexterm>
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 | 216 |                         The new LDAP implementation significantly expands the control abilities that
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 | 217 |                         were possible with prior versions of Samba. It is now possible to specify
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 | 218 |                         <quote>per-user</quote> profile settings, home directories, account access controls, and
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 | 219 |                         much more. Corporate sites will see that the Samba Team has listened to their
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 | 220 |                         requests both for capability and greater scalability.
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 | 221 |                         </para>
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 | 222 |                 </listitem>
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 | 223 |         </varlistentry>
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 | 224 | 
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 | 225 | </variablelist>
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 | 226 | 
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 | 227 | </sect2>
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 | 228 | 
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 | 229 | </sect1>
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 | 230 | 
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 | 231 | <sect1 id="passdbtech">
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 | 232 |         <title>Technical Information</title>
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 | 233 | 
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 | 234 |         <para>
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 | 235 | <indexterm><primary>plaintext passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 236 | <indexterm><primary>encrypted passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 237 |         Old Windows clients send plaintext passwords over the wire. Samba can check these
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 | 238 |         passwords by encrypting them and comparing them to the hash stored in the UNIX user database.
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 | 239 |         </para>
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 | 240 | 
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 | 241 |         <para>
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 | 242 | <indexterm><primary>encrypted passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 243 | <indexterm><primary>LanMan</primary></indexterm>
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 | 244 | <indexterm><primary>plaintext passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 245 | <indexterm><primary>registry</primary></indexterm>
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 | 246 |         Newer Windows clients send encrypted passwords (LanMan and NT hashes) instead of plaintext passwords over
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 | 247 |         the wire. The newest clients will send only encrypted passwords and refuse to send plaintext passwords unless
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 | 248 |         their registry is tweaked.
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 | 249 |         </para>
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 | 250 | 
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 | 251 |         <para>
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 | 252 | <indexterm><primary>UNIX-style encrypted passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 253 | <indexterm><primary>converted</primary></indexterm>
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 | 254 |         Many people ask why Samba cannot simply use the UNIX password database. Windows requires
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 | 255 |         passwords that are encrypted in its own format.  The UNIX passwords can't be converted to
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 | 256 |         UNIX-style encrypted passwords. Because of that, you can't use the standard UNIX user
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 | 257 |         database, and you have to store the LanMan and NT hashes somewhere else.
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 | 258 |         </para>
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 | 259 | 
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 | 260 |         <para>
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 | 261 | <indexterm><primary>differently encrypted passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 262 | <indexterm><primary>profile</primary></indexterm>
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 | 263 | <indexterm><primary>workstations</primary></indexterm>
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 | 264 | <indexterm><primary>tdbsam</primary></indexterm>
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 | 265 |         In addition to differently encrypted passwords, Windows also stores certain data for each
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 | 266 |         user that is not stored in a UNIX user database: for example, workstations the user may logon from,
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 | 267 |         the location where the user's profile is stored, and so on. Samba retrieves and stores this
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 | 268 |         information using a <smbconfoption name="passdb backend"/>. Commonly available backends are LDAP,
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 | 269 |         tdbsam, and plain text file. For more information, see the man page for &smb.conf; regarding the
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 | 270 |         <smbconfoption name="passdb backend"/> parameter.
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 | 271 |         </para>
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 | 272 | 
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 | 273 | 
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 | 274 |         <figure id="idmap-sid2uid">
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 | 275 |                 <title>IDMAP: Resolution of SIDs to UIDs.</title>
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 | 276 |                 <imagefile scale="40">idmap-sid2uid</imagefile>
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 | 277 |         </figure>
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 | 278 | 
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 | 279 |         <para>
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 | 280 |         <indexterm><primary>SID</primary></indexterm>
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 | 281 | <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
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 | 282 | <indexterm><primary>SID</primary></indexterm>
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 | 283 |         The resolution of SIDs to UIDs is fundamental to correct operation of Samba. In both cases shown, if winbindd
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 | 284 |         is not running or cannot be contacted, then only local SID/UID resolution is possible. See <link
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 | 285 |         linkend="idmap-sid2uid">resolution of SIDs to UIDs</link> and <link linkend="idmap-uid2sid">resolution of UIDs
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 | 286 |         to SIDs</link> diagrams.
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 | 287 |         </para>
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 | 288 | 
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 | 289 |         <figure id="idmap-uid2sid">
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 | 290 |                 <title>IDMAP: Resolution of UIDs to SIDs.</title>
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 | 291 |                 <imagefile scale="50">idmap-uid2sid</imagefile>
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 | 292 |         </figure>
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 | 293 | 
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 | 294 |         <sect2>
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 | 295 |         <title>Important Notes About Security</title>
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 | 296 | 
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 | 297 |                 <para>
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 | 298 | <indexterm><primary>SMB password encryption</primary></indexterm>
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 | 299 | <indexterm><primary>clear-text passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 300 | <indexterm><primary>hashed password equivalent</primary></indexterm>
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 | 301 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
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 | 302 | <indexterm><primary>secret</primary></indexterm>
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 | 303 |                 The UNIX and SMB password encryption techniques seem similar on the surface. This
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 | 304 |                 similarity is, however, only skin deep. The UNIX scheme typically sends clear-text
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 | 305 |                 passwords over the network when logging in. This is bad. The SMB encryption scheme
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 | 306 |                 never sends the clear-text password over the network, but it does store the 16-byte
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 | 307 |                 hashed values on disk. This is also bad. Why? Because the 16 byte hashed values
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 | 308 |                 are a <quote>password equivalent.</quote> You cannot derive the user's password from them, but
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 | 309 |                 they could potentially be used in a modified client to gain access to a server.
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 | 310 |                 This would require considerable technical knowledge on behalf of the attacker but
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 | 311 |                 is perfectly possible. You should therefore treat the data stored in whatever passdb
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 | 312 |                 backend you use (smbpasswd file, LDAP) as though it contained the clear-text
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 | 313 |                 passwords of all your users. Its contents must be kept secret, and the file should
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 | 314 |                 be protected accordingly.
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 | 315 |                 </para>
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 | 316 | 
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 | 317 |                 <para>
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 | 318 | <indexterm><primary>password scheme</primary></indexterm>
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 | 319 | <indexterm><primary>plaintext passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 320 | <indexterm><primary>compatible</primary></indexterm>
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 | 321 |                 Ideally, we would like a password scheme that involves neither plaintext passwords
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 | 322 |                 on the network nor plaintext passwords on disk. Unfortunately, this is not available because Samba is stuck with
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 | 323 |                 having to be compatible with other SMB systems (Windows NT, Windows for Workgroups, Windows 9x/Me).
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 | 324 |                 </para>
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 | 325 | 
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 | 326 |                 <para>
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 | 327 | <indexterm><primary>encrypted passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 328 | <indexterm><primary>plaintext passwords</primary></indexterm>
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 | 329 |                 Windows NT 4.0 Service Pack 3 changed the default setting so plaintext passwords
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 | 330 |                 are disabled from being sent over the wire. This mandates either the use of encrypted
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 | 331 |                 password support or editing the Windows NT registry to re-enable plaintext passwords.
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 | 332 |                 </para>
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 | 333 | 
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 | 334 |                 <para>
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 | 335 | <indexterm><primary>domain security</primary></indexterm>
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 | 336 | <indexterm><primary>domain environment</primary></indexterm>
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 | 337 |                 The following versions of Microsoft Windows do not support full domain security protocols,
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 | 338 |                 although they may log onto a domain environment:
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 | 339 |                 </para>
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 | 340 | 
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 | 341 |                 <itemizedlist>
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 | 342 |                         <listitem><para>MS DOS Network client 3.0 with the basic network redirector installed.</para></listitem>
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 | 343 |                         <listitem><para>Windows 95 with the network redirector update installed.</para></listitem>
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 | 344 |                         <listitem><para>Windows 98 [Second Edition].</para></listitem>
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 | 345 |                         <listitem><para>Windows Me.</para></listitem>
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 | 346 |                 </itemizedlist>
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 | 347 | 
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 | 348 |                 <note>
 | 
|---|
 | 349 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 350 | <indexterm><primary>Windows XP Home</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 351 | <indexterm><primary>domain member</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 352 | <indexterm><primary>domain logons</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 353 |                 MS Windows XP Home does not have facilities to become a domain member, and it cannot participate in domain logons.
 | 
|---|
 | 354 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 355 |                 </note>
 | 
|---|
 | 356 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 357 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 358 |                 The following versions of MS Windows fully support domain security protocols.
 | 
|---|
 | 359 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 360 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 361 |                 <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 362 |                         <listitem><para>Windows NT 3.5x.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 363 |                         <listitem><para>Windows NT 4.0.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 364 |                         <listitem><para>Windows 2000 Professional.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 365 |                         <listitem><para>Windows 200x Server/Advanced Server.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 366 |                         <listitem><para>Windows XP Professional.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 367 |                 </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 368 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 369 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 370 | <indexterm><primary>SMB/CIFS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 371 | <indexterm><primary>authentication</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 372 | <indexterm><primary>challenge/response mechanis</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 373 | <indexterm><primary>clear-text</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 374 | <indexterm><primary>encrypted</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 375 | <indexterm><primary>negotiate</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 376 |                 All current releases of Microsoft SMB/CIFS clients support authentication via the
 | 
|---|
 | 377 |                 SMB challenge/response mechanism described here. Enabling clear-text authentication
 | 
|---|
 | 378 |                 does not disable the ability of the client to participate in encrypted authentication.
 | 
|---|
 | 379 |                 Instead, it allows the client to negotiate either plaintext or encrypted password
 | 
|---|
 | 380 |                 handling.
 | 
|---|
 | 381 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 382 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 383 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 384 | <indexterm><primary>cached encrypted password</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 385 | <indexterm><primary>plaintext passwords</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 386 | <indexterm><primary>registry change</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 387 | <indexterm><primary>auto-reconnect</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 388 | <indexterm><primary>encrypted passwords</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 389 |                 MS Windows clients will cache the encrypted password alone. Where plaintext passwords
 | 
|---|
 | 390 |                 are re-enabled through the appropriate registry change, the plaintext password is never
 | 
|---|
 | 391 |                 cached. This means that in the event that a network connections should become disconnected
 | 
|---|
 | 392 |                 (broken), only the cached (encrypted) password will be sent to the resource server to
 | 
|---|
 | 393 |                 effect an auto-reconnect. If the resource server does not support encrypted passwords, the
 | 
|---|
 | 394 |                 auto-reconnect will fail. Use of encrypted passwords is strongly advised.
 | 
|---|
 | 395 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 396 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 397 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 398 |                 <title>Advantages of Encrypted Passwords</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 399 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 400 |                         <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 401 |                                 <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 402 | <indexterm><primary>passed across the network</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 403 | <indexterm><primary>network sniffer</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 404 | <indexterm><primary>SMB server</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 405 |                                 Plaintext passwords are not passed across the network. Someone using a network sniffer
 | 
|---|
 | 406 |                                 cannot just record passwords going to the SMB server.
 | 
|---|
 | 407 |                                 </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 408 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 409 |                                 <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 410 | <indexterm><primary>not stored anywhere</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 411 | <indexterm><primary>memory</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 412 | <indexterm><primary>disk</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 413 |                                 Plaintext passwords are not stored anywhere in memory or on disk.
 | 
|---|
 | 414 |                                 </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 415 |  
 | 
|---|
 | 416 |                                 <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 417 | <indexterm><primary>encrypted passwords</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 418 | <indexterm><primary>user-level security</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 419 | <indexterm><primary>password prompt</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 420 | <indexterm><primary>SMB encryption</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 421 |                                 Windows NT does not like talking to a server that does not support encrypted passwords. It will refuse to
 | 
|---|
 | 422 |                                 browse the server if the server is also in user-level security mode. It will insist on prompting the user for
 | 
|---|
 | 423 |                                 the password on each connection, which is very annoying. The only thing you can do to stop this is to use SMB
 | 
|---|
 | 424 |                                 encryption.
 | 
|---|
 | 425 |                                 </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 426 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 427 |                                 <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 428 | <indexterm><primary>encrypted password</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 429 | <indexterm><primary>automatic reconnects</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 430 |                                 Encrypted password support allows automatic share (resource) reconnects.
 | 
|---|
 | 431 |                                 </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 432 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 433 |                                 <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 434 | <indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 435 | <indexterm><primary>BDC</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 436 |                                 Encrypted passwords are essential for PDC/BDC operation.
 | 
|---|
 | 437 |                                 </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 438 |                         </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 439 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 440 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 441 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 442 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 443 |                 <title>Advantages of Non-Encrypted Passwords</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 444 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 445 |                         <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 446 |                                 <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 447 | <indexterm><primary>cached in memory</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 448 |                                 Plaintext passwords are not kept on disk and are not cached in memory.
 | 
|---|
 | 449 |                                 </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 450 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 451 |                                 <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 452 | <indexterm><primary>Login</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 453 | <indexterm><primary>FTP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 454 |                                 Plaintext passwords use the same password file as other UNIX services, such as Login and FTP.
 | 
|---|
 | 455 |                                 </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 456 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 457 |                                 <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 458 | <indexterm><primary>Telnet</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 459 | <indexterm><primary>FTP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 460 |                                 Use of other services (such as Telnet and FTP) that send plaintext passwords over
 | 
|---|
 | 461 |                                 the network makes sending them for SMB not such a big deal.
 | 
|---|
 | 462 |                                 </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 463 |                         </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 464 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 465 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 466 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 467 |         <sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 468 |         <title>Mapping User Identifiers between MS Windows and UNIX</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 469 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 470 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 471 | <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 472 | <indexterm><primary>SID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 473 | <indexterm><primary>mapping</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 474 |         Every operation in UNIX/Linux requires a user identifier (UID), just as in
 | 
|---|
 | 475 |         MS Windows NT4/200x this requires a security identifier (SID). Samba provides
 | 
|---|
 | 476 |         two means for mapping an MS Windows user to a UNIX/Linux UID.
 | 
|---|
 | 477 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 478 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 479 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 480 | <indexterm><primary>Samba SAM</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 481 | <indexterm><primary>SAM</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 482 | <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 483 | <indexterm><primary>account information database</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 484 | <indexterm><primary>local user account</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 485 |         First, all Samba SAM database accounts require a UNIX/Linux UID that the account will map to. As users are
 | 
|---|
 | 486 |         added to the account information database, Samba will call the <smbconfoption name="add user script"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 487 |         interface to add the account to the Samba host OS. In essence all accounts in the local SAM require a local
 | 
|---|
 | 488 |         user account.
 | 
|---|
 | 489 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 490 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 491 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 492 |         <indexterm><primary>idmap uid</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 493 |         <indexterm><primary>idmap gid</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 494 |         <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 495 |         <indexterm><primary>SAM</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 496 |         <indexterm><primary>foreign domain</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 497 |         <indexterm><primary>non-member Windows client</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 498 |         <indexterm><primary>SID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 499 |         The second way to map Windows SID to UNIX UID is via the <emphasis>idmap uid</emphasis> and
 | 
|---|
 | 500 |         <emphasis>idmap gid</emphasis> parameters in &smb.conf;.  Please refer to the man page for information about
 | 
|---|
 | 501 |         these parameters.  These parameters are essential when mapping users from a remote (non-member Windows client
 | 
|---|
 | 502 |         or a member of a foreign domain) SAM server.
 | 
|---|
 | 503 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 504 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 505 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 506 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 507 |         <sect2 id="idmapbackend">
 | 
|---|
 | 508 |         <title>Mapping Common UIDs/GIDs on Distributed Machines</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 509 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 510 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 511 | <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 512 | <indexterm><primary>GID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 513 | <indexterm><primary>BDC</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 514 | <indexterm><primary>domain member servers</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 515 | <indexterm><primary>NFS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 516 | <indexterm><primary>rsync</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 517 |         Samba-3 has a special facility that makes it possible to maintain identical UIDs and GIDs
 | 
|---|
 | 518 |         on all servers in a distributed network. A distributed network is one where there exists
 | 
|---|
 | 519 |         a PDC, one or more BDCs, and/or one or more domain member servers. Why is this important?
 | 
|---|
 | 520 |         This is important if files are being shared over more than one protocol (e.g., NFS) and where
 | 
|---|
 | 521 |         users are copying files across UNIX/Linux systems using tools such as <command>rsync</command>.
 | 
|---|
 | 522 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 523 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 524 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 525 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP-based</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 526 | <indexterm><primary>idmap backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 527 | <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 528 | <indexterm><primary>GID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 529 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 530 | <indexterm><primary>SAM backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 531 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP idmap Backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 532 |         <indexterm><primary>idmap backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 533 |         The special facility is enabled using a parameter called <parameter>idmap backend</parameter>.
