Table of Contents
This chapter deals exclusively with the differences between Samba-3.0.20 and Samba-2.2.8a. It points out where configuration parameters have changed, and provides a simple guide for the move from 2.2.x to 3.0.20.
Samba-3.0.20 default behavior should be approximately the same as Samba-2.2.x.
The default behavior when the new parameter passdb backend
is not defined in the smb.conf
file provides the same default behavior as Samba-2.2.x
with encrypt passwords = Yes and
will use the smbpasswd
database.
So why say that behavior should be approximately the same as Samba-2.2.x? Because Samba-3.0.20 can negotiate new protocols, such as support for native Unicode, that may result in differing protocol code paths being taken. The new behavior under such circumstances is not exactly the same as the old one. The good news is that the domain and machine SIDs will be preserved across the upgrade.
If the Samba-2.2.x system is using an LDAP backend, and there is no time to update the LDAP
database, then make sure that passdb backend = ldapsam_compat
is specified in the smb.conf
file. For the rest, behavior should remain more or less the same.
At a later date, when there is time to implement a new Samba-3-compatible LDAP backend, it is possible
to migrate the old LDAP database to the new one through use of the pdbedit.
See The pdbedit Command.
The major new features are:
Active Directory support. This release is able to join an ADS realm as a member server and authenticate users using LDAP/Kerberos.
Unicode support. Samba will now negotiate Unicode on the wire, and internally there is a much better infrastructure for multibyte and Unicode character sets.
New authentication system. The internal authentication system has been almost completely rewritten. Most of the changes are internal, but the new authoring system is also very configurable.
New filename mangling system. The filename mangling system has been completely rewritten. An internal database now stores mangling maps persistently.
New “net” command. A new “net” command has been added. It is somewhat similar to the “net” command in Windows. Eventually, we plan to replace a bunch of other utilities (such as smbpasswd) with subcommands in “net”.
Samba now negotiates NT-style status32 codes on the wire. This considerably improves error handling.
Better Windows 200x/XP printing support, including publishing printer attributes in Active Directory.
New loadable RPC modules for passdb backends and character sets.
New default dual-daemon winbindd support for better performance.
Support for migrating from a Windows NT 4.0 domain to a Samba domain and maintaining user, group, and domain SIDs.
Support for establishing trust relationships with Windows NT 4.0 domain controllers.
Initial support for a distributed Winbind architecture using an LDAP directory for storing SID to UID/GID mappings.
Major updates to the Samba documentation tree.
Full support for client and server SMB signing to ensure compatibility with default Windows 2003 security settings.
Plus lots of other improvements!
This section contains a brief listing of changes to smb.conf
options since the Samba-2.2.x series up to an
including Samba-3.0.21. Please refer to the smb.conf(5) man page for complete descriptions of new or modified
parameters.
In alphabetical order, these are the parameters eliminated from Samba-2.2.x through 3.0.21.
