| 1 | '\" t | 
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| 2 | .\"     Title: smbpasswd | 
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| 3 | .\"    Author: [see the "AUTHOR" section] | 
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| 4 | .\" Generator: DocBook XSL Stylesheets v1.75.2 <http://docbook.sf.net/> | 
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| 5 | .\"      Date: 08/02/2011 | 
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| 6 | .\"    Manual: File Formats and Conventions | 
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| 7 | .\"    Source: Samba 3.5 | 
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| 8 | .\"  Language: English | 
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| 9 | .\" | 
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| 10 | .TH "SMBPASSWD" "5" "08/02/2011" "Samba 3\&.5" "File Formats and Conventions" | 
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| 11 | .\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- | 
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| 12 | .\" * set default formatting | 
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| 13 | .\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- | 
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| 14 | .\" disable hyphenation | 
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| 15 | .nh | 
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| 16 | .\" disable justification (adjust text to left margin only) | 
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| 17 | .ad l | 
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| 18 | .\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- | 
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| 19 | .\" * MAIN CONTENT STARTS HERE * | 
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| 20 | .\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- | 
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| 21 | .SH "NAME" | 
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| 22 | smbpasswd \- The Samba encrypted password file | 
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| 23 | .SH "SYNOPSIS" | 
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| 24 | .PP | 
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| 25 | smbpasswd | 
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| 26 | .SH "DESCRIPTION" | 
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| 27 | .PP | 
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| 28 | This tool is part of the | 
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| 29 | \fBsamba\fR(7) | 
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| 30 | suite\&. | 
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| 31 | .PP | 
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| 32 | smbpasswd is the Samba encrypted password file\&. It contains the username, Unix user id and the SMB hashed passwords of the user, as well as account flag information and the time the password was last changed\&. This file format has been evolving with Samba and has had several different formats in the past\&. | 
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| 33 | .SH "FILE FORMAT" | 
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| 34 | .PP | 
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| 35 | The format of the smbpasswd file used by Samba 2\&.2 is very similar to the familiar Unix | 
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| 36 | passwd(5) | 
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| 37 | file\&. It is an ASCII file containing one line for each user\&. Each field ithin each line is separated from the next by a colon\&. Any entry beginning with \'#\' is ignored\&. The smbpasswd file contains the following information for each user: | 
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| 38 | .PP | 
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| 39 | name | 
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| 40 | .RS 4 | 
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| 41 | This is the user name\&. It must be a name that already exists in the standard UNIX passwd file\&. | 
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| 42 | .RE | 
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| 43 | .PP | 
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| 44 | uid | 
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| 45 | .RS 4 | 
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| 46 | This is the UNIX uid\&. It must match the uid field for the same user entry in the standard UNIX passwd file\&. If this does not match then Samba will refuse to recognize this smbpasswd file entry as being valid for a user\&. | 
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| 47 | .RE | 
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| 48 | .PP | 
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| 49 | Lanman Password Hash | 
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| 50 | .RS 4 | 
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| 51 | This is the LANMAN hash of the user\'s password, encoded as 32 hex digits\&. The LANMAN hash is created by DES encrypting a well known string with the user\'s password as the DES key\&. This is the same password used by Windows 95/98 machines\&. Note that this password hash is regarded as weak as it is vulnerable to dictionary attacks and if two users choose the same password this entry will be identical (i\&.e\&. the password is not "salted" as the UNIX password is)\&. If the user has a null password this field will contain the characters "NO PASSWORD" as the start of the hex string\&. If the hex string is equal to 32 \'X\' characters then the user\'s account is marked as | 
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| 52 | \fBdisabled\fR | 
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| 53 | and the user will not be able to log onto the Samba server\&. | 
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| 54 | .sp | 
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| 55 | \fIWARNING !!\fR | 
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| 56 | Note that, due to the challenge\-response nature of the SMB/CIFS authentication protocol, anyone with a knowledge of this password hash will be able to impersonate the user on the network\&. For this reason these hashes are known as | 
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| 57 | \fIplain text equivalents\fR | 
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| 58 | and must | 
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| 59 | \fINOT\fR | 
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| 60 | be made available to anyone but the root user\&. To protect these passwords the smbpasswd file is placed in a directory with read and traverse access only to the root user and the smbpasswd file itself must be set to be read/write only by root, with no other access\&. | 
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| 61 | .RE | 
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| 62 | .PP | 
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| 63 | NT Password Hash | 
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| 64 | .RS 4 | 
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| 65 | This is the Windows NT hash of the user\'s password, encoded as 32 hex digits\&. The Windows NT hash is created by taking the user\'s password as represented in 16\-bit, little\-endian UNICODE and then applying the MD4 (internet rfc1321) hashing algorithm to it\&. | 
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| 66 | .sp | 
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| 67 | This password hash is considered more secure than the LANMAN Password Hash as it preserves the case of the password and uses a much higher quality hashing algorithm\&. However, it is still the case that if two users choose the same password this entry will be identical (i\&.e\&. the password is not "salted" as the UNIX password is)\&. | 
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| 68 | .sp | 
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| 69 | \fIWARNING !!\fR\&. Note that, due to the challenge\-response nature of the SMB/CIFS authentication protocol, anyone with a knowledge of this password hash will be able to impersonate the user on the network\&. For this reason these hashes are known as | 
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| 70 | \fIplain text equivalents\fR | 
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| 71 | and must | 
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| 72 | \fINOT\fR | 
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| 73 | be made available to anyone but the root user\&. To protect these passwords the smbpasswd file is placed in a directory with read and traverse access only to the root user and the smbpasswd file itself must be set to be read/write only by root, with no other access\&. | 