 | 
|---|
 | 534 |         The default setting for this parameter is an empty string. Technically it is possible to use
 | 
|---|
 | 535 |         an LDAP-based idmap backend for UIDs and GIDs, but it makes most sense when this is done for
 | 
|---|
 | 536 |         network configurations that also use LDAP for the SAM backend.
 | 
|---|
 | 537 |         <link linkend="idmapbackendexample">Example Configuration with the LDAP idmap Backend</link>
 | 
|---|
 | 538 |         shows that configuration.
 | 
|---|
 | 539 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 540 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 541 | <indexterm><primary>SAM backend</primary><secondary>ldapsam</secondary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 542 | <example id="idmapbackendexample">
 | 
|---|
 | 543 | <title>Example Configuration with the LDAP idmap Backend</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 544 | <smbconfblock>
 | 
|---|
 | 545 | <smbconfsection name="[global]"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 546 | <smbconfoption name="idmap backend">ldap:ldap://ldap-server.quenya.org:636</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 547 | <smbconfcomment>Alternatively, this could be specified as:</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 548 | <smbconfoption name="idmap backend">ldap:ldaps://ldap-server.quenya.org</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 549 | </smbconfblock>
 | 
|---|
 | 550 | </example>
 | 
|---|
 | 551 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 552 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 553 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP backends</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 554 | <indexterm><primary>PADL Software</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 555 |         A network administrator who wants to make significant use of LDAP backends will sooner or later be
 | 
|---|
 | 556 |         exposed to the excellent work done by PADL Software. PADL <ulink url="http://www.padl.com"/> have
 | 
|---|
 | 557 |         produced and released to open source an array of tools that might be of interest. These tools include:
 | 
|---|
 | 558 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 559 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 560 |         <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 561 |                 <listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 562 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 563 | <indexterm><primary>nss_ldap</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 564 | <indexterm><primary>NSS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 565 | <indexterm><primary>AIX</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 566 | <indexterm><primary>Linux</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 567 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 568 | <indexterm><primary>Solaris</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 569 | <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 570 | <indexterm><primary>GID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 571 |                 <emphasis>nss_ldap:</emphasis> An LDAP name service switch (NSS) module to provide native
 | 
|---|
 | 572 |                 name service support for AIX, Linux, Solaris, and other operating systems. This tool
 | 
|---|
 | 573 |                 can be used for centralized storage and retrieval of UIDs and GIDs.
 | 
|---|
 | 574 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 575 |                 </listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 576 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 577 |                 <listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 578 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 579 | <indexterm><primary>pam_ldap</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 580 | <indexterm><primary>PAM</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 581 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 582 | <indexterm><primary>access authentication</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 583 |                 <emphasis>pam_ldap:</emphasis> A PAM module that provides LDAP integration for UNIX/Linux
 | 
|---|
 | 584 |                 system access authentication.
 | 
|---|
 | 585 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 586 |                 </listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 587 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 588 |                 <listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 589 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 590 | <indexterm><primary>idmap_ad</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 591 | <indexterm><primary>IDMAP backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 592 | <indexterm><primary>RFC 2307</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 593 | <indexterm><primary>PADL</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 594 |                 <emphasis>idmap_ad:</emphasis> An IDMAP backend that supports the Microsoft Services for
 | 
|---|
 | 595 |                 UNIX RFC 2307 schema available from the PADL Web
 | 
|---|
 | 596 |                 <ulink url="http://www.padl.com/download/xad_oss_plugins.tar.gz">site</ulink>.
 | 
|---|
 | 597 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 598 |                 </listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 599 |         </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 600 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 601 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 602 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 603 |         <sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 604 |         <title>Comments Regarding LDAP</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 605 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 606 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 607 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary><secondary>directories</secondary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 608 | <indexterm><primary>architecture</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 609 | <indexterm><primary>FIM</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 610 | <indexterm><primary>SSO</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 611 |         There is much excitement and interest in LDAP directories in the information technology world
 | 
|---|
 | 612 |         today. The LDAP architecture was designed to be highly scalable. It was also designed for
 | 
|---|
 | 613 |         use across a huge number of potential areas of application encompassing a wide range of operating
 | 
|---|
 | 614 |         systems and platforms. LDAP technologies are at the heart of the current generations of Federated
 | 
|---|
 | 615 |         Identity Management (FIM) solutions that can underlie a corporate Single Sign-On (SSO) environment.
 | 
|---|
 | 616 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 617 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 618 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 619 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 620 | <indexterm><primary>eDirectory</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 621 | <indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 622 | <indexterm><primary>authentication</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 623 |         LDAP implementations have been built across a wide variety of platforms. It lies at the core of Microsoft
 | 
|---|
 | 624 |         Windows Active Directory services (ADS), Novell's eDirectory, as well as many others. Implementation of the
 | 
|---|
 | 625 |         directory services LDAP involves interaction with legacy as well as new generation applications, all of which
 | 
|---|
 | 626 |         depend on some form of authentication services.
 | 
|---|
 | 627 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 628 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 629 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 630 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP directory</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 631 | <indexterm><primary>authentication</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 632 | <indexterm><primary>access controls</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 633 | <indexterm><primary>intermediate tools</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 634 | <indexterm><primary>middle-ware</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 635 | <indexterm><primary>central environment</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 636 | <indexterm><primary>infrastructure</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 637 | <indexterm><primary>login shells</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 638 | <indexterm><primary>mail</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 639 | <indexterm><primary>messaging systems</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 640 | <indexterm><primary>quota controls</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 641 | <indexterm><primary>printing systems</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 642 | <indexterm><primary>DNS servers</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 643 | <indexterm><primary>DHCP servers</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 644 |         UNIX services can utilize LDAP directory information for authentication and access controls
 | 
|---|
 | 645 |         through intermediate tools and utilities. The total environment that consists of the LDAP directory
 | 
|---|
 | 646 |         and the middle-ware tools and utilities makes it possible for all user access to the UNIX platform
 | 
|---|
 | 647 |         to be managed from a central environment and yet distributed to wherever the point of need may
 | 
|---|
 | 648 |         be physically located. Applications that benefit from this infrastructure include: UNIX login
 | 
|---|
 | 649 |         shells, mail and messaging systems, quota controls, printing systems, DNS servers, DHCP servers,
 | 
|---|
 | 650 |         and also Samba.
 | 
|---|
 | 651 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 652 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 653 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 654 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 655 | <indexterm><primary>passdb backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 656 | <indexterm><primary>scalable</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 657 | <indexterm><primary>SAM backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 658 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP directory</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 659 | <indexterm><primary>management costs</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 660 |         Many sites are installing LDAP for the first time in order to provide a scalable passdb backend
 | 
|---|
 | 661 |         for Samba. Others are faced with the need to adapt an existing LDAP directory to new uses such
 | 
|---|
 | 662 |         as for the Samba SAM backend. Whatever your particular need and attraction to Samba may be,
 | 
|---|
 | 663 |         decisions made in respect of the design of the LDAP directory structure and its implementation
 | 
|---|
 | 664 |         are of a durable nature for the site. These have far-reaching implications that affect long-term
 | 
|---|
 | 665 |         information systems management costs.
 | 
|---|
 | 666 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 667 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 668 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 669 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP deployment</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 670 | <indexterm><primary>Directory Information Tree</primary><see>DIT</see></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 671 |         Do not rush into an LDAP deployment. Take the time to understand how the design of the Directory
 | 
|---|
 | 672 |         Information Tree (DIT) may impact current and future site needs, as well as the ability to meet
 | 
|---|
 | 673 |         them. The way that Samba SAM information should be stored within the DIT varies from site to site
 | 
|---|
 | 674 |         and with each implementation new experience is gained. It is well understood by LDAP veterans that
 | 
|---|
 | 675 |         first implementations create awakening, second implementations of LDAP create fear, and
 | 
|---|
 | 676 |         third-generation deployments bring peace and tranquility.
 | 
|---|
 | 677 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 678 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 679 |         <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 680 |         <title>Caution Regarding LDAP and Samba</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 681 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 682 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 683 | <indexterm><primary>POSIX identity</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 684 | <indexterm><primary>networking environment</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 685 | <indexterm><primary>user accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 686 | <indexterm><primary>group accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 687 | <indexterm><primary>machine trust accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 688 | <indexterm><primary>interdomain trust accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 689 | <indexterm><primary>intermediate information</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 690 |         Samba requires UNIX POSIX identity information as well as a place to store information that is
 | 
|---|
 | 691 |         specific to Samba and the Windows networking environment. The most used information that must
 | 
|---|
 | 692 |         be dealt with includes: user accounts, group accounts, machine trust accounts, interdomain
 | 
|---|
 | 693 |         trust accounts, and intermediate information specific to Samba internals.
 | 
|---|
 | 694 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 695 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 696 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 697 | <indexterm><primary>deployment guidelines</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 698 | <indexterm><primary>HOWTO documents</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 699 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 700 |         The example deployment guidelines in this book, as well as other books and HOWTO documents
 | 
|---|
 | 701 |         available from the internet may not fit with established directory designs and implementations.
 | 
|---|
 | 702 |         The existing DIT may not be able to accommodate the simple information layout proposed in common
 | 
|---|
 | 703 |         sources. Additionally, you may find that the common scripts and tools that are used to provision
 | 
|---|
 | 704 |         the LDAP directory for use with Samba may not suit your needs.
 | 
|---|
 | 705 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 706 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 707 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 708 | <indexterm><primary>existing LDAP DIT</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 709 |         It is not uncommon, for sites that have existing LDAP DITs to find necessity to generate a
 | 
|---|
 | 710 |         set of site-specific scripts and utilities to make it possible to deploy Samba within the
 | 
|---|
 | 711 |         scope of site operations. The way that user and group accounts are distributed throughout
 | 
|---|
 | 712 |         the DIT may make this a challenging matter. The solution will, of course, be rewarding, but
 | 
|---|
 | 713 |         the journey to it may be challenging. Take time to understand site needs and do not rush
 | 
|---|
 | 714 |         into deployment.
 | 
|---|
 | 715 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 716 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 717 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 718 | <indexterm><primary>scripts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 719 | <indexterm><primary>tools</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 720 |         Above all, do not blindly use scripts and tools that are not suitable for your site. Check
 | 
|---|
 | 721 |         and validate all scripts before you execute them to make sure that the existing infrastructure
 | 
|---|
 | 722 |         will not be damaged by inadvertent use of an inappropriate tool.
 | 
|---|
 | 723 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 724 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 725 |         </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 726 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 727 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 728 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 729 |         <sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 730 |         <title>LDAP Directories and Windows Computer Accounts</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 731 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 732 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 733 | <indexterm><primary>turnkey solution</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 734 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP.</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 735 | <indexterm><primary>frustrating experience</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 736 |                 Samba doesn't provide a turnkey solution to LDAP. It is best to deal with the design and
 | 
|---|
 | 737 |                 configuration of an LDAP directory prior to integration with Samba. A working knowledge
 | 
|---|
 | 738 |                 of LDAP makes Samba integration easy, and the lack of a working knowledge of LDAP can make
 | 
|---|
 | 739 |                 it a frustrating experience.
 | 
|---|
 | 740 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 741 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 742 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 743 | <indexterm><primary>computer accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 744 | <indexterm><primary>machine accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 745 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 746 |                 Computer (machine) accounts can be placed wherever you like in an LDAP directory subject
 | 
|---|
 | 747 |                 to some constraints that are described in this chapter.
 | 
|---|
 | 748 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 749 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 750 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 751 | <indexterm><primary>POSIX</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 752 | <indexterm><primary>sambaSamAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 753 | <indexterm><primary>computer accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 754 | <indexterm><primary>machine accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 755 | <indexterm><primary>Windows NT4/200X</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 756 | <indexterm><primary>user account</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 757 | <indexterm><primary>trust accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 758 |                 The POSIX and sambaSamAccount components of computer (machine) accounts are both used by Samba.
 | 
|---|
 | 759 |                 Thus, machine accounts are treated inside Samba in the same way that Windows NT4/200X treats
 | 
|---|
 | 760 |                 them. A user account and a machine account are indistinguishable from each other, except that
 | 
|---|
 | 761 |                 the machine account ends in a $ character, as do trust accounts.
 | 
|---|
 | 762 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 763 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 764 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 765 | <indexterm><primary>user</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 766 | <indexterm><primary>group</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 767 | <indexterm><primary>machine</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 768 | <indexterm><primary>trust</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 769 | <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 770 |                 The need for Windows user, group, machine, trust, and other accounts to be tied to a valid UNIX
 | 
|---|
 | 771 |                 UID is a design decision that was made a long way back in the history of Samba development. It
 | 
|---|
 | 772 |                 is unlikely that this decision will be reversed or changed during the remaining life of the
 | 
|---|
 | 773 |                 Samba-3.x series.
 | 
|---|
 | 774 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 775 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 776 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 777 | <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 778 | <indexterm><primary>SID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 779 | <indexterm><primary>NSS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 780 |                 The resolution of a UID from the Windows SID is achieved within Samba through a mechanism that
 | 
|---|
 | 781 |                 must refer back to the host operating system on which Samba is running. The NSS is the preferred
 | 
|---|
 | 782 |                 mechanism that shields applications (like Samba) from the need to know everything about every
 | 
|---|
 | 783 |                 host OS it runs on.
 | 
|---|
 | 784 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 785 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 786 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 787 | <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 788 | <indexterm><primary>passwd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 789 | <indexterm><primary>shadow</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 790 | <indexterm><primary>group</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 791 | <indexterm><primary>NSS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 792 | <indexterm><primary>winbindd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 793 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 794 |                 Samba asks the host OS to provide a UID via the <quote>passwd</quote>, <quote>shadow</quote>,
 | 
|---|
 | 795 |                 and <quote>group</quote> facilities in the NSS control (configuration) file. The best tool
 | 
|---|
 | 796 |                 for achieving this is left up to the UNIX administrator to determine. It is not imposed by
 | 
|---|
 | 797 |                 Samba. Samba provides winbindd with its support libraries as one method. It is
 | 
|---|
 | 798 |                 possible to do this via LDAP, and for that Samba provides the appropriate hooks so that
 | 
|---|
 | 799 |                 all account entities can be located in an LDAP directory.
 | 
|---|
 | 800 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 801 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 802 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 803 | <indexterm><primary>PADL</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 804 | <indexterm><primary>nss_ldap</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 805 | <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 806 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 807 | <indexterm><primary>documentation</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 808 |                 For many the weapon of choice is to use the PADL nss_ldap utility. This utility must
 | 
|---|
 | 809 |                 be configured so that computer accounts can be resolved to a POSIX/UNIX account UID. That
 | 
|---|
 | 810 |                 is fundamentally an LDAP design question.  The information provided on the Samba list and
 | 
|---|
 | 811 |                 in the documentation is directed at providing working examples only. The design
 | 
|---|
 | 812 |                 of an LDAP directory is a complex subject that is beyond the scope of this documentation.
 | 
|---|
 | 813 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 814 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 815 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 816 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 817 | </sect1>
 | 
|---|
 | 818 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 819 | <sect1 id="acctmgmttools">
 | 
|---|
 | 820 | <title>Account Management Tools</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 821 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 822 | <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 823 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 824 | <indexterm><primary>machine accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 825 | <indexterm><primary>management tools</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 826 | Samba provides two tools for management of user and machine accounts:
 | 
|---|
 | 827 | <command>smbpasswd</command> and <command>pdbedit</command>.
 | 
|---|
 | 828 | </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 829 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 830 | <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 831 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 832 | <indexterm><primary>password aging</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 833 | <indexterm><primary>failed logins</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 834 | The <command>pdbedit</command> can be used to manage account policies in addition to
 | 
|---|
 | 835 | Samba user account information. The policy management capability is used to administer
 | 
|---|
 | 836 | domain default settings for password aging and management controls to handle failed login
 | 
|---|
 | 837 | attempts.
 | 
|---|
 | 838 | </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 839 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 840 | <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 841 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 842 | <indexterm><primary>storage mechanism</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 843 | <indexterm><primary>SambaSAMAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 844 | <indexterm><primary>net</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 845 | Some people are confused when reference is made to <literal>smbpasswd</literal> because the
 | 
|---|
 | 846 | name refers to a storage mechanism for SambaSAMAccount information, but it is also the name
 | 
|---|
 | 847 | of a utility tool. That tool is destined to eventually be replaced by new functionality that
 | 
|---|
 | 848 | is being added to the <command>net</command> toolset (see <link linkend="NetCommand">the Net Command</link>.