admin log
alternate permissions
character set
client codepage
code page directory
coding system
domain admin group
domain guest group
enable svcctl
force unknown acl user
ldap filter
min password length
nt smb support
post script
printer admin
printer driver
printer driver file
printer driver location
read size
source environment
status
strip dot
total print jobs
unicode
use rhosts
valid chars
vfs options
winbind enable local accounts
New parameters in the Samba 3.0.0 series prior to release of Samba 3.0.20 are grouped by function):
Remote Management
abort shutdown script
shutdown script
User and Group Account Management
add group script
add machine script
add user to group script
algorithmic rid base
delete group script
delete user from group script
passdb backend
rename user script
set primary group script
username map script
Authentication
auth methods
ldap password sync
passdb expand explicit
realm
Protocol Options
afs token lifetime
client lanman auth
client NTLMv2 auth
client schannel
client signing
client use spnego
defer sharing violations
disable netbios
enable privileges
use kerberos keytab
log nt token command
ntlm auth
paranoid server security
sendfile
server schannel
server signing
smb ports
svcctl list
use spnego
File Service
allocation roundup size
acl check permissions
acl group control
acl map full control
aio read size
aio write size
dfree cache time
dfree command
ea support
enable asu support
force unknown acl user
get quota command
hide special files
hide unwriteable files
inherit owner
hostname lookups
kernel change notify
mangle prefix
map acl inherit
map read only
max stat cache size
msdfs proxy
set quota command
store dos attributes
use sendfile
vfs objects
Printing
cups options
cups server
force printername
iprint server
max reported print jobs
printcap cache time
Unicode and Character Sets
display charset
dos charset
UNIX charset
SID to UID/GID Mappings
idmap backend
idmap gid
idmap uid
username map script
winbind nested groups
winbind nss info
winbind trusted domains only
template primary group
enable rid algorithm
LDAP
ldap delete dn
ldap group suffix
ldap idmap suffix
ldap machine suffix
ldap passwd sync
ldap replication sleep
ldap timeout
ldap user suffix
General Configuration
eventlog list
preload modules
reset on zero vc
privatedir
dos filetimes (enabled by default)
encrypt passwords (enabled by default)
mangling method (set to hash2 by default)
map to guest
only user (deprecated)
passwd chat
passwd program
password server
restrict anonymous (integer value)
security (new ads value)
strict locking (enabled by default)
winbind cache time (increased to 5 minutes)
winbind uid (deprecated in favor of idmap uid)
winbind gid (deprecated in favor of idmap gid)
winbindd nss info
write cache (deprecated)
The major changes in behavior since that Samba-2.2.x series are documented in this section.
Please refer to the WHATSNEW.txt
file that ships with every release of
Samba to obtain detailed information regarding the changes that have been made during the
life of the current Samba release.
Refer to Installation, Chapter 1, Chapter 1 for information pertaining to the Samba-3 data files, their location and the information that must be preserved across server migrations, updates and upgrades.
Please remember to back up your existing ${lock directory}/*tdb before upgrading to Samba-3. If necessary, Samba will upgrade databases as they are opened. Downgrading from Samba-3 to 2.2, or reversion to an earlier version of Samba-3 from a later release, is an unsupported path.
The old Samba-2.2.x tdb files are described in the next table.
Table 34.1. Samba-2.2.x TDB File Descriptions
Name | Description | Backup? |
---|---|---|
account_policy | User policy settings | yes |
brlock | Byte-range file locking information. | no |
connections | Client connection information | no |
locking | Temporary file locking data. | no |
messages | Temporary storage of messages being processed by smbd. | no |
ntdrivers | Stores per-printer driver information. | yes |
ntforms | Stores per-printer forms information. | yes |
ntprinters | Stores the per-printer devmode configuration settings. | yes |
printing/*.tdb | Cached output from lpq command created on a per-print-service basis. | no |
registry | Read-only Samba registry skeleton that provides support for exporting various database tables via the winreg RPCs. | no |
sessionid | Temporary cache for miscellaneous session information. | no |
share_info | Share ACL settings. | yes |
unexpected | Packets received for which no process was listening. | no |
winbindd_cache | Cache of identity information received from an NT4 or an ADS domain. | yes |
winbindd_idmap | New ID map table from SIDS to UNIX UIDs/GIDs. | yes |
The following issues are known changes in behavior between Samba-2.2 and Samba-3 that may affect certain installations of Samba.
When operating as a member of a Windows domain, Samba-2.2 would map any users authenticated by the remote DC to the “guest account” if a UID could not be obtained via the getpwnam() call. Samba-3 rejects the connection with the error message “NT_STATUS_LOGON_FAILURE.” There is no current workaround to re-establish the Samba-2.2 behavior.
When adding machines to a Samba-2.2 controlled domain, the “add user script” was used to create the UNIX identity of the machine trust account. Samba-3 introduces a new “add machine script” that must be specified for this purpose. Samba-3 will not fall back to using the “add user script” in the absence of an “add machine script”.