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| 74 | .RE | 
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| 75 | .PP | 
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| 76 | Account Flags | 
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| 77 | .RS 4 | 
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| 78 | This section contains flags that describe the attributes of the users account\&. This field is bracketed by \'[\' and \']\' characters and is always 13 characters in length (including the \'[\' and \']\' characters)\&. The contents of this field may be any of the following characters: | 
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| 79 | .sp | 
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| 80 | .RS 4 | 
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| 81 | .ie n \{\ | 
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| 82 | \h'-04'\(bu\h'+03'\c | 
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| 83 | .\} | 
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| 84 | .el \{\ | 
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| 85 | .sp -1 | 
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| 86 | .IP \(bu 2.3 | 
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| 87 | .\} | 
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| 88 | \fIU\fR | 
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| 89 | \- This means this is a "User" account, i\&.e\&. an ordinary user\&. | 
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| 90 | .RE | 
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| 91 | .sp | 
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| 92 | .RS 4 | 
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| 93 | .ie n \{\ | 
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| 94 | \h'-04'\(bu\h'+03'\c | 
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| 95 | .\} | 
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| 96 | .el \{\ | 
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| 97 | .sp -1 | 
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| 98 | .IP \(bu 2.3 | 
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| 99 | .\} | 
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| 100 | \fIN\fR | 
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| 101 | \- This means the account has no password (the passwords in the fields LANMAN Password Hash and NT Password Hash are ignored)\&. Note that this will only allow users to log on with no password if the | 
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| 102 | \fI null passwords\fR | 
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| 103 | parameter is set in the | 
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| 104 | \fBsmb.conf\fR(5) | 
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| 105 | config file\&. | 
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| 106 | .RE | 
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| 107 | .sp | 
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| 108 | .RS 4 | 
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| 109 | .ie n \{\ | 
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| 110 | \h'-04'\(bu\h'+03'\c | 
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| 111 | .\} | 
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| 112 | .el \{\ | 
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| 113 | .sp -1 | 
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| 114 | .IP \(bu 2.3 | 
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| 115 | .\} | 
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| 116 | \fID\fR | 
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| 117 | \- This means the account is disabled and no SMB/CIFS logins will be allowed for this user\&. | 
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| 118 | .RE | 
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| 119 | .sp | 
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| 120 | .RS 4 | 
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| 121 | .ie n \{\ | 
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| 122 | \h'-04'\(bu\h'+03'\c | 
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| 123 | .\} | 
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| 124 | .el \{\ | 
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| 125 | .sp -1 | 
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| 126 | .IP \(bu 2.3 | 
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| 127 | .\} | 
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| 128 | \fIX\fR | 
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| 129 | \- This means the password does not expire\&. | 
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| 130 | .RE | 
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| 131 | .sp | 
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| 132 | .RS 4 | 
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| 133 | .ie n \{\ | 
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| 134 | \h'-04'\(bu\h'+03'\c | 
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| 135 | .\} | 
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| 136 | .el \{\ | 
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| 137 | .sp -1 | 
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| 138 | .IP \(bu 2.3 | 
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| 139 | .\} | 
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| 140 | \fIW\fR | 
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| 141 | \- This means this account is a "Workstation Trust" account\&. This kind of account is used in the Samba PDC code stream to allow Windows NT Workstations and Servers to join a Domain hosted by a Samba PDC\&. | 
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| 142 | .sp | 
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| 143 | .RE | 
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| 144 | Other flags may be added as the code is extended in future\&. The rest of this field space is filled in with spaces\&. For further information regarding the flags that are supported please refer to the man page for the | 
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| 145 | pdbedit | 
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| 146 | command\&. | 
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| 147 | .RE | 
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| 148 | .PP | 
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| 149 | Last Change Time | 
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| 150 | .RS 4 | 
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| 151 | This field consists of the time the account was last modified\&. It consists of the characters \'LCT\-\' (standing for "Last Change Time") followed by a numeric encoding of the UNIX time in seconds since the epoch (1970) that the last change was made\&. | 
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| 152 | .RE | 
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| 153 | .PP | 
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| 154 | All other colon separated fields are ignored at this time\&. | 
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| 155 | .SH "VERSION" | 
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| 156 | .PP | 
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| 157 | This man page is correct for version 3 of the Samba suite\&. | 
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| 158 | .SH "SEE ALSO" | 
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| 159 | .PP | 
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| 160 | \fBsmbpasswd\fR(8), | 
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| 161 | \fBSamba\fR(7), and the Internet RFC1321 for details on the MD4 algorithm\&. | 
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| 162 | .SH "AUTHOR" | 
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| 163 | .PP | 
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| 164 | The original Samba software and related utilities were created by Andrew Tridgell\&. Samba is now developed by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar to the way the Linux kernel is developed\&. | 
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| 165 | .PP | 
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| 166 | The original Samba man pages were written by Karl Auer\&. The man page sources were converted to YODL format (another excellent piece of Open Source software, available at | 
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| 167 | ftp://ftp\&.icce\&.rug\&.nl/pub/unix/) and updated for the Samba 2\&.0 release by Jeremy Allison\&. The conversion to DocBook for Samba 2\&.2 was done by Gerald Carter\&. The conversion to DocBook XML 4\&.2 for Samba 3\&.0 was done by Alexander Bokovoy\&. | 
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