 | 
|---|
 | 849 | </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 850 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 851 |         <sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 852 |         <title>The <command>smbpasswd</command> Tool</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 853 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 854 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 855 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 856 | <indexterm><primary>passwd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 857 | <indexterm><primary>yppasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 858 | <indexterm><primary>passdb backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 859 | <indexterm><primary>storage methods</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 860 |                 The <command>smbpasswd</command> utility is similar to the <command>passwd</command>
 | 
|---|
 | 861 |                 and <command>yppasswd</command> programs. It maintains the two 32 byte password
 | 
|---|
 | 862 |                 fields in the passdb backend. This utility operates independently of the actual
 | 
|---|
 | 863 |                 account and password storage methods used (as specified by the <parameter>passdb
 | 
|---|
 | 864 |                 backend</parameter> in the &smb.conf; file.
 | 
|---|
 | 865 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 866 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 867 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 868 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 869 | <indexterm><primary>client-server mode</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 870 |                 <command>smbpasswd</command> works in a client-server mode where it contacts the
 | 
|---|
 | 871 |                 local smbd to change the user's password on its behalf. This has enormous benefits.
 | 
|---|
 | 872 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 873 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 874 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 875 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 876 | <indexterm><primary>change passwords</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 877 |                 <command>smbpasswd</command> has the capability to change passwords on Windows NT
 | 
|---|
 | 878 |                 servers (this only works when the request is sent to the NT PDC if changing an NT
 | 
|---|
 | 879 |                 domain user's password).
 | 
|---|
 | 880 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 881 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 882 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 883 |                 <indexterm><primary>user management</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 884 |                 <indexterm><primary>user account</primary><secondary>Adding/Deleting</secondary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 885 |                 <command>smbpasswd</command> can be used to:
 | 
|---|
 | 886 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 887 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 888 |                 <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 889 |                         <listitem><para><emphasis>add</emphasis> user or machine accounts.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 890 |                         <listitem><para><emphasis>delete</emphasis> user or machine accounts.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 891 |                         <listitem><para><emphasis>enable</emphasis> user or machine accounts.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 892 |                         <listitem><para><emphasis>disable</emphasis> user or machine accounts.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 893 |                         <listitem><para><emphasis>set to NULL</emphasis> user passwords.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 894 |                         <listitem><para><emphasis>manage</emphasis> interdomain trust accounts.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 895 |                 </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 896 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 897 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 898 |                 To run smbpasswd as a normal user, just type:
 | 
|---|
 | 899 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 900 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 901 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 902 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 903 | &prompt;<userinput>smbpasswd</userinput>
 | 
|---|
 | 904 | <prompt>Old SMB password: </prompt><userinput><replaceable>secret</replaceable></userinput>
 | 
|---|
 | 905 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 906 |                 For <replaceable>secret</replaceable>, type the old value here or press return if
 | 
|---|
 | 907 |                 there is no old password.
 | 
|---|
 | 908 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 909 | <prompt>New SMB Password: </prompt><userinput><replaceable>new secret</replaceable></userinput>
 | 
|---|
 | 910 | <prompt>Repeat New SMB Password: </prompt><userinput><replaceable>new secret</replaceable></userinput>
 | 
|---|
 | 911 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 912 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 913 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 914 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 915 |                 If the old value does not match the current value stored for that user, or the two
 | 
|---|
 | 916 |                 new values do not match each other, then the password will not be changed.
 | 
|---|
 | 917 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 918 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 919 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 920 | <indexterm><primary>SMB password</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 921 |                 When invoked by an ordinary user, the command will allow only the user to change his or her own
 | 
|---|
 | 922 |                 SMB password.
 | 
|---|
 | 923 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 924 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 925 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 926 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 927 | <indexterm><primary>SMB password</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 928 |                 When run by root, <command>smbpasswd</command> may take an optional argument specifying
 | 
|---|
 | 929 |                 the username whose SMB password you wish to change. When run as root, <command>smbpasswd</command>
 | 
|---|
 | 930 |                 does not prompt for or check the old password value, thus allowing root to set passwords
 | 
|---|
 | 931 |                 for users who have forgotten their passwords.
 | 
|---|
 | 932 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 933 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 934 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 935 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 936 | <indexterm><primary>passwd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 937 | <indexterm><primary>yppasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 938 | <indexterm><primary>change capabilities</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 939 |                 <command>smbpasswd</command> is designed to work in the way familiar to UNIX
 | 
|---|
 | 940 |                 users who use the <command>passwd</command> or <command>yppasswd</command> commands.
 | 
|---|
 | 941 |                 While designed for administrative use, this tool provides essential user-level
 | 
|---|
 | 942 |                 password change capabilities.
 | 
|---|
 | 943 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 944 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 945 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 946 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 947 |                 For more details on using <command>smbpasswd</command>, refer to the man page (the
 | 
|---|
 | 948 |                 definitive reference).
 | 
|---|
 | 949 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 950 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 951 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 952 |         <sect2 id="pdbeditthing">
 | 
|---|
 | 953 |         <title>The <command>pdbedit</command> Tool</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 954 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 955 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 956 |                 <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 957 |                 <indexterm><primary>User Management</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 958 |                 <indexterm><primary>account policy</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 959 |                 <indexterm><primary>User Accounts</primary><secondary>Adding/Deleting</secondary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 960 |                 <command>pdbedit</command> is a tool that can be used only by root. It is used to
 | 
|---|
 | 961 |                 manage the passdb backend, as well as domain-wide account policy settings. <command>pdbedit</command>
 | 
|---|
 | 962 |                 can be used to:
 | 
|---|
 | 963 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 964 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 965 |                 <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 966 |                         <listitem><para>add, remove, or modify user accounts.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 967 |                         <listitem><para>list user accounts.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 968 |                         <listitem><para>migrate user accounts.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 969 |                         <listitem><para>migrate group accounts.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 970 |                         <listitem><para>manage account policies.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 971 |                         <listitem><para>manage domain access policy settings.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 972 |                 </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 973 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 974 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 975 |                 <indexterm><primary>Sarbanes-Oxley</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 976 |                 Under the terms of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, American businesses and organizations are mandated to
 | 
|---|
 | 977 |                 implement a series of <literal>internal controls</literal> and procedures to communicate, store,
 | 
|---|
 | 978 |                 and protect financial data. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act has far reaching implications in respect of:
 | 
|---|
 | 979 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 980 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 981 |                 <orderedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 982 |                         <listitem><para>Who has access to information systems that store financial data.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 983 |                         <listitem><para>How personal and financial information is treated among employees and business
 | 
|---|
 | 984 |                                 partners.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 985 |                         <listitem><para>How security vulnerabilities are managed.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 986 |                         <listitem><para>Security and patch level maintenance for all information systems.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 987 |                         <listitem><para>How information systems changes are documented and tracked.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 988 |                         <listitem><para>How information access controls are implemented and managed.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 989 |                         <listitem><para>Auditability of all information systems in respect of change and security.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 990 |                         <listitem><para>Disciplinary procedures and controls to ensure privacy.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 991 |                 </orderedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 992 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 993 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 994 |                 <indexterm><primary>accountability</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 995 |                 <indexterm><primary>compliance</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 996 |                 In short, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 is an instrument that enforces accountability in respect of
 | 
|---|
 | 997 |                 business related information systems so as to ensure the compliance of all information systems that
 | 
|---|
 | 998 |                 are used to store personal information and particularly for financial records processing. Similar
 | 
|---|
 | 999 |                 accountabilities are being demanded around the world.
 | 
|---|
 | 1000 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1001 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1002 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1003 |                 <indexterm><primary>laws</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1004 |                 <indexterm><primary>regulations</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1005 |                 <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1006 |                 <indexterm><primary>access controls</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1007 |                 <indexterm><primary>manage accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1008 |                 The need to be familiar with the Samba tools and facilities that permit information systems operation
 | 
|---|
 | 1009 |                 in compliance with government laws and regulations is clear to all. The <command>pdbedit</command> is
 | 
|---|
 | 1010 |                 currently the only Samba tool that provides the capacity to manage account and systems access controls
 | 
|---|
 | 1011 |                 and policies. During the remaining life-cycle of the Samba-3 series it is possible the new tools may
 | 
|---|
 | 1012 |                 be implemented to aid in this important area.
 | 
|---|
 | 1013 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1014 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1015 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1016 |                 Domain global policy controls available in Windows NT4 compared with Samba
 | 
|---|
 | 1017 |                 is shown in <link linkend="policycontrols">NT4 Domain v's Samba Policy Controls</link>.
 | 
|---|
 | 1018 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1019 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1020 |                 <table id="policycontrols">
 | 
|---|
 | 1021 |                 <title>NT4 Domain v's Samba Policy Controls</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1022 |             <tgroup cols="5">
 | 
|---|
 | 1023 |                 <colspec align="left" colwidth="2*"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 1024 |                 <colspec align="left" colwidth="2*"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 1025 |                 <colspec align="center" colwidth="1*"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 1026 |                 <colspec align="center" colwidth="1*"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 1027 |                 <colspec align="center" colwidth="1*"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 1028 |                 <thead>
 | 
|---|
 | 1029 |                     <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1030 |                         <entry><para>NT4 policy Name</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1031 |                         <entry><para>Samba Policy Name</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1032 |                         <entry><para>NT4 Range</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1033 |                         <entry><para>Samba Range</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1034 |                         <entry><para>Samba Default</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1035 |                     </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1036 |                 </thead>
 | 
|---|
 | 1037 |                 <tbody>
 | 
|---|
 | 1038 |                     <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1039 |                                         <entry><para>Maximum Password Age</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1040 |                                         <entry><para>maximum password age</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1041 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 999 (days)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1042 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 4294967295 (sec)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1043 |                                         <entry><para>4294967295</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1044 |                     </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1045 |                     <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1046 |                                         <entry><para>Minimum Password Age</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1047 |                                         <entry><para>minimum password age</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1048 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 999 (days)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1049 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 4294967295 (sec)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1050 |                                         <entry><para>0</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1051 |                     </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1052 |                     <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1053 |                                         <entry><para>Minimum Password Length</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1054 |                                         <entry><para>min password length</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1055 |                                         <entry><para>1 - 14 (Chars)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1056 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 4294967295 (Chars)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1057 |                                         <entry><para>5</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1058 |                     </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1059 |                     <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1060 |                                         <entry><para>Password Uniqueness</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1061 |                                         <entry><para>password history</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1062 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 23 (#)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1063 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 4294967295 (#)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1064 |                                         <entry><para>0</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1065 |                     </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1066 |                     <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1067 |                                         <entry><para>Account Lockout - Reset count after</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1068 |                                         <entry><para>reset count minutes</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1069 |                                         <entry><para>1 - 99998 (min)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1070 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 4294967295 (min)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1071 |                                         <entry><para>30</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1072 |                     </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1073 |                     <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1074 |                                         <entry><para>Lockout after bad logon attempts</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1075 |                                         <entry><para>bad lockout attempt</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1076 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 998 (#)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1077 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 4294967295 (#)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1078 |                                         <entry><para>0</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1079 |                     </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1080 |                     <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1081 |                                         <entry><para>*** Not Known ***</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1082 |                                         <entry><para>disconnect time</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1083 |                                         <entry><para>TBA</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1084 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 4294967295</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1085 |                                         <entry><para>0</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1086 |                     </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1087 |                     <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1088 |                                         <entry><para>Lockout Duration</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1089 |                                         <entry><para>lockout duration</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1090 |                                         <entry><para>1 - 99998 (min)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1091 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 4294967295 (min)</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1092 |                                         <entry><para>30</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1093 |                     </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1094 |                     <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1095 |                                         <entry><para>Users must log on in order to change password</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1096 |                                         <entry><para>user must logon to change password</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1097 |                                         <entry><para>0/1</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1098 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 4294967295</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1099 |                                         <entry><para>0</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1100 |                     </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1101 |                     <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1102 |                                         <entry><para>*** Registry Setting ***</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1103 |                                         <entry><para>refuse machine password change</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1104 |                                         <entry><para>0/1</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1105 |                                         <entry><para>0 - 4294967295</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1106 |                                         <entry><para>0</para></entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1107 |                     </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1108 |                                 </tbody>
 | 
|---|
 | 1109 |                         </tgroup>
 | 
|---|
 | 1110 |                 </table>
 | 
|---|
 | 1111 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1112 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1113 |                 <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1114 | <indexterm><primary>policy settings</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1115 | <indexterm><primary>account security</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1116 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1117 |                 The <command>pdbedit</command> tool is the only one that can manage the account
 | 
|---|
 | 1118 |                 security and policy settings. It is capable of all operations that smbpasswd can
 | 
|---|
 | 1119 |                 do as well as a superset of them.
 | 
|---|
 | 1120 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1121 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1122 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1123 |                 <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1124 | <indexterm><primary>account import/export</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1125 | <indexterm><primary>passdb backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1126 |                 One particularly important purpose of the <command>pdbedit</command> is to allow
 | 
|---|
 | 1127 |                 the import/export of account information from one passdb backend to another.
 | 
|---|
 | 1128 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1129 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1130 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 1131 |                 <title>User Account Management</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1132 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1133 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1134 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1135 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1136 | <indexterm><primary>system accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1137 | <indexterm><primary>user account</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1138 | <indexterm><primary>domain user manager</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1139 | <indexterm><primary>add user script</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1140 | <indexterm><primary>interface scripts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1141 |                 The <command>pdbedit</command> tool, like the <command>smbpasswd</command> tool, requires
 | 
|---|
 | 1142 |                 that a POSIX user account already exists in the UNIX/Linux system accounts database (backend).
 | 
|---|
 | 1143 |                 Neither tool will call out to the operating system to create a user account because this is
 | 
|---|
 | 1144 |                 considered to be the responsibility of the system administrator. When the Windows NT4 domain
 | 
|---|
 | 1145 |                 user manager is used to add an account, Samba will implement the <literal>add user script</literal>
 | 
|---|
 | 1146 |                 (as well as the other interface scripts) to ensure that user, group and machine accounts are
 | 
|---|
 | 1147 |                 correctly created and changed. The use of the <command>pdbedit</command> tool does not
 | 
|---|
 | 1148 |                 make use of these interface scripts.
 | 
|---|
 | 1149 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1150 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1151 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1152 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1153 | <indexterm><primary>POSIX account</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1154 |                 Before attempting to use the <command>pdbedit</command> tool to manage user and machine
 | 
|---|
 | 1155 |                 accounts, make certain that a system (POSIX) account has already been created.