There have been a few new changes that Samba administrators should be aware of when moving to Samba-3.
Encrypted passwords have been enabled by default in order to
interoperate better with out-of-the-box Windows client
installations. This does mean that either (a) a Samba account
must be created for each user, or (b) “encrypt passwords = no”
must be explicitly defined in smb.conf
.
Inclusion of new security = ads option for integration with an Active Directory domain using the native Windows Kerberos 5 and LDAP protocols.
Samba-3 also includes the possibility of setting up chains of authentication methods (auth methods) and account storage backends (passdb backend). Please refer to
the smb.conf
man page and Account Information Databases, for
details. While both parameters assume sane default values, it is likely that you will need to understand what
the values actually mean in order to ensure Samba operates correctly.
Certain functions of the smbpasswd tool have been split between the new smbpasswd utility, the net tool, and the new pdbedit utility. See the respective man pages for details.
This section outlines the new features effecting Samba/LDAP integration.
A new object class (sambaSamAccount) has been introduced to replace the old sambaAccount. This change aids in the renaming of attributes to prevent clashes with attributes from other vendors. There is a conversion script (examples/LDAP/convertSambaAccount) to modify an LDIF file to the new schema.
$
ldapsearch .... -LLL -b "ou=people,dc=..." > old.ldif$
convertSambaAccount --sid <DOM SID> --input old.ldif --output new.ldif
The <DOM SID> can be obtained by running
$
net getlocalsid <DOMAINNAME>
Under Samba-2.x the domain SID can be obtained by executing:
$
smbpasswd -S <DOMAINNAME>
The old sambaAccount
schema may still be used by specifying the
ldapsam_compat
passdb backend. However, the sambaAccount and
associated attributes have been moved to the historical section of
the schema file and must be uncommented before use if needed.
The Samba-2.2 object class declaration for a sambaAccount
has not changed
in the Samba-3 samba.schema
file.
Other new object classes and their uses include:
sambaDomain
domain information used to allocate RIDs
for users and groups as necessary. The attributes are added
in “ldap suffix” directory entry automatically if
an idmap UID/GID range has been set and the “ldapsam”
passdb backend has been selected.
sambaGroupMapping an object representing the relationship between a posixGroup and a Windows group/SID. These entries are stored in the “ldap group suffix” and managed by the “net groupmap” command.
sambaUNIXIdPool
created in the “ldap idmap suffix” entry
automatically and contains the next available “idmap UID” and
“idmap GID”.
sambaIdmapEntry
object storing a mapping between a
SID and a UNIX UID/GID. These objects are created by the
idmap_ldap module as needed.
The following new smb.conf
parameters have been added to aid in directing
certain LDAP queries when passdb backend = ldapsam://...
has been
specified.
ldap suffix used to search for user and computer accounts.
ldap user suffix used to store user accounts.
ldap machine suffix used to store machine trust accounts.
ldap group suffix location of posixGroup/sambaGroupMapping entries.
ldap idmap suffix location of sambaIdmapEntry objects.
If an ldap suffix
is defined, it will be appended to all of the
remaining subsuffix parameters. In this case, the order of the suffix
listings in smb.conf
is important. Always place the ldap suffix
first
in the list.
Due to a limitation in Samba's smb.conf
parsing, you should not surround
the domain names with quotation marks.
Samba-3 supports an LDAP backend for the idmap subsystem. The following options inform Samba that the idmap table should be stored on the directory server onterose in the ou=idmap,dc=quenya,dc=org partition.
[global] |
... |
idmap backend = ldap:ldap://onterose/ |
ldap idmap suffix = ou=idmap,dc=quenya,dc=org |
idmap uid = 40000-50000 |
idmap gid = 40000-50000 |
This configuration allows Winbind installations on multiple servers to share a UID/GID number space, thus avoiding the interoperability problems with NFS that were present in Samba-2.2.