 | 
|---|
 | 1156 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1157 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1158 |                 <sect4>
 | 
|---|
 | 1159 |                 <title>Listing User and Machine Accounts</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1160 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1161 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1162 | <indexterm><primary>tdbsam</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1163 | <indexterm><primary>password backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1164 |                 The following is an example of the user account information that is stored in
 | 
|---|
 | 1165 |                 a tdbsam password backend. This listing was produced by running:
 | 
|---|
 | 1166 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1167 | &prompt;<userinput>pdbedit -Lv met</userinput>
 | 
|---|
 | 1168 | UNIX username:        met
 | 
|---|
 | 1169 | NT username:          met
 | 
|---|
 | 1170 | Account Flags:        [U          ]
 | 
|---|
 | 1171 | User SID:             S-1-5-21-1449123459-1407424037-3116680435-2004
 | 
|---|
 | 1172 | Primary Group SID:    S-1-5-21-1449123459-1407424037-3116680435-1201
 | 
|---|
 | 1173 | Full Name:            Melissa E Terpstra
 | 
|---|
 | 1174 | Home Directory:       \\frodo\met\Win9Profile
 | 
|---|
 | 1175 | HomeDir Drive:        H:
 | 
|---|
 | 1176 | Logon Script:         scripts\logon.bat
 | 
|---|
 | 1177 | Profile Path:         \\frodo\Profiles\met
 | 
|---|
 | 1178 | Domain:               &example.workgroup;
 | 
|---|
 | 1179 | Account desc:
 | 
|---|
 | 1180 | Workstations:         melbelle
 | 
|---|
 | 1181 | Munged dial:
 | 
|---|
 | 1182 | Logon time:           0
 | 
|---|
 | 1183 | Logoff time:          Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1184 | Kickoff time:         Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1185 | Password last set:    Sat, 14 Dec 2002 14:37:03 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1186 | Password can change:  Sat, 14 Dec 2002 14:37:03 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1187 | Password must change: Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1188 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1189 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1190 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1191 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1192 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd format</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1193 |                 Accounts can also be listed in the older <literal>smbpasswd</literal> format:
 | 
|---|
 | 1194 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1195 | &rootprompt;<userinput>pdbedit -Lw</userinput>
 | 
|---|
 | 1196 | root:0:84B0D8E14D158FF8417EAF50CFAC29C3:
 | 
|---|
 | 1197 |      AF6DD3FD4E2EA8BDE1695A3F05EFBF52:[U          ]:LCT-42681AB8:
 | 
|---|
 | 1198 | jht:1000:6BBC4159020A52741486235A2333E4D2:
 | 
|---|
 | 1199 |      CC099521AD554A3C3CF2556274DBCFBC:[U          ]:LCT-40D75B5B:
 | 
|---|
 | 1200 | rcg:1002:E95D4331A6F23AF8AAD3B435B51404EE:
 | 
|---|
 | 1201 |      BB0F2C39B04CA6100F0E535DF8314B43:[U          ]:LCT-40D7C5A3:
 | 
|---|
 | 1202 | afw:1003:1AAFA7F9F6DC1DEAAAD3B435B51404EE:
 | 
|---|
 | 1203 |      CE92C2F9471594CDC4E7860CA6BC62DB:[T          ]:LCT-40DA501F:
 | 
|---|
 | 1204 | met:1004:A2848CB7E076B435AAD3B435B51404EE:
 | 
|---|
 | 1205 |      F25F5D3405085C555236B80B7B22C0D2:[U          ]:LCT-4244FAB8:
 | 
|---|
 | 1206 | aurora$:1005:060DE593EA638B8ACC4A19F14D2FF2BB:
 | 
|---|
 | 1207 |      060DE593EA638B8ACC4A19F14D2FF2BB:[W          ]:LCT-4173E5CC:
 | 
|---|
 | 1208 | temptation$:1006:XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX:
 | 
|---|
 | 1209 |      A96703C014E404E33D4049F706C45EE9:[W          ]:LCT-42BF0C57:
 | 
|---|
 | 1210 | vaioboss$:1001:XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX:
 | 
|---|
 | 1211 |      88A30A095160072784C88F811E89F98A:[W          ]:LCT-41C3878D:
 | 
|---|
 | 1212 | frodo$:1008:15891DC6B843ECA41249940C814E316B:
 | 
|---|
 | 1213 |      B68EADCCD18E17503D3DAD3E6B0B9A75:[W          ]:LCT-42B7979F:
 | 
|---|
 | 1214 | marvel$:1011:BF709959C3C94E0B3958B7B84A3BB6F3:
 | 
|---|
 | 1215 |      C610EFE9A385A3E8AA46ADFD576E6881:[W          ]:LCT-40F07A4
 | 
|---|
 | 1216 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1217 | <indexterm><primary>login id</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1218 | <indexterm><primary>UID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1219 | <indexterm><primary>LanManger password</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1220 | <indexterm><primary>NT password</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1221 | <indexterm><primary>Account Flags</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1222 | <indexterm><primary>LCT</primary><see>last change time</see></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1223 |                 The account information that was returned by this command in order from left to right
 | 
|---|
 | 1224 |                 consists of the following colon separated data:
 | 
|---|
 | 1225 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1226 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1227 |                 <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1228 |                         <listitem><para>Login ID.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1229 |                         <listitem><para>UNIX UID.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1230 |                         <listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1231 |                                 <para>Microsoft LanManager password hash (password converted to upper-case then hashed.</para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1232 |                         </listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1233 |                         <listitem><para>Microsoft NT password hash (hash of the case-preserved password).</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1234 |                         <listitem><para>Samba SAM Account Flags.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1235 |                         <listitem><para>The LCT data (password last change time).</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1236 |                 </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1237 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1238 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1239 | <indexterm><primary>Account Flags</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1240 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1241 |                 The Account Flags parameters are documented in the <command>pdbedit</command> man page, and are
 | 
|---|
 | 1242 |                 briefly documented in <link linkend="TOSHARG-acctflags">the Account Flags Management section</link>.
 | 
|---|
 | 1243 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1244 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1245 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1246 | <indexterm><primary>last change time</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1247 |                 The LCT data consists of 8 hexadecimal characters representing the time since January 1, 1970, of
 | 
|---|
 | 1248 |                 the time when the password was last changed.
 | 
|---|
 | 1249 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1250 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1251 |                 </sect4>
 | 
|---|
 | 1252 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1253 |                 <sect4>
 | 
|---|
 | 1254 |                 <title>Adding User Accounts</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1255 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1256 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1257 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1258 | <indexterm><primary>add a user account</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1259 | <indexterm><primary>standalone server</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1260 | <indexterm><primary>domain</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1261 | <indexterm><primary>SambaSAMAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1262 |                 The <command>pdbedit</command> can be used to add a user account to a standalone server
 | 
|---|
 | 1263 |                 or to a domain. In the example shown here the account for the user <literal>vlaan</literal>
 | 
|---|
 | 1264 |                 has been created before attempting to add the SambaSAMAccount.
 | 
|---|
 | 1265 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1266 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -a vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1267 | new password: secretpw
 | 
|---|
 | 1268 | retype new password: secretpw
 | 
|---|
 | 1269 | Unix username:        vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1270 | NT username:          vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1271 | Account Flags:        [U          ]
 | 
|---|
 | 1272 | User SID:             S-1-5-21-726309263-4128913605-1168186429-3014
 | 
|---|
 | 1273 | Primary Group SID:    S-1-5-21-726309263-4128913605-1168186429-513
 | 
|---|
 | 1274 | Full Name:            Victor Laan
 | 
|---|
 | 1275 | Home Directory:       \\frodo\vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1276 | HomeDir Drive:        H:
 | 
|---|
 | 1277 | Logon Script:         scripts\logon.bat
 | 
|---|
 | 1278 | Profile Path:         \\frodo\profiles\vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1279 | Domain:               &example.workgroup;
 | 
|---|
 | 1280 | Account desc:         Guest User
 | 
|---|
 | 1281 | Workstations:
 | 
|---|
 | 1282 | Munged dial:
 | 
|---|
 | 1283 | Logon time:           0
 | 
|---|
 | 1284 | Logoff time:          Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1285 | Kickoff time:         Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1286 | Password last set:    Wed, 29 Jun 2005 19:35:12 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1287 | Password can change:  Wed, 29 Jun 2005 19:35:12 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1288 | Password must change: Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1289 | Last bad password   : 0
 | 
|---|
 | 1290 | Bad password count  : 0
 | 
|---|
 | 1291 | Logon hours         : FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
 | 
|---|
 | 1292 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1293 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1294 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1295 |                 </sect4>
 | 
|---|
 | 1296 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1297 |                 <sect4>
 | 
|---|
 | 1298 |                 <title>Deleting Accounts</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1299 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1300 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1301 | <indexterm><primary>account deleted</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1302 | <indexterm><primary>SambaSAMAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1303 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1304 | <indexterm><primary>passdb backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1305 |                 An account can be deleted from the SambaSAMAccount database
 | 
|---|
 | 1306 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1307 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -x vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1308 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1309 |                 The account is removed without further screen output. The account is removed only from the
 | 
|---|
 | 1310 |                 SambaSAMAccount (passdb backend) database, it is not removed from the UNIX account backend.
 | 
|---|
 | 1311 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1312 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1313 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1314 | <indexterm><primary>delete user script</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1315 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1316 |                 The use of the NT4 domain user manager to delete an account will trigger the <parameter>delete user
 | 
|---|
 | 1317 |                 script</parameter>, but not the <command>pdbedit</command> tool.
 | 
|---|
 | 1318 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1319 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1320 |                 </sect4>
 | 
|---|
 | 1321 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1322 |                 <sect4>
 | 
|---|
 | 1323 |                 <title>Changing User Accounts</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1324 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1325 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1326 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1327 |                 Refer to the <command>pdbedit</command> man page for a full synopsis of all operations
 | 
|---|
 | 1328 |                 that are available with this tool.
 | 
|---|
 | 1329 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1330 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1331 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1332 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1333 |                 An example of a simple change in the user account information is the change of the full name
 | 
|---|
 | 1334 |                 information shown here:
 | 
|---|
 | 1335 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1336 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -r --fullname="Victor Aluicious Laan" vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1337 | ...
 | 
|---|
 | 1338 | Primary Group SID:    S-1-5-21-726309263-4128913605-1168186429-513
 | 
|---|
 | 1339 | Full Name:            Victor Aluicious Laan
 | 
|---|
 | 1340 | Home Directory:       \\frodo\vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1341 | ...
 | 
|---|
 | 1342 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1343 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1344 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1345 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1346 | <indexterm><primary>grace time</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1347 | <indexterm><primary>password expired</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1348 | <indexterm><primary>expired password</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1349 |                 Let us assume for a moment that a user's password has expired and the user is unable to
 | 
|---|
 | 1350 |                 change the password at this time. It may be necessary to give the user additional grace time
 | 
|---|
 | 1351 |                 so that it is possible to continue to work with the account and the original password. This
 | 
|---|
 | 1352 |                 demonstrates how the password expiration settings may be updated
 | 
|---|
 | 1353 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1354 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -Lv vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1355 | ...
 | 
|---|
 | 1356 | Password last set:    Sun, 09 Sep 2001 22:21:40 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1357 | Password can change:  Thu, 03 Jan 2002 15:08:35 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1358 | Password must change: Thu, 03 Jan 2002 15:08:35 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1359 | Last bad password   : Thu, 03 Jan 2002 15:08:35 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1360 | Bad password count  : 2
 | 
|---|
 | 1361 | ...
 | 
|---|
 | 1362 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1363 | <indexterm><primary>bad logon attempts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1364 | <indexterm><primary>lock the account</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1365 |                 The user has recorded 2 bad logon attempts and the next will lock the account, but the
 | 
|---|
 | 1366 |                 password is also expired. Here is how this account can be reset:
 | 
|---|
 | 1367 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1368 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -z vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1369 | ...
 | 
|---|
 | 1370 | Password last set:    Sun, 09 Sep 2001 22:21:40 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1371 | Password can change:  Thu, 03 Jan 2002 15:08:35 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1372 | Password must change: Thu, 03 Jan 2002 15:08:35 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1373 | Last bad password   : 0
 | 
|---|
 | 1374 | Bad password count  : 0
 | 
|---|
 | 1375 | ...
 | 
|---|
 | 1376 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1377 |                 The <literal>Password must change:</literal> parameter can be reset like this:
 | 
|---|
 | 1378 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1379 | &rootprompt; pdbedit --pwd-must-change-time=1200000000 vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1380 | ...
 | 
|---|
 | 1381 | Password last set:    Sun, 09 Sep 2001 22:21:40 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1382 | Password can change:  Thu, 03 Jan 2002 15:08:35 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1383 | Password must change: Thu, 10 Jan 2008 14:20:00 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1384 | ...
 | 
|---|
 | 1385 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1386 |                 Another way to use this tools is to set the date like this:
 | 
|---|
 | 1387 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1388 | &rootprompt; pdbedit --pwd-must-change-time="2010-01-01" \
 | 
|---|
 | 1389 |               --time-format="%Y-%m-%d" vlaan
 | 
|---|
 | 1390 | ...
 | 
|---|
 | 1391 | Password last set:    Sun, 09 Sep 2001 22:21:40 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1392 | Password can change:  Thu, 03 Jan 2002 15:08:35 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1393 | Password must change: Fri, 01 Jan 2010 00:00:00 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1394 | ...
 | 
|---|
 | 1395 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1396 | <indexterm><primary>strptime</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1397 | <indexterm><primary>time format</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1398 |                 Refer to the strptime man page for specific time format information.
 | 
|---|
 | 1399 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1400 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1401 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1402 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1403 | <indexterm><primary>SambaSAMAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1404 |                 Please refer to the pdbedit man page for further information relating to SambaSAMAccount
 | 
|---|
 | 1405 |                 management.
 | 
|---|
 | 1406 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1407 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1408 |                 <sect5 id="TOSHARG-acctflags">
 | 
|---|
 | 1409 |                 <title>Account Flags Management</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1410 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1411 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1412 | <indexterm><primary>Samba SAM account flags</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1413 | <indexterm><primary>account control block</primary><see>ACB</see></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1414 | <indexterm><primary>account encode_bits</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1415 | <indexterm><primary>account control flags</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1416 |                 The Samba SAM account flags are properly called the ACB (account control block) within
 | 
|---|
 | 1417 |                 the Samba source code. In some parts of the Samba source code they are referred to as the
 | 
|---|
 | 1418 |                 account encode_bits, and also as the account control flags.
 | 
|---|
 | 1419 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1420 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1421 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1422 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1423 | <indexterm><primary>user account</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1424 | <indexterm><primary>machine account</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1425 | <indexterm><primary>trust account</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1426 | <indexterm><primary>damaged data</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1427 |                 The manual adjustment of user, machine (workstation or server) or an inter-domain trust
 | 
|---|
 | 1428 |                 account account flgas should not be necessary under normal conditions of use of Samba. On the other hand,
 | 
|---|
 | 1429 |                 where this information becomes corrupted for some reason, the ability to correct the damaged data is certainly
 | 
|---|
 | 1430 |                 useful. The tool of choice by which such correction can be affected is the <command>pdbedit</command> utility.
 | 
|---|
 | 1431 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1432 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1433 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1434 | <indexterm><primary>account flags</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1435 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP directory</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1436 |                 There have been a few requests for information regarding the account flags from developers
 | 
|---|
 | 1437 |                 who are creating their own Samba management tools. An example of a need for information regarding
 | 
|---|
 | 1438 |                 the proper management of the account flags is evident when developing scripts that will be used
 | 
|---|
 | 1439 |                 to manage an LDAP directory.
 | 
|---|
 | 1440 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1441 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1442 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1443 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1444 | <indexterm><primary>account flag order</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1445 |                 The account flag field can contain up to 16 characters. Presently, only 11 are in use.
 | 
|---|
 | 1446 |                 These are listed in <link linkend="accountflags">Samba SAM Account Control Block Flags</link>.
 | 
|---|
 | 1447 |                 The order in which the flags are specified to the <command>pdbedit</command> command is not important.
 | 
|---|
 | 1448 |                 In fact, they can be set without problem in any order in the SambaAcctFlags record in the LDAP directory.
 | 
|---|
 | 1449 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1450 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1451 |                 <table frame="all" id="accountflags">
 | 
|---|
 | 1452 |                 <title>Samba SAM Account Control Block Flags</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1453 |         <tgroup cols="2" align="center">
 | 
|---|
 | 1454 |             <thead>
 | 
|---|
 | 1455 |             <row><entry align="center">Flag</entry><entry>Description</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1456 |             </thead>
 | 
|---|
 | 1457 |             <tbody>
 | 
|---|
 | 1458 |             <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1459 |                                 <entry align="center">D</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1460 |                                 <entry align="left">Account is disabled.</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1461 |                         </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1462 |             <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1463 |                                 <entry align="center">H</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1464 |                                 <entry align="left">A home directory is required.</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1465 |                         </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1466 |             <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1467 |                                 <entry align="center">I</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1468 |                                 <entry align="left">An inter-domain trust account.</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1469 |                         </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1470 |             <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1471 |                                 <entry align="center">L</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1472 |                                 <entry align="left">Account has been auto-locked.</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1473 |                         </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1474 |             <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1475 |                                 <entry align="center">M</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1476 |                                 <entry align="left">An MNS (Microsoft network service) logon account.</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1477 |                         </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1478 |             <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1479 |                                 <entry align="center">N</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1480 |                                 <entry align="left">Password not required.</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1481 |                         </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1482 |             <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1483 |                                 <entry align="center">S</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1484 |                                 <entry align="left">A server trust account.</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1485 |                         </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1486 |             <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1487 |                                 <entry align="center">T</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1488 |                                 <entry align="left">Temporary duplicate account entry.</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1489 |                         </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1490 |             <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1491 |                                 <entry align="center">U</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1492 |                                 <entry align="left">A normal user account.</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1493 |                         </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1494 |             <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1495 |                                 <entry align="center">W</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1496 |                                 <entry align="left">A workstation trust account.</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1497 |                         </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1498 |             <row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1499 |                                 <entry align="center">X</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1500 |                                 <entry align="left">Password does not expire.</entry>
 | 
|---|
 | 1501 |                         </row>
 | 
|---|
 | 1502 |             </tbody>
 | 
|---|
 | 1503 |         </tgroup>
 | 
|---|
 | 1504 |         </table>
 | 
|---|
 | 1505 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1506 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1507 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1508 | <indexterm><primary>account control flags</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1509 |                 An example of use of the <command>pdbedit</command> utility to set the account control flags
 | 
|---|
 | 1510 |                 is shown here:
 | 
|---|
 | 1511 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1512 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -r -c "[DLX]" jht
 | 
|---|
 | 1513 | Unix username:        jht
 | 
|---|
 | 1514 | NT username:          jht
 | 
|---|
 | 1515 | Account Flags:        [DHULX      ]
 | 
|---|
 | 1516 | User SID:             S-1-5-21-729263-4123605-1186429-3000
 | 
|---|
 | 1517 | Primary Group SID:    S-1-5-21-729263-4123605-1186429-513
 | 
|---|
 | 1518 | Full Name:            John H Terpstra,Utah Office
 | 
|---|
 | 1519 | Home Directory:       \\aurora\jht
 | 
|---|
 | 1520 | HomeDir Drive:        H:
 | 
|---|
 | 1521 | Logon Script:         scripts\logon.bat
 | 
|---|
 | 1522 | Profile Path:         \\aurora\profiles\jht
 | 
|---|
 | 1523 | Domain:               MIDEARTH
 | 
|---|
 | 1524 | Account desc:         BluntObject
 | 
|---|
 | 1525 | Workstations:
 | 
|---|
 | 1526 | Logon time:           0
 | 
|---|
 | 1527 | Logoff time:          Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1528 | Kickoff time:         0
 | 
|---|
 | 1529 | Password last set:    Sun, 03 Jul 2005 23:19:18 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1530 | Password can change:  Sun, 03 Jul 2005 23:19:18 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1531 | Password must change: Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1532 | Last bad password   : 0
 | 
|---|
 | 1533 | Bad password count  : 0
 | 
|---|
 | 1534 | Logon hours         : FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
 | 
|---|
 | 1535 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1536 | <indexterm><primary>default settings</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1537 |         The flags can be reset to the default settings by executing:
 | 
|---|
 | 1538 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1539 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -r -c "[]" jht
 | 
|---|
 | 1540 | Unix username:        jht
 | 
|---|
 | 1541 | NT username:          jht
 | 
|---|
 | 1542 | Account Flags:        [U          ]
 | 
|---|
 | 1543 | User SID:             S-1-5-21-729263-4123605-1186429-3000
 | 
|---|
 | 1544 | Primary Group SID:    S-1-5-21-729263-4123605-1186429-513
 | 
|---|
 | 1545 | Full Name:            John H Terpstra,Utah Office
 | 
|---|
 | 1546 | Home Directory:       \\aurora\jht
 | 
|---|
 | 1547 | HomeDir Drive:        H:
 | 
|---|
 | 1548 | Logon Script:         scripts\logon.bat
 | 
|---|
 | 1549 | Profile Path:         \\aurora\profiles\jht
 | 
|---|
 | 1550 | Domain:               MIDEARTH
 | 
|---|
 | 1551 | Account desc:         BluntObject
 | 
|---|
 | 1552 | Workstations:
 | 
|---|
 | 1553 | Logon time:           0
 | 
|---|
 | 1554 | Logoff time:          Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1555 | Kickoff time:         0
 | 
|---|
 | 1556 | Password last set:    Sun, 03 Jul 2005 23:19:18 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1557 | Password can change:  Sun, 03 Jul 2005 23:19:18 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1558 | Password must change: Mon, 18 Jan 2038 20:14:07 GMT
 | 
|---|
 | 1559 | Last bad password   : 0
 | 
|---|
 | 1560 | Bad password count  : 0
 | 
|---|
 | 1561 | Logon hours         : FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
 | 
|---|
 | 1562 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1563 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1564 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1565 |                 </sect5>
 | 
|---|
 | 1566 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1567 |                 </sect4>
 | 
|---|
 | 1568 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1569 |                 <sect4>
 | 
|---|
 | 1570 |                 <title>Domain Account Policy Managment</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1571 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1572 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1573 | <indexterm><primary>domain account access policies</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1574 | <indexterm><primary>access policies</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1575 |                 To view the domain account access policies that may be configured execute:
 | 
|---|
 | 1576 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1577 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -P ?
 | 
|---|
 | 1578 | No account policy by that name
 | 
|---|
 | 1579 | Account policy names are :
 | 
|---|
 | 1580 | min password length
 | 
|---|
 | 1581 | password history
 | 
|---|
 | 1582 | user must logon to change password
 | 
|---|
 | 1583 | maximum password age
 | 
|---|
 | 1584 | minimum password age
 | 
|---|
 | 1585 | lockout duration
 | 
|---|
 | 1586 | reset count minutes
 | 
|---|
 | 1587 | bad lockout attempt
 | 
|---|
 | 1588 | disconnect time
 | 
|---|
 | 1589 | refuse machine password change
 | 
|---|
 | 1590 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1591 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1592 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1593 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1594 |                 Commands will be executed to establish controls for our domain as follows:
 | 
|---|
 | 1595 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1596 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1597 |                 <orderedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1598 |                         <listitem><para>min password length = 8 characters.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1599 |                         <listitem><para>password history = last 4 passwords.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1600 |                         <listitem><para>maximum password age = 90 days.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1601 |                         <listitem><para>minimum password age = 7 days.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1602 |                         <listitem><para>bad lockout attempt = 8 bad logon attempts.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1603 |                         <listitem><para>lockout duration = forever, account must be manually reenabled.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1604 |                 </orderedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1605 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1606 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1607 |                 The following command execution will achieve these settings:
 | 
|---|
 | 1608 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1609 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -P "min password length" -C 8
 | 
|---|
 | 1610 | account policy value for min password length was 5
 | 
|---|
 | 1611 | account policy value for min password length is now 8
 | 
|---|
 | 1612 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -P "password history" -C 4
 | 
|---|
 | 1613 | account policy value for password history was 0
 | 
|---|
 | 1614 | account policy value for password history is now 4
 | 
|---|
 | 1615 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -P "maximum password age" -C 7776000
 | 
|---|
 | 1616 | account policy value for maximum password age was 4294967295
 | 
|---|
 | 1617 | account policy value for maximum password age is now 7776000
 | 
|---|
 | 1618 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -P "minimum password age" -C 604800
 | 
|---|
 | 1619 | account policy value for minimum password age was 0
 | 
|---|
 | 1620 | account policy value for minimum password age is now 7
 | 
|---|
 | 1621 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -P "bad lockout attempt" -C 8
 | 
|---|
 | 1622 | account policy value for bad lockout attempt was 0
 | 
|---|
 | 1623 | account policy value for bad lockout attempt is now 8
 | 
|---|
 | 1624 | &rootprompt; pdbedit -P "lockout duration" -C -1
 | 
|---|
 | 1625 | account policy value for lockout duration was 30
 | 
|---|
 | 1626 | account policy value for lockout duration is now 4294967295
 | 
|---|
 | 1627 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1628 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1629 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1630 | <note><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1631 | To set the maximum (infinite) lockout time use the value of -1.
 | 
|---|
 | 1632 | </para></note>
 | 
|---|
 | 1633 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1634 | <warning><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1635 | Account policies must be set individually on each PDC and BDC. At this time (Samba 3.0.11 to Samba 3.0.14a)
 | 
|---|
 | 1636 | account policies are not replicated automatically. This may be fixed before Samba 3.0.20 ships or some
 | 
|---|
 | 1637 | time there after. Please check the WHATSNEW.txt file in the Samba-3 tarball for specific update notiations
 | 
|---|
 | 1638 | regarding this facility.
 | 
|---|
 | 1639 | </para></warning>
 | 
|---|
 | 1640 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1641 |                 </sect4>
 | 
|---|
 | 1642 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1643 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 1644 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1645 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 1646 |                 <title>Account Import/Export</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1647 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1648 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1649 |                 <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1650 | <indexterm><primary>account import/export</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1651 | <indexterm><primary>authentication</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1652 |                 The <command>pdbedit</command> tool allows import/export of authentication (account)
 | 
|---|
 | 1653 |                 databases from one backend to another. For example, to import/export accounts from an
 | 
|---|
 | 1654 |                 old <filename>smbpasswd</filename> database to a <parameter>tdbsam</parameter>
 | 
|---|
 | 1655 |                 backend:
 | 
|---|
 | 1656 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1657 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1658 |                 <procedure>
 | 
|---|
 | 1659 |                         <step><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1660 | <indexterm><primary>pdbedit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1661 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1662 | &rootprompt;<userinput>pdbedit -i smbpasswd -e tdbsam</userinput>
 | 
|---|
 | 1663 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 1664 |                         </para></step>
 | 
|---|
 | 1665 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1666 |                         <step><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1667 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1668 |                         Replace the <parameter>smbpasswd</parameter> with <parameter>tdbsam</parameter> in the
 | 
|---|
 | 1669 |                         <parameter>passdb backend</parameter> configuration in &smb.conf;.
 | 
|---|
 | 1670 |                         </para></step>
 | 
|---|
 | 1671 |                 </procedure>
 | 
|---|
 | 1672 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1673 |         </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 1674 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 1675 | </sect1>
 | 
|---|
 | 1676 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1677 | <sect1>
 | 
|---|
 | 1678 | <title>Password Backends</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1679 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1680 | <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1681 | <indexterm><primary>account database</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1682 | <indexterm><primary>SMB/CIFS server</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1683 | Samba offers flexibility in backend account database design. The flexibility is immediately obvious as one
 | 
|---|
 | 1684 | begins to explore this capability. Recent changes to Samba (since 3.0.23) have removed the mulitple backend
 | 
|---|
 | 1685 | feature in order to simplify problems that broke some installations. This removal has made the internal
 | 
|---|
 | 1686 | operation of Samba-3 more consistent and predictable.
 | 
|---|
 | 1687 | </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1688 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1689 | <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1690 | <indexterm><primary>multiple backends</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1691 | <indexterm><primary>tdbsam databases</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1692 | Beginning with Samba 3.0.23 it is no longer possible to specify use of mulitple passdb backends. Earlier
 | 
|---|
 | 1693 | versions of Samba-3 made it possible to specify multiple password backends, and even multiple
 | 
|---|
 | 1694 | backends of the same type. The multiple passdb backend capability caused many problems with name to SID and
 | 
|---|
 | 1695 | SID to name ID resolution.  The Samba team wrestled with the challenges and decided that this feature needed
 | 
|---|
 | 1696 | to be removed.
 | 
|---|
 | 1697 | </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1698 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1699 |         <sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 1700 |         <title>Plaintext</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1701 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1702 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1703 | <indexterm><primary>user database</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1704 | <indexterm><primary>/etc/samba/smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1705 | <indexterm><primary>/etc/smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1706 | <indexterm><primary>password encryption</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1707 | <indexterm><primary>/etc/passwd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1708 | <indexterm><primary>PAM</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1709 |                 Older versions of Samba retrieved user information from the UNIX user database
 | 
|---|
 | 1710 |                 and eventually some other fields from the file <filename>/etc/samba/smbpasswd</filename>
 | 
|---|
 | 1711 |                 or <filename>/etc/smbpasswd</filename>. When password encryption is disabled, no
 | 
|---|
 | 1712 |                 SMB-specific data is stored at all. Instead, all operations are conducted via the way
 | 
|---|
 | 1713 |                 that the Samba host OS will access its <filename>/etc/passwd</filename> database.
 | 
|---|
 | 1714 |                 On most Linux systems, for example, all user and group resolution is done via PAM.
 | 
|---|
 | 1715 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1716 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1717 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 1718 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1719 |         <sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 1720 |         <title>smbpasswd: Encrypted Password Database</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1721 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1722 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1723 |                 <indexterm><primary>SAM backend</primary><secondary>smbpasswd</secondary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1724 | <indexterm><primary>user account</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1725 | <indexterm><primary>LM/NT password hashes</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1726 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1727 |                 Traditionally, when configuring <smbconfoption name="encrypt passwords">yes</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 1728 |                 in Samba's &smb.conf; file, user account information such as username, LM/NT password hashes,
 | 
|---|
 | 1729 |                 password change times, and account flags have been stored in the <filename>smbpasswd(5)</filename>
 | 
|---|
 | 1730 |                 file. There are several disadvantages to this approach for sites with large numbers of users
 | 
|---|
 | 1731 |                 (counted in the thousands).
 | 
|---|
 | 1732 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1733 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1734 |                 <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1735 |                 <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1736 | <indexterm><primary>lookups</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1737 |                 The first problem is that all lookups must be performed sequentially. Given that
 | 
|---|
 | 1738 |                 there are approximately two lookups per domain logon (one during initial logon validation
 | 
|---|
 | 1739 |                 and one for a session connection setup, such as when mapping a network drive or printer), this
 | 
|---|
 | 1740 |                 is a performance bottleneck for large sites. What is needed is an indexed approach
 | 
|---|
 | 1741 |                 such as that used in databases.
 | 
|---|
 | 1742 |                 </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1743 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1744 |                 <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1745 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1746 | <indexterm><primary>replicate</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1747 | <indexterm><primary>rsync</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1748 | <indexterm><primary>ssh</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1749 | <indexterm><primary>custom scripts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1750 |                 The second problem is that administrators who desire to replicate an smbpasswd file
 | 
|---|
 | 1751 |                 to more than one Samba server are left to use external tools such as
 | 
|---|
 | 1752 |                 <command>rsync(1)</command> and <command>ssh(1)</command> and write custom,
 | 
|---|
 | 1753 |                 in-house scripts.
 | 
|---|
 | 1754 |                 </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1755 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1756 |                 <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1757 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1758 | <indexterm><primary>home directory</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1759 | <indexterm><primary>password expiration</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1760 | <indexterm><primary>relative identifier</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1761 | <indexterm><primary>relative identifier</primary><see>RID</see></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1762 |                 Finally, the amount of information that is stored in an smbpasswd entry leaves
 | 
|---|
 | 1763 |                 no room for additional attributes such as a home directory, password expiration time,
 | 
|---|
 | 1764 |                 or even a relative identifier (RID).
 | 
|---|
 | 1765 |                 </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1766 |                 </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1767 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1768 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1769 | <indexterm><primary>user attributes</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1770 | <indexterm><primary>smbd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1771 | <indexterm><primary>API</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1772 | <indexterm><primary>samdb interface</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1773 |                 As a result of these deficiencies, a more robust means of storing user attributes
 | 
|---|
 | 1774 |                 used by smbd was developed. The API that defines access to user accounts
 | 
|---|
 | 1775 |                 is commonly referred to as the samdb interface (previously, this was called the passdb
 | 
|---|
 | 1776 |                 API and is still so named in the Samba source code trees).
 | 
|---|
 | 1777 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1778 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1779 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1780 | <indexterm><primary>passdb backends</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1781 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd plaintext database</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1782 | <indexterm><primary>tdbsam</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1783 | <indexterm><primary>ldapsam</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1784 | <indexterm><primary>enterprise</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1785 |                 Samba provides an enhanced set of passdb backends that overcome the deficiencies
 | 
|---|
 | 1786 |                 of the smbpasswd plaintext database. These are tdbsam and ldapsam.
 | 
|---|
 | 1787 |                 Of these, ldapsam will be of most interest to large corporate or enterprise sites.
 | 
|---|
 | 1788 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1789 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1790 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 1791 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1792 |         <sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 1793 |         <title>tdbsam</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1794 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1795 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1796 |                 <indexterm><primary>SAM backend</primary><secondary>tdbsam</secondary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1797 | <indexterm><primary>trivial database</primary><see>TDB</see></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1798 | <indexterm><primary>machine account</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1799 |                 Samba can store user and machine account data in a <quote>TDB</quote> (trivial database).
 | 
|---|
 | 1800 |                 Using this backend does not require any additional configuration. This backend is
 | 
|---|
 | 1801 |                 recommended for new installations that do not require LDAP.
 | 
|---|
 | 1802 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1803 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1804 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1805 | <indexterm><primary>tdbsam</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1806 | <indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1807 | <indexterm><primary>BDC</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1808 | <indexterm><primary>scalability</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1809 |                 As a general guide, the Samba Team does not recommend using the tdbsam backend for sites
 | 
|---|
 | 1810 |                 that have 250 or more users. Additionally, tdbsam is not capable of scaling for use
 | 
|---|
 | 1811 |                 in sites that require PDB/BDC implementations that require replication of the account
 | 
|---|
 | 1812 |                 database. Clearly, for reason of scalability, the use of ldapsam should be encouraged.
 | 
|---|
 | 1813 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1814 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1815 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1816 | <indexterm><primary>250-user limit</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1817 | <indexterm><primary>performance-based</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1818 | <indexterm><primary>tdbsam</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1819 |                 The recommendation of a 250-user limit is purely based on the notion that this
 | 
|---|
 | 1820 |                 would generally involve a site that has routed networks, possibly spread across
 | 
|---|
 | 1821 |                 more than one physical location. The Samba Team has not at this time established
 | 
|---|
 | 1822 |                 the performance-based scalability limits of the tdbsam architecture.
 | 
|---|
 | 1823 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1824 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1825 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1826 | <indexterm><primary>4,500 user accounts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1827 | <indexterm><primary>passdb backend</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1828 | <indexterm><primary>tdbsam</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1829 | <indexterm><primary>SambaSAMAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1830 |                 There are sites that have thousands of users and yet require only one server.
 | 
|---|
 | 1831 |                 One site recently reported having 4,500 user accounts on one UNIX system and
 | 
|---|
 | 1832 |                 reported excellent performance with the <literal>tdbsam</literal> passdb backend.
 | 
|---|
 | 1833 |                 The limitation of where the <literal>tdbsam</literal> passdb backend can be used
 | 
|---|
 | 1834 |                 is not one pertaining to a limitation in the TDB storage system, it is based
 | 
|---|
 | 1835 |                 only on the need for a reliable distribution mechanism for the SambaSAMAccount
 | 
|---|
 | 1836 |                 backend.
 | 
|---|
 | 1837 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1838 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1839 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 1840 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1841 |         <sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 1842 |         <title>ldapsam</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1843 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1844 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1845 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1846 | <indexterm><primary>ldapsam</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1847 |                 <indexterm><primary>SAM backend</primary><secondary>ldapsam</secondary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1848 |                 There are a few points to stress that the ldapsam does not provide. The LDAP
 | 
|---|
 | 1849 |                 support referred to in this documentation does not include:
 | 
|---|
 | 1850 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1851 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1852 |                 <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1853 |                         <listitem><para>A means of retrieving user account information from
 | 
|---|
 | 1854 |                         a Windows 200x Active Directory server.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1855 |                         <listitem><para>A means of replacing /etc/passwd.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1856 |                 </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1857 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1858 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1859 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1860 | <indexterm><primary>NSS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1861 | <indexterm><primary>PAM</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1862 | <indexterm><primary>LGPL</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1863 |                 The second item can be accomplished by using LDAP NSS and PAM modules. LGPL versions of these libraries can be
 | 
|---|
 | 1864 |                 obtained from <ulink url="http://www.padl.com/">PADL Software</ulink>.  More information about the
 | 
|---|
 | 1865 |                 configuration of these packages may be found in <ulink url="http://safari.oreilly.com/?XmlId=1-56592-491-6">
 | 
|---|
 | 1866 |                 <emphasis>LDAP, System Administration</emphasis> by Gerald Carter, Chapter 6, Replacing NIS"</ulink>.
 | 
|---|
 | 1867 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1868 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1869 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1870 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP directory</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1871 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1872 | <indexterm><primary>directory server</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1873 |                 This document describes how to use an LDAP directory for storing Samba user
 | 
|---|
 | 1874 |                 account information traditionally stored in the smbpasswd(5) file. It is
 | 
|---|
 | 1875 |                 assumed that the reader already has a basic understanding of LDAP concepts
 | 
|---|
 | 1876 |                 and has a working directory server already installed. For more information
 | 
|---|
 | 1877 |                 on LDAP architectures and directories, please refer to the following sites:
 | 
|---|
 | 1878 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1879 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1880 |                 <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1881 |                         <listitem><para><ulink url="http://www.openldap.org/">OpenLDAP</ulink></para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1882 |                         <listitem><para><ulink url="http://www.sun.com/software/products/directory_srvr_ee/index.xml">
 | 
|---|
 | 1883 |                                 Sun One Directory Server</ulink></para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1884 |                         <listitem><para><ulink url="http://www.novell.com/products/edirectory/">Novell eDirectory</ulink></para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1885 |                         <listitem><para><ulink url="http://www-306.ibm.com/software/tivoli/products/directory-server/">IBM
 | 
|---|
 | 1886 |                                 Tivoli Directory Server</ulink></para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1887 |                         <listitem><para><ulink url="http://www.redhat.com/software/rha/directory/">Red Hat Directory
 | 
|---|
 | 1888 |                                 Server</ulink></para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1889 |                         <listitem><para><ulink url="http://www.linuxsecurity.com/content/view/119229">Fedora Directory
 | 
|---|
 | 1890 |                                 Server</ulink></para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1891 |                 </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1892 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1893 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1894 |                 Two additional Samba resources that may prove to be helpful are:
 | 
|---|
 | 1895 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1896 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1897 |                 <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1898 |                         <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1899 | <indexterm><primary>Samba-PDC-LDAP-HOWTO</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1900 |                         The <ulink url="http://www.unav.es/cti/ldap-smb/ldap-smb-3-howto.html">Samba-PDC-LDAP-HOWTO</ulink>
 | 
|---|
 | 1901 |                         maintained by Ignacio Coupeau.
 | 
|---|
 | 1902 |                         </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1903 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1904 |                         <listitem><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1905 | <indexterm><primary>IDEALX</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1906 | <indexterm><primary>NT migration scripts</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1907 | <indexterm><primary>smbldap-tools</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1908 |                         The NT migration scripts from <ulink url="http://samba.idealx.org/">IDEALX</ulink> that are
 | 
|---|
 | 1909 |                         geared to manage users and groups in such a Samba-LDAP domain controller configuration.
 | 
|---|
 | 1910 |                         Idealx also produced the smbldap-tools and the Interactive Console Management tool.
 | 
|---|
 | 1911 |                         </para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 1912 |                 </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 1913 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1914 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 1915 |                 <title>Supported LDAP Servers</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1916 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1917 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1918 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1919 | <indexterm><primary>ldapsam</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1920 | <indexterm><primary>OpenLDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1921 | <indexterm><primary>Netscape's Directory Server</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1922 |                         The LDAP ldapsam code was developed and tested using the OpenLDAP 2.x server and
 | 
|---|
 | 1923 |                         client libraries. The same code should work with Netscape's Directory Server and client SDK.
 | 
|---|
 | 1924 |                         However, there are bound to be compile errors and bugs. These should not be hard to fix.
 | 
|---|
 | 1925 |                         Please submit fixes via the process outlined in <link linkend="bugreport">Reporting Bugs</link>.
 | 
|---|
 | 1926 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1927 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1928 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1929 |                         Samba is capable of working with any standards-compliant LDAP server.
 | 
|---|
 | 1930 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1931 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1932 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 1933 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1934 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 1935 |                 <title>Schema and Relationship to the RFC 2307 posixAccount</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 1936 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1937 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1938 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1939 |                         Samba-3.0 includes the necessary schema file for OpenLDAP 2.x in the
 | 
|---|
 | 1940 |                         <filename>examples/LDAP/samba.schema</filename> directory of the source code distribution
 | 
|---|
 | 1941 |                         tarball. The schema entry for the sambaSamAccount ObjectClass is shown here:
 | 
|---|
 | 1942 | <programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 1943 | ObjectClass (1.3.6.1.4.1.7165.2.2.6 NAME 'sambaSamAccount' SUP top AUXILIARY
 | 
|---|
 | 1944 |     DESC 'Samba-3.0 Auxiliary SAM Account'
 | 
|---|
 | 1945 |     MUST ( uid $ sambaSID )
 | 
|---|
 | 1946 |     MAY  ( cn $ sambaLMPassword $ sambaNTPassword $ sambaPwdLastSet $
 | 
|---|
 | 1947 |           sambaLogonTime $ sambaLogoffTime $ sambaKickoffTime $
 | 
|---|
 | 1948 |           sambaPwdCanChange $ sambaPwdMustChange $ sambaAcctFlags $
 | 
|---|
 | 1949 |           displayName $ sambaHomePath $ sambaHomeDrive $ sambaLogonScript $
 | 
|---|
 | 1950 |           sambaProfilePath $ description $ sambaUserWorkstations $
 | 
|---|
 | 1951 |           sambaPrimaryGroupSID $ sambaDomainName ))
 | 
|---|
 | 1952 | </programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 1953 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1954 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1955 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1956 | <indexterm><primary>samba.schema</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1957 | <indexterm><primary>OpenLDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1958 | <indexterm><primary>OID</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1959 |                         The <filename>samba.schema</filename> file has been formatted for OpenLDAP 2.0/2.1.
 | 
|---|
 | 1960 |                         The Samba Team owns the OID space used by the above schema and recommends its use.
 | 
|---|
 | 1961 |                         If you translate the schema to be used with Netscape DS, please submit the modified
 | 
|---|
 | 1962 |                         schema file as a patch to <ulink url="mailto:jerry@samba.org">jerry@samba.org</ulink>.
 | 
|---|
 | 1963 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1964 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1965 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1966 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1967 | <indexterm><primary>/etc/passwd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1968 | <indexterm><primary>sambaSamAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1969 | <indexterm><primary>AUXILIARY</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1970 | <indexterm><primary>ObjectClass</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1971 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1972 | <indexterm><primary>RFC 2307.</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1973 |                         Just as the smbpasswd file is meant to store information that provides information
 | 
|---|
 | 1974 |                         additional to  a user's <filename>/etc/passwd</filename> entry, so is the sambaSamAccount
 | 
|---|
 | 1975 |                         object meant to supplement the UNIX user account information. A sambaSamAccount is an
 | 
|---|
 | 1976 |                         <constant>AUXILIARY</constant> ObjectClass, so it can be used to augment existing
 | 
|---|
 | 1977 |                         user account information in the LDAP directory, thus providing information needed
 | 
|---|
 | 1978 |                         for Samba account handling. However, there are several fields (e.g., uid) that overlap
 | 
|---|
 | 1979 |                         with the posixAccount ObjectClass outlined in RFC 2307. This is by design.
 | 
|---|
 | 1980 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1981 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 1982 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 1983 | <indexterm><primary>account information</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1984 | <indexterm><primary>sambaSamAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1985 | <indexterm><primary>posixAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1986 | <indexterm><primary>ObjectClasses</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1987 | <indexterm><primary>smbd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1988 | <indexterm><primary>getpwnam</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1989 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1990 | <indexterm><primary>NIS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1991 | <indexterm><primary>NSS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 1992 |                         In order to store all user account information (UNIX and Samba) in the directory,
 | 
|---|
 | 1993 |                         it is necessary to use the sambaSamAccount and posixAccount ObjectClasses in
 | 
|---|
 | 1994 |                         combination. However, <command>smbd</command> will still obtain the user's UNIX account
 | 
|---|
 | 1995 |                         information via the standard C library calls, such as getpwnam().
 | 
|---|
 | 1996 |                         This means that the Samba server must also have the LDAP NSS library installed
 | 
|---|
 | 1997 |                         and functioning correctly. This division of information makes it possible to
 | 
|---|
 | 1998 |                         store all Samba account information in LDAP, but still maintain UNIX account
 | 
|---|
 | 1999 |                         information in NIS while the network is transitioning to a full LDAP infrastructure.
 | 
|---|
 | 2000 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2001 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2002 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2003 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2004 |                 <title>OpenLDAP Configuration</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2005 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2006 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2007 | <indexterm><primary>sambaSamAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2008 | <indexterm><primary>OpenLDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2009 | <indexterm><primary>slapd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2010 | <indexterm><primary>samba.schema</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2011 |                 To include support for the sambaSamAccount object in an OpenLDAP directory
 | 
|---|
 | 2012 |                 server, first copy the samba.schema file to slapd's configuration directory.
 | 
|---|
 | 2013 |                 The samba.schema file can be found in the directory <filename>examples/LDAP</filename>
 | 
|---|
 | 2014 |                 in the Samba source distribution.
 | 
|---|
 | 2015 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2016 | &rootprompt;<userinput>cp samba.schema /etc/openldap/schema/</userinput>
 | 
|---|
 | 2017 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2018 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2019 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2020 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2021 | <indexterm><primary>samba.schema</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2022 | <indexterm><primary>slapd.conf</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2023 | <indexterm><primary>sambaSamAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2024 | <indexterm><primary>cosine.schema</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2025 | <indexterm><primary>uid</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2026 | <indexterm><primary>inetorgperson.schema</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2027 | <indexterm><primary>displayName</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2028 | <indexterm><primary>attribute</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2029 |                 Next, include the <filename>samba.schema</filename> file in <filename>slapd.conf</filename>.
 | 
|---|
 | 2030 |                 The sambaSamAccount object contains two attributes that depend on other schema
 | 
|---|
 | 2031 |                 files. The <parameter>uid</parameter> attribute is defined in <filename>cosine.schema</filename> and
 | 
|---|
 | 2032 |                 the <parameter>displayName</parameter> attribute is defined in the <filename>inetorgperson.schema</filename>
 | 
|---|
 | 2033 |                 file. Both of these must be included before the <filename>samba.schema</filename> file.
 | 
|---|
 | 2034 | <programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2035 | ## /etc/openldap/slapd.conf
 | 
|---|
 | 2036 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2037 | ## schema files (core.schema is required by default)
 | 
|---|
 | 2038 | include            /etc/openldap/schema/core.schema
 | 
|---|
 | 2039 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2040 | ## needed for sambaSamAccount
 | 
|---|
 | 2041 | include            /etc/openldap/schema/cosine.schema
 | 
|---|
 | 2042 | include            /etc/openldap/schema/inetorgperson.schema
 | 
|---|
 | 2043 | include            /etc/openldap/schema/nis.schema
 | 
|---|
 | 2044 | include            /etc/openldap/schema/samba.schema
 | 
|---|
 | 2045 | ....
 | 
|---|
 | 2046 | </programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2047 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2048 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2049 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2050 | <indexterm><primary>sambaSamAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2051 | <indexterm><primary>posixAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2052 | <indexterm><primary>posixGroup</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2053 | <indexterm><primary>ObjectClasses</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2054 |                 It is recommended that you maintain some indices on some of the most useful attributes,
 | 
|---|
 | 2055 |                 as in the following example, to speed up searches made on sambaSamAccount ObjectClasses
 | 
|---|
 | 2056 |                 (and possibly posixAccount and posixGroup as well):
 | 
|---|
 | 2057 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2058 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2059 | <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2060 | <programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2061 | # Indices to maintain
 | 
|---|
 | 2062 | ## required by OpenLDAP
 | 
|---|
 | 2063 | index objectclass             eq
 | 
|---|
 | 2064 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2065 | index cn                      pres,sub,eq
 | 
|---|
 | 2066 | index sn                      pres,sub,eq
 | 
|---|
 | 2067 | ## required to support pdb_getsampwnam
 | 
|---|
 | 2068 | index uid                     pres,sub,eq
 | 
|---|
 | 2069 | ## required to support pdb_getsambapwrid()
 | 
|---|
 | 2070 | index displayName             pres,sub,eq
 | 
|---|
 | 2071 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2072 | ## uncomment these if you are storing posixAccount and
 | 
|---|
 | 2073 | ## posixGroup entries in the directory as well
 | 
|---|
 | 2074 | ##index uidNumber               eq
 | 
|---|
 | 2075 | ##index gidNumber               eq
 | 
|---|
 | 2076 | ##index memberUid               eq
 | 
|---|
 | 2077 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2078 | index   sambaSID              eq
 | 
|---|
 | 2079 | index   sambaPrimaryGroupSID  eq
 | 
|---|
 | 2080 | index   sambaDomainName       eq
 | 
|---|
 | 2081 | index   default               sub
 | 
|---|
 | 2082 | </programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2083 | </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2084 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2085 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2086 |                 Create the new index by executing:
 | 
|---|
 | 2087 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2088 | &rootprompt;./sbin/slapindex -f slapd.conf
 | 
|---|
 | 2089 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2090 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2091 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2092 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2093 |                 Remember to restart slapd after making these changes:
 | 
|---|
 | 2094 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2095 | &rootprompt;<userinput>/etc/init.d/slapd restart</userinput>
 | 
|---|
 | 2096 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2097 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2098 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2099 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2100 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2101 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2102 |                 <title>Initialize the LDAP Database</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2103 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2104 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2105 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP database</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2106 | <indexterm><primary>account containers</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2107 | <indexterm><primary>LDIF file</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2108 | <indexterm><primary>DNS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2109 |                 Before you can add accounts to the LDAP database, you must create the account containers
 | 
|---|
 | 2110 |                 that they will be stored in. The following LDIF file should be modified to match your
 | 
|---|
 | 2111 |                 needs (DNS entries, and so on):
 | 
|---|
 | 2112 | <programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2113 | # Organization for Samba Base
 | 
|---|
 | 2114 | dn: dc=quenya,dc=org
 | 
|---|
 | 2115 | objectclass: dcObject
 | 
|---|
 | 2116 | objectclass: organization
 | 
|---|
 | 2117 | dc: quenya
 | 
|---|
 | 2118 | o: Quenya Org Network
 | 
|---|
 | 2119 | description: The Samba-3 Network LDAP Example
 | 
|---|
 | 2120 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2121 | # Organizational Role for Directory Management
 | 
|---|
 | 2122 | dn: cn=Manager,dc=quenya,dc=org
 | 
|---|
 | 2123 | objectclass: organizationalRole
 | 
|---|
 | 2124 | cn: Manager
 | 
|---|
 | 2125 | description: Directory Manager
 | 
|---|
 | 2126 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2127 | # Setting up container for Users OU
 | 
|---|
 | 2128 | dn: ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org
 | 
|---|
 | 2129 | objectclass: top
 | 
|---|
 | 2130 | objectclass: organizationalUnit
 | 
|---|
 | 2131 | ou: People
 | 
|---|
 | 2132 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2133 | # Setting up admin handle for People OU
 | 
|---|
 | 2134 | dn: cn=admin,ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org
 | 
|---|
 | 2135 | cn: admin
 | 
|---|
 | 2136 | objectclass: top
 | 
|---|
 | 2137 | objectclass: organizationalRole
 | 
|---|
 | 2138 | objectclass: simpleSecurityObject
 | 
|---|
 | 2139 | userPassword: {SSHA}c3ZM9tBaBo9autm1dL3waDS21+JSfQVz
 | 
|---|
 | 2140 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2141 | # Setting up container for groups
 | 
|---|
 | 2142 | dn: ou=Groups,dc=quenya,dc=org
 | 
|---|
 | 2143 | objectclass: top
 | 
|---|
 | 2144 | objectclass: organizationalUnit
 | 
|---|
 | 2145 | ou: Groups
 | 
|---|
 | 2146 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2147 | # Setting up admin handle for Groups OU
 | 
|---|
 | 2148 | dn: cn=admin,ou=Groups,dc=quenya,dc=org
 | 
|---|
 | 2149 | cn: admin
 | 
|---|
 | 2150 | objectclass: top
 | 
|---|
 | 2151 | objectclass: organizationalRole
 | 
|---|
 | 2152 | objectclass: simpleSecurityObject
 | 
|---|
 | 2153 | userPassword: {SSHA}c3ZM9tBaBo9autm1dL3waDS21+JSfQVz
 | 
|---|
 | 2154 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2155 | # Setting up container for computers
 | 
|---|
 | 2156 | dn: ou=Computers,dc=quenya,dc=org
 | 
|---|
 | 2157 | objectclass: top
 | 
|---|
 | 2158 | objectclass: organizationalUnit
 | 
|---|
 | 2159 | ou: Computers
 | 
|---|
 | 2160 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2161 | # Setting up admin handle for Computers OU
 | 
|---|
 | 2162 | dn: cn=admin,ou=Computers,dc=quenya,dc=org
 | 
|---|
 | 2163 | cn: admin
 | 
|---|
 | 2164 | objectclass: top
 | 
|---|
 | 2165 | objectclass: organizationalRole
 | 
|---|
 | 2166 | objectclass: simpleSecurityObject
 | 
|---|
 | 2167 | userPassword: {SSHA}c3ZM9tBaBo9autm1dL3waDS21+JSfQVz
 | 
|---|
 | 2168 | </programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2169 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2170 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2171 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2172 | <indexterm><primary>userPassword</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2173 | <indexterm><primary>slappasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2174 |                 The userPassword shown above should be generated using <command>slappasswd</command>.
 | 
|---|
 | 2175 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2176 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2177 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2178 | <indexterm><primary>LDIF</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2179 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2180 |                 The following command will then load the contents of the LDIF file into the LDAP
 | 
|---|
 | 2181 |                 database.
 | 
|---|
 | 2182 | <indexterm><primary>slapadd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2183 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2184 | &prompt;<userinput>slapadd -v -l initldap.dif</userinput>
 | 
|---|
 | 2185 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2186 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2187 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2188 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2189 |                 Do not forget to secure your LDAP server with an adequate access control list
 | 
|---|
 | 2190 |                 as well as an admin password.
 | 
|---|
 | 2191 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2192 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2193 |                 <note><para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2194 | <indexterm><primary>secrets.tdb</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2195 |                 Before Samba can access the LDAP server, you need to store the LDAP admin password
 | 
|---|
 | 2196 |                 in the Samba-3 <filename>secrets.tdb</filename> database by:
 | 
|---|
 | 2197 | <indexterm><primary>smbpasswd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2198 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2199 | &rootprompt;<userinput>smbpasswd -w <replaceable>secret</replaceable></userinput>
 | 
|---|
 | 2200 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2201 |                 </para></note>
 | 
|---|
 | 2202 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2203 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2204 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2205 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2206 |                 <title>Configuring Samba</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2207 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2208 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2209 | <indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2210 | <indexterm><primary>smbd</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2211 |                         The following parameters are available in &smb.conf; only if your version of Samba was built with
 | 
|---|
 | 2212 |                         LDAP support. Samba automatically builds with LDAP support if the LDAP libraries are found. The
 | 
|---|
 | 2213 |                         best method to verify that Samba was built with LDAP support is:
 | 
|---|
 | 2214 | <screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2215 | &rootprompt; smbd -b | grep LDAP
 | 
|---|
 | 2216 |    HAVE_LDAP_H
 | 
|---|
 | 2217 |    HAVE_LDAP
 | 
|---|
 | 2218 |    HAVE_LDAP_DOMAIN2HOSTLIST
 | 
|---|
 | 2219 |    HAVE_LDAP_INIT
 | 
|---|
 | 2220 |    HAVE_LDAP_INITIALIZE
 | 
|---|
 | 2221 |    HAVE_LDAP_SET_REBIND_PROC
 | 
|---|
 | 2222 |    HAVE_LIBLDAP
 | 
|---|
 | 2223 |    LDAP_SET_REBIND_PROC_ARGS
 | 
|---|
 | 2224 | </screen>
 | 
|---|
 | 2225 |                         If the build of the <command>smbd</command> command you are using does not produce output
 | 
|---|
 | 2226 |                         that includes <literal>HAVE_LDAP_H</literal> it is necessary to discover why the LDAP headers
 | 
|---|
 | 2227 |                         and libraries were not found during compilation.
 | 
|---|
 | 2228 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2229 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2230 |                         <para>LDAP-related smb.conf options include these:
 | 
|---|
 | 2231 |                         <smbconfblock>
 | 
|---|
 | 2232 |                         <smbconfoption name="passdb backend">ldapsam:url</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2233 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap admin dn"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2234 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap delete dn"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2235 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap filter"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2236 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap group suffix"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2237 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap idmap suffix"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2238 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap machine suffix"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2239 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap passwd sync"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2240 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap ssl"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2241 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap suffix"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2242 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap user suffix"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2243 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap replication sleep"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2244 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap timeout"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2245 |                         <smbconfoption name="ldap page size"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2246 |                         </smbconfblock>
 | 
|---|
 | 2247 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2248 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2249 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2250 |                         These are described in the &smb.conf; man page and so are not repeated here. However, an example
 | 
|---|
 | 2251 |                         for use with an LDAP directory is shown in <link linkend="confldapex">the Configuration with LDAP.</link>
 | 
|---|
 | 2252 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2253 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2254 | <example id="confldapex">
 | 
|---|
 | 2255 | <title>Configuration with LDAP</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2256 | <smbconfblock>
 | 
|---|
 | 2257 | <smbconfsection name="[global]"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2258 | <smbconfoption name="security">user</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2259 | <smbconfoption name="encrypt passwords">yes</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2260 | <smbconfoption name="netbios name">MORIA</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2261 | <smbconfoption name="workgroup">NOLDOR</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2262 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2263 | <smbconfcomment>LDAP related parameters:</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2264 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2265 | <smbconfcomment>Define the DN used when binding to the LDAP servers.</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2266 | <smbconfcomment>The password for this DN is not stored in smb.conf</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2267 | <smbconfcomment>Set it using 'smbpasswd -w secret' to store the</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2268 | <smbconfcomment>passphrase in the secrets.tdb file.</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2269 | <smbconfcomment>If the "ldap admin dn" value changes, it must be reset.</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2270 | <smbconfoption name="ldap admin dn">"cn=Manager,dc=quenya,dc=org"</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2271 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2272 | <smbconfcomment>SSL directory connections can be configured by:</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2273 | <smbconfcomment>('off', 'start tls', or 'on' (default))</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2274 | <smbconfoption name="ldap ssl">start tls</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2275 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2276 | <smbconfcomment>syntax: passdb backend = ldapsam:ldap://server-name[:port]</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2277 | <smbconfoption name="passdb backend">ldapsam:ldap://frodo.quenya.org</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2278 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2279 | <smbconfcomment>smbpasswd -x delete the entire dn-entry</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2280 | <smbconfoption name="ldap delete dn">no</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2281 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2282 | <smbconfcomment>The machine and user suffix are added to the base suffix</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2283 | <smbconfcomment>wrote WITHOUT quotes. NULL suffixes by default</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2284 | <smbconfoption name="ldap user suffix">ou=People</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2285 | <smbconfoption name="ldap group suffix">ou=Groups</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2286 | <smbconfoption name="ldap machine suffix">ou=Computers</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2287 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2288 | <smbconfcomment>Trust UNIX account information in LDAP</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2289 | <smbconfcomment> (see the smb.conf man page for details)</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2290 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2291 | <smbconfcomment>Specify the base DN to use when searching the directory</smbconfcomment>
 | 
|---|
 | 2292 | <smbconfoption name="ldap suffix">dc=quenya,dc=org</smbconfoption>
 | 
|---|
 | 2293 | </smbconfblock>
 | 
|---|
 | 2294 | </example>
 | 
|---|
 | 2295 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2296 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2297 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2298 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2299 |                 <title>Accounts and Groups Management</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2300 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2301 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2302 |                         <indexterm><primary>User Management</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2303 |                         <indexterm><primary>User Accounts</primary><secondary>Adding/Deleting</secondary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2304 |                         Because user accounts are managed through the sambaSamAccount ObjectClass, you should
 | 
|---|
 | 2305 |                         modify your existing administration tools to deal with sambaSamAccount attributes.
 | 
|---|
 | 2306 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2307 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2308 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2309 | <indexterm><primary>sambaSamAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2310 | <indexterm><primary>/etc/openldap/sldap.conf</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2311 | <indexterm><primary>NSS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2312 |                         Machine accounts are managed with the sambaSamAccount ObjectClass, just
 | 
|---|
 | 2313 |                         like user accounts. However, it is up to you to store those accounts
 | 
|---|
 | 2314 |                         in a different tree of your LDAP namespace. You should use
 | 
|---|
 | 2315 |                         <quote>ou=Groups,dc=quenya,dc=org</quote> to store groups and
 | 
|---|
 | 2316 |                         <quote>ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org</quote> to store users. Just configure your
 | 
|---|
 | 2317 |                         NSS and PAM accordingly (usually, in the <filename>/etc/openldap/sldap.conf</filename>
 | 
|---|
 | 2318 |                         configuration file).
 | 
|---|
 | 2319 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2320 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2321 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2322 | <indexterm><primary>POSIX</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2323 | <indexterm><primary>posixGroup</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2324 | <indexterm><primary>Domain Groups</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2325 | <indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2326 |                         In Samba-3, the group management system is based on POSIX
 | 
|---|
 | 2327 |                         groups. This means that Samba makes use of the posixGroup ObjectClass.
 | 
|---|
 | 2328 |                         For now, there is no NT-like group system management (global and local
 | 
|---|
 | 2329 |                         groups). Samba-3 knows only about <constant>Domain Groups</constant>
 | 
|---|
 | 2330 |                         and, unlike MS Windows 2000 and Active Directory, Samba-3 does not
 | 
|---|
 | 2331 |                         support nested groups.
 | 
|---|
 | 2332 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2333 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2334 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2335 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2336 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2337 |                 <title>Security and sambaSamAccount</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2338 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2339 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2340 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2341 | <indexterm><primary>sambaSAMAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2342 |                         There are two important points to remember when discussing the security
 | 
|---|
 | 2343 |                         of sambaSAMAccount entries in the directory.
 | 
|---|
 | 2344 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2345 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2346 |                         <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 2347 |                                 <listitem><para><emphasis>Never</emphasis> retrieve the SambaLMPassword or
 | 
|---|
 | 2348 | <indexterm><primary>SambaNTPassword</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2349 |                                 SambaNTPassword attribute values over an unencrypted LDAP session.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 2350 |                                 <listitem><para><emphasis>Never</emphasis> allow non-admin users to
 | 
|---|
 | 2351 |                                 view the SambaLMPassword or SambaNTPassword attribute values.</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 2352 |                         </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 2353 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2354 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2355 | <indexterm><primary>clear-text</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2356 | <indexterm><primary>impersonate</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2357 | <indexterm><primary>LM/NT password hashes</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2358 |                         These password hashes are clear-text equivalents and can be used to impersonate
 | 
|---|
 | 2359 |                         the user without deriving the original clear-text strings. For more information
 | 
|---|
 | 2360 |                         on the details of LM/NT password hashes, refer to <link linkend="passdb">the
 | 
|---|
 | 2361 |                         Account Information Database section</link>.
 | 
|---|
 | 2362 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2363 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2364 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2365 | <indexterm><primary>encrypted session</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2366 | <indexterm><primary>StartTLS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2367 | <indexterm><primary>LDAPS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2368 | <indexterm><primary>secure communications</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2369 |                         To remedy the first security issue, the <smbconfoption name="ldap ssl"/> &smb.conf;
 | 
|---|
 | 2370 |                         parameter defaults to require an encrypted session (<smbconfoption name="ldap
 | 
|---|
 | 2371 |                         ssl">on</smbconfoption>) using the default port of <constant>636</constant> when
 | 
|---|
 | 2372 |                         contacting the directory server. When using an OpenLDAP server, it
 | 
|---|
 | 2373 |                         is possible to use the StartTLS LDAP extended operation in the place of LDAPS.
 | 
|---|
 | 2374 |                         In either case, you are strongly encouraged to use secure communications protocols
 | 
|---|
 | 2375 |                         (so do not set <smbconfoption name="ldap ssl">off</smbconfoption>).
 | 
|---|
 | 2376 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2377 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2378 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2379 | <indexterm><primary>LDAPS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2380 | <indexterm><primary>StartTLS</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2381 | <indexterm><primary>LDAPv3</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2382 |                         Note that the LDAPS protocol is deprecated in favor of the LDAPv3 StartTLS
 | 
|---|
 | 2383 |                         extended operation. However, the OpenLDAP library still provides support for
 | 
|---|
 | 2384 |                         the older method of securing communication between clients and servers.
 | 
|---|
 | 2385 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2386 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2387 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2388 | <indexterm><primary>harvesting password hashes</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2389 | <indexterm><primary>ACL</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2390 | <indexterm><primary>slapd.conf</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2391 |                         The second security precaution is to prevent non-administrative users from
 | 
|---|
 | 2392 |                         harvesting password hashes from the directory. This can be done using the
 | 
|---|
 | 2393 |                         following ACL in <filename>slapd.conf</filename>:
 | 
|---|
 | 2394 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2395 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2396 | <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2397 | <programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2398 | ## allow the "ldap admin dn" access, but deny everyone else
 | 
|---|
 | 2399 | access to attrs=SambaLMPassword,SambaNTPassword
 | 
|---|
 | 2400 |      by dn="cn=Samba Admin,ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org" write
 | 
|---|
 | 2401 |      by * none
 | 
|---|
 | 2402 | </programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2403 | </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2404 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2405 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2406 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2407 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2408 |                 <title>LDAP Special Attributes for sambaSamAccounts</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2409 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2410 |                         <para> The sambaSamAccount ObjectClass is composed of the attributes shown in next tables: <link
 | 
|---|
 | 2411 |                         linkend="attribobjclPartA">Part A</link>, and <link linkend="attribobjclPartB">Part B</link>.
 | 
|---|
 | 2412 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2413 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2414 |                         <table frame="all" id="attribobjclPartA">
 | 
|---|
 | 2415 |                                 <title>Attributes in the sambaSamAccount ObjectClass (LDAP), Part A</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2416 |                         <tgroup cols="2" align="justify">
 | 
|---|
 | 2417 |                                         <colspec align="left"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2418 |                                         <colspec align="justify" colwidth="1*"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2419 |                         <tbody>
 | 
|---|
 | 2420 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaLMPassword</constant></entry><entry>The LanMan password 16-byte hash stored as a character
 | 
|---|
 | 2421 |                                                 representation of a hexadecimal string.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2422 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaNTPassword</constant></entry><entry>The NT password 16-byte hash stored as a character
 | 
|---|
 | 2423 |                                                 representation of a hexadecimal string.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2424 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaPwdLastSet</constant></entry><entry>The integer time in seconds since 1970 when the
 | 
|---|
 | 2425 |                                                 <constant>sambaLMPassword</constant> and <constant>sambaNTPassword</constant> attributes were last set.
 | 
|---|
 | 2426 |                                 </entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2427 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2428 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaAcctFlags</constant></entry><entry>String of 11 characters surrounded by square brackets [ ]
 | 
|---|
 | 2429 |                                                 representing account flags such as U (user), W (workstation), X (no password expiration),
 | 
|---|
 | 2430 |                                                 I (domain trust account), H (home dir required), S (server trust account),
 | 
|---|
 | 2431 |                                                 and D (disabled).</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2432 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2433 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaLogonTime</constant></entry><entry>Integer value currently unused.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2434 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2435 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaLogoffTime</constant></entry><entry>Integer value currently unused.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2436 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2437 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaKickoffTime</constant></entry><entry>Specifies the time (UNIX time format) when the user
 | 
|---|
 | 2438 |                                 will be locked down and cannot login any longer. If this attribute is omitted, then the account will never expire.
 | 
|---|
 | 2439 |                                 Using this attribute together with shadowExpire of the shadowAccount ObjectClass will enable accounts to
 | 
|---|
 | 2440 |                                 expire completely on an exact date.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2441 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2442 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaPwdCanChange</constant></entry><entry>Specifies the time (UNIX time format)
 | 
|---|
 | 2443 |                                 after which the user is allowed to change his password. If this attribute is not set, the user will be free
 | 
|---|
 | 2444 |                                 to change his password whenever he wants.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2445 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2446 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaPwdMustChange</constant></entry><entry>Specifies the time (UNIX time format) when the user is
 | 
|---|
 | 2447 |                                 forced to change his password. If this value is set to 0, the user will have to change his password at first login.
 | 
|---|
 | 2448 |                                 If this attribute is not set, then the password will never expire.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2449 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2450 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaHomeDrive</constant></entry><entry>Specifies the drive letter to which to map the
 | 
|---|
 | 2451 |                                 UNC path specified by sambaHomePath. The drive letter must be specified in the form <quote>X:</quote>
 | 
|---|
 | 2452 |                                 where X is the letter of the drive to map. Refer to the <quote>logon drive</quote> parameter in the
 | 
|---|
 | 2453 |                                 smb.conf(5) man page for more information.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2454 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2455 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaLogonScript</constant></entry><entry>The sambaLogonScript property specifies the path of
 | 
|---|
 | 2456 |                                 the user's logon script, .CMD, .EXE, or .BAT file. The string can be null. The path
 | 
|---|
 | 2457 |                                 is relative to the netlogon share. Refer to the <smbconfoption name="logon script"/> parameter in the
 | 
|---|
 | 2458 |                                 &smb.conf; man page for more information.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2459 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2460 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaProfilePath</constant></entry><entry>Specifies a path to the user's profile.
 | 
|---|
 | 2461 |                                 This value can be a null string, a local absolute path, or a UNC path. Refer to the
 | 
|---|
 | 2462 |                                 <smbconfoption name="logon path"/> parameter in the &smb.conf; man page for more information.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2463 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2464 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaHomePath</constant></entry><entry>The sambaHomePath property specifies the path of
 | 
|---|
 | 2465 |                                 the home directory for the user. The string can be null. If sambaHomeDrive is set and specifies
 | 
|---|
 | 2466 |                                 a drive letter, sambaHomePath should be a UNC path. The path must be a network
 | 
|---|
 | 2467 |                                 UNC path of the form <filename>\\server\share\directory</filename>. This value can be a null string.
 | 
|---|
 | 2468 |                                 Refer to the <command>logon home</command> parameter in the &smb.conf; man page for more information.
 | 
|---|
 | 2469 |                                 </entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2470 |                         </tbody>
 | 
|---|
 | 2471 |                         </tgroup></table>
 | 
|---|
 | 2472 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2473 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2474 |                         <table frame="all" id="attribobjclPartB">
 | 
|---|
 | 2475 |                                 <title>Attributes in the sambaSamAccount ObjectClass (LDAP), Part B</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2476 |                         <tgroup cols="2" align="justify">
 | 
|---|
 | 2477 |                                         <colspec align="left"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2478 |                                         <colspec align="justify" colwidth="1*"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2479 |                         <tbody>
 | 
|---|
 | 2480 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaUserWorkstations</constant></entry><entry>Here you can give a comma-separated list of machines
 | 
|---|
 | 2481 |                                 on which the user is allowed to login. You may observe problems when you try to connect to a Samba domain member.
 | 
|---|
 | 2482 |                                 Because domain members are not in this list, the domain controllers will reject them. Where this attribute is omitted,
 | 
|---|
 | 2483 |                                 the default implies no restrictions.
 | 
|---|
 | 2484 |                                 </entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2485 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2486 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaSID</constant></entry><entry>The security identifier(SID) of the user.
 | 
|---|
 | 2487 |                                 The Windows equivalent of UNIX UIDs.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2488 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2489 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaPrimaryGroupSID</constant></entry><entry>The security identifier (SID) of the primary group
 | 
|---|
 | 2490 |                                 of the user.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2491 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2492 |                                 <row><entry><constant>sambaDomainName</constant></entry><entry>Domain the user is part of.</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2493 |                         </tbody>
 | 
|---|
 | 2494 |                         </tgroup></table>
 | 
|---|
 | 2495 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2496 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2497 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2498 | <indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2499 | <indexterm><primary>sambaSamAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2500 |                         The majority of these parameters are only used when Samba is acting as a PDC of
 | 
|---|
 | 2501 |                         a domain (refer to <link linkend="samba-pdc">Domain Control</link>, for details on
 | 
|---|
 | 2502 |                         how to configure Samba as a PDC). The following four attributes
 | 
|---|
 | 2503 |                         are only stored with the sambaSamAccount entry if the values are non-default values:
 | 
|---|
 | 2504 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2505 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2506 |                         <itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 2507 | <indexterm><primary>sambaHomePath</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2508 | <indexterm><primary>sambaLogonScript</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2509 | <indexterm><primary>sambaProfilePath</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2510 | <indexterm><primary>sambaHomeDrive</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2511 |                                 <listitem><para>sambaHomePath</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 2512 |                                 <listitem><para>sambaLogonScript</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 2513 |                                 <listitem><para>sambaProfilePath</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 2514 |                                 <listitem><para>sambaHomeDrive</para></listitem>
 | 
|---|
 | 2515 |                         </itemizedlist>
 | 
|---|
 | 2516 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2517 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2518 | <indexterm><primary>sambaSamAccount</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2519 | <indexterm><primary>PDC</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2520 | <indexterm><primary>smbHome</primary></indexterm>
 | 
|---|
 | 2521 |                         These attributes are only stored with the sambaSamAccount entry if
 | 
|---|
 | 2522 |                         the values are non-default values. For example, assume MORIA has now been
 | 
|---|
 | 2523 |                         configured as a PDC and that <smbconfoption name="logon home">\\%L\%u</smbconfoption> was defined in
 | 
|---|
 | 2524 |                         its &smb.conf; file. When a user named <quote>becky</quote> logs on to the domain,
 | 
|---|
 | 2525 |                         the <smbconfoption name="logon home"/> string is expanded to \\MORIA\becky.
 | 
|---|
 | 2526 |                         If the smbHome attribute exists in the entry <quote>uid=becky,ou=People,dc=samba,dc=org</quote>,
 | 
|---|
 | 2527 |                         this value is used. However, if this attribute does not exist, then the value
 | 
|---|
 | 2528 |                         of the <smbconfoption name="logon home"/> parameter is used in its place. Samba
 | 
|---|
 | 2529 |                         will only write the attribute value to the directory entry if the value is
 | 
|---|
 | 2530 |                         something other than the default (e.g., <filename>\\MOBY\becky</filename>).
 | 
|---|
 | 2531 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2532 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2533 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2534 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2535 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2536 |                 <title>Example LDIF Entries for a sambaSamAccount</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2537 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2538 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2539 |                         The following is a working LDIF that demonstrates the use of the SambaSamAccount ObjectClass:
 | 
|---|
 | 2540 | <programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2541 | dn: uid=guest2, ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org
 | 
|---|
 | 2542 | sambaLMPassword: 878D8014606CDA29677A44EFA1353FC7
 | 
|---|
 | 2543 | sambaPwdMustChange: 2147483647
 | 
|---|
 | 2544 | sambaPrimaryGroupSID: S-1-5-21-2447931902-1787058256-3961074038-513
 | 
|---|
 | 2545 | sambaNTPassword: 552902031BEDE9EFAAD3B435B51404EE
 | 
|---|
 | 2546 | sambaPwdLastSet: 1010179124
 | 
|---|
 | 2547 | sambaLogonTime: 0
 | 
|---|
 | 2548 | objectClass: sambaSamAccount
 | 
|---|
 | 2549 | uid: guest2
 | 
|---|
 | 2550 | sambaKickoffTime: 2147483647
 | 
|---|
 | 2551 | sambaAcctFlags: [UX         ]
 | 
|---|
 | 2552 | sambaLogoffTime: 2147483647
 | 
|---|
 | 2553 | sambaSID: S-1-5-21-2447931902-1787058256-3961074038-5006
 | 
|---|
 | 2554 | sambaPwdCanChange: 0
 | 
|---|
 | 2555 | </programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2556 |                         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2557 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2558 |                         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2559 |                         The following is an LDIF entry for using both the sambaSamAccount and
 | 
|---|
 | 2560 |                         posixAccount ObjectClasses:
 | 
|---|
 | 2561 | <programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2562 | dn: uid=gcarter, ou=People,dc=quenya,dc=org
 | 
|---|
 | 2563 | sambaLogonTime: 0
 | 
|---|
 | 2564 | displayName: Gerald Carter
 | 
|---|
 | 2565 | sambaLMPassword: 552902031BEDE9EFAAD3B435B51404EE
 | 
|---|
 | 2566 | sambaPrimaryGroupSID: S-1-5-21-2447931902-1787058256-3961074038-1201
 | 
|---|
 | 2567 | objectClass: posixAccount
 | 
|---|
 | 2568 | objectClass: sambaSamAccount
 | 
|---|
 | 2569 | sambaAcctFlags: [UX         ]
 | 
|---|
 | 2570 | userPassword: {crypt}BpM2ej8Rkzogo
 | 
|---|
 | 2571 | uid: gcarter
 | 
|---|
 | 2572 | uidNumber: 9000
 | 
|---|
 | 2573 | cn: Gerald Carter
 | 
|---|
 | 2574 | loginShell: /bin/bash
 | 
|---|
 | 2575 | logoffTime: 2147483647
 | 
|---|
 | 2576 | gidNumber: 100
 | 
|---|
 | 2577 | sambaKickoffTime: 2147483647
 | 
|---|
 | 2578 | sambaPwdLastSet: 1010179230
 | 
|---|
 | 2579 | sambaSID: S-1-5-21-2447931902-1787058256-3961074038-5004
 | 
|---|
 | 2580 | homeDirectory: /home/moria/gcarter
 | 
|---|
 | 2581 | sambaPwdCanChange: 0
 | 
|---|
 | 2582 | sambaPwdMustChange: 2147483647
 | 
|---|
 | 2583 | sambaNTPassword: 878D8014606CDA29677A44EFA1353FC7
 | 
|---|
 | 2584 | </programlisting>
 | 
|---|
 | 2585 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2586 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2587 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2588 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2589 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2590 |                 <title>Password Synchronization</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2591 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2592 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2593 |                 Samba-3 and later can update the non-Samba (LDAP) password stored with an account. When
 | 
|---|
 | 2594 |                 using pam_ldap, this allows changing both UNIX and Windows passwords at once.
 | 
|---|
 | 2595 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2596 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2597 |                 <para>The <smbconfoption name="ldap passwd sync"/> options can have the  values shown in
 | 
|---|
 | 2598 |                 <link linkend="ldappwsync">Possible <emphasis>ldap passwd sync</emphasis> Values</link>.</para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2599 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2600 |                 <table frame="all" id="ldappwsync">
 | 
|---|
 | 2601 |                 <title>Possible <parameter>ldap passwd sync</parameter> Values</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2602 |                 <tgroup cols="2">
 | 
|---|
 | 2603 |                         <colspec align="left" colwidth="1*"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2604 |                         <colspec align="justify" colwidth="4*"/>
 | 
|---|
 | 2605 |                 <thead>
 | 
|---|
 | 2606 |                         <row><entry align="left">Value</entry><entry align="center">Description</entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2607 |                 </thead>
 | 
|---|
 | 2608 |                 <tbody>
 | 
|---|
 | 2609 |                 <row><entry>yes</entry><entry><para>When the user changes his password, update
 | 
|---|
 | 2610 |                                <constant>SambaNTPassword</constant>, <constant>SambaLMPassword</constant>,
 | 
|---|
 | 2611 |                                and the <constant>password</constant> fields.</para></entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2612 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2613 |                 <row><entry>no</entry><entry><para>Only update <constant>SambaNTPassword</constant> and
 | 
|---|
 | 2614 |                                         <constant>SambaLMPassword</constant>.</para></entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2615 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2616 |                 <row><entry>only</entry><entry><para>Only update the LDAP password and let the LDAP server
 | 
|---|
 | 2617 |                         worry about the other fields.  This option is only available on some LDAP servers and
 | 
|---|
 | 2618 |                         only when the LDAP server supports LDAP_EXOP_X_MODIFY_PASSWD.</para></entry></row>
 | 
|---|
 | 2619 |                 </tbody>
 | 
|---|
 | 2620 |                 </tgroup>
 | 
|---|
 | 2621 |                 </table>
 | 
|---|
 | 2622 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2623 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2624 |                 <para>More information can be found in the &smb.conf; man page.</para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2625 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2626 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2627 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2628 |                 <sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2629 |                 <title>Using OpenLDAP Overlay for Password Synchronization</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2630 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2631 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2632 |                 Howard Chu has written a special overlay called <command>smbk5pwd</command>. This tool  modifies the
 | 
|---|
 | 2633 |                 <literal>SambaNTPassword</literal>, <literal>SambaLMPassword</literal> and <literal>Heimdal</literal>
 | 
|---|
 | 2634 |                 hashes in an OpenLDAP entry when an LDAP_EXOP_X_MODIFY_PASSWD operation is performed.
 | 
|---|
 | 2635 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2636 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2637 |                 <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2638 |                 The overlay is shipped with OpenLDAP-2.3 and can be found in the
 | 
|---|
 | 2639 |                 <filename>contrib/slapd-modules/smbk5pwd</filename> subdirectory. This module can also be used with
 | 
|---|
 | 2640 |                 OpenLDAP-2.2.
 | 
|---|
 | 2641 |                 </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2642 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2643 |                 </sect3>
 | 
|---|
 | 2644 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2645 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 2646 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2647 | </sect1>
 | 
|---|
 | 2648 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2649 | <sect1>
 | 
|---|
 | 2650 | <title>Common Errors</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2651 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2652 |         <sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 2653 |                 <title>Users Cannot Logon</title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2654 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2655 |                 <para><quote>I've installed Samba, but now I can't log on with my UNIX account! </quote></para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2656 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2657 |                 <para>Make sure your user has been added to the current Samba <smbconfoption name="passdb backend"/>.
 | 
|---|
 | 2658 |                 Read the <link linkend="acctmgmttools">Account Management Tools,</link> for details.</para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2659 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2660 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 2661 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2662 |         <sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 2663 |         <title>Configuration of <parameter>auth methods</parameter></title>
 | 
|---|
 | 2664 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2665 |         <para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2666 |         When explicitly setting an <smbconfoption name="auth methods"/> parameter,
 | 
|---|
 | 2667 |         <parameter>guest</parameter> must be specified as the first entry on the line &smbmdash;
 | 
|---|
 | 2668 |         for example, <smbconfoption name="auth methods">guest sam</smbconfoption>.
 | 
|---|
 | 2669 |         </para>
 | 
|---|
 | 2670 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2671 |         </sect2>
 | 
|---|
 | 2672 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2673 | </sect1>
 | 
|---|
 | 2674 | 
 | 
|---|
 | 2675 | </chapter>
 | 
|---|