--- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/findsmb.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/findsmb 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,141 @@ +#!/usr/bin/perl +# +# Prints info on all smb responding machines on a subnet. +# This script needs to be run on a machine without nmbd running and be +# run as root to get correct info from WIN95 clients. +# +# syntax: +# findsmb [subnet broadcast address] +# +# with no agrument it will list machines on the current subnet +# +# There will be a "+" in front of the workgroup name for machines that are +# local master browsers for that workgroup. There will be an "*" in front +# of the workgroup name for machines that are the domain master browser for +# that workgroup. +# + +$SAMBABIN = "/usr/bin"; + +for ($i = 0; $i < 2; $i++) { # test for -d option and broadcast address + $_ = shift; + if (m/-d|-D/) { + $DEBUG = 1; + } else { + if ($_) { + $BCAST = "-B $_"; + } + } +} + +sub ipsort # do numeric sort on last field of IP address +{ + @t1 = split(/\./,$a); + @t2 = split(/\./,$b); + @t1[3] <=> @t2[3]; +} + +# look for all machines that respond to a name lookup + +open(NMBLOOKUP,"$SAMBABIN/nmblookup $BCAST '*'|") || + die("Can't run nmblookup '*'.\n"); + +# get rid of all lines that are not a response IP address, +# strip everything but IP address and sort by last field in address + +@ipaddrs = sort ipsort grep(s/ \*<00>.*$//,); + +# print header info + +print "\nIP ADDR NETBIOS NAME WORKGROUP/OS/VERSION $BCAST\n"; +print "---------------------------------------------------------------------\n"; + +foreach $ip (@ipaddrs) # loop through each IP address found +{ + $ip =~ s/\n//; # strip newline from IP address + +# find the netbios names registered by each machine + + open(NMBLOOKUP,"$SAMBABIN/nmblookup -r -A $ip|") || + die("Can't get nmb name list.\n"); + @nmblookup = ; + close NMBLOOKUP; + +# get the first <00> name + + @name = grep(/<00>/,@nmblookup); + $_ = @name[0]; + if ($_) { # we have a netbios name + if (/GROUP/) { # is it a group name + ($name, $aliases, $type, $length, @addresses) = + gethostbyaddr(pack('C4',split('\.',$ip)),2); + if (! $name) { # could not get name + $name = "unknown nis name"; + } + } else { + /(.{1,15})\s+<00>\s+/; + $name = $1; + } + +# do an smbclient command on the netbios name. + + open(SMB,"$SAMBABIN/smbclient -N -L $name -I $ip -U% |") || + die("Can't do smbclient command.\n"); + @smb = ; + close SMB; + + if ($DEBUG) { # if -d flag print results of nmblookup and smbclient + print "===============================================================\n"; + print @nmblookup; + print @smb; + } + +# look for the OS= string + + @info = grep(/OS=/,@smb); + $_ = @info[0]; + if ($_) { # we found response + s/Domain=|OS=|Server=|\n//g; # strip out descriptions to make line shorter + + } else { # no OS= string in response (WIN95 client) + +# for WIN95 clients get workgroup name from nmblookup response + @name = grep(/<00> - /,@nmblookup); + $_ = @name[0]; + if ($_) { + /(.{1,15})\s+<00>\s+/; + $_ = "[$1]"; + } else { + $_ = "Unknown Workgroup"; + } + } + +# see if machine registered a local master browser name + if (grep(/<1d>/,@nmblookup)) { + $master = '+'; # indicate local master browser + if (grep(/<1b>/,@nmblookup)) { # how about domain master browser? + $master = '*'; # indicate domain master browser + } + } else { + $master = ' '; # not a browse master + } + +# line up info in 3 columns + + print "$ip".' 'x(16-length($ip))."$name".' 'x(14-length($name))."$master"."$_\n"; + + } else { # no netbios name found +# try getting the host name + ($name, $aliases, $type, $length, @addresses) = + gethostbyaddr(pack('C4',split('\.',$ip)),2); + if (! $name) { # could not get name + $name = "unknown nis name"; + } + if ($DEBUG) { # if -d flag print results of nmblookup + print "===============================================================\n"; + print @nmblookup; + } + print "$ip".' 'x(16-length($ip))."$name\n"; + } +} + --- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/samba.log.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/samba.log 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,15 @@ +/var/log/samba/log.nmb { + notifempty + missingok + postrotate + /usr/bin/killall -HUP nmbd + endscript +} + +/var/log/samba/log.smb { + notifempty + missingok + postrotate + /usr/bin/killall -HUP smbd + endscript +} --- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/samba.pamd.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/samba.pamd 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +#%PAM-1.0 +auth required /lib/security/pam_nologin.so +auth required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth +account required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth +session required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth --- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/samba.xinetd.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/samba.xinetd 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,15 @@ +# default: on +# description: SWAT is the Samba Web Admin Tool. Use swat \ +# to configure your Samba server. To use SWAT, \ +# connect to port 901 with your favorite web browser. +service swat +{ + port = 901 + socket_type = stream + wait = no + only_from = 127.0.0.1 + user = root + server = /usr/sbin/swat + log_on_failure += USERID + disable = no +} --- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/smb.conf.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/smb.conf 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,533 @@ + +# This is the main Samba configuration file. You should read the +# smb.conf(5) manual page in order to understand the options listed +# here. Samba has a huge number of configurable options (perhaps too +# many!) most of which are not shown in this example +# +# Any line which starts with a ; (semi-colon) or a # (hash) +# is a comment and is ignored. In this example we will use a # +# for commentry and a ; for parts of the config file that you +# may wish to enable +# +# NOTE: Whenever you modify this file you should run the command "testparm" +# to check that you have not made any basic syntactic errors. +# +#======================= Global Settings ===================================== +[global] + +# 1. Server Naming Options: +# workgroup = NT-Domain-Name or Workgroup-Name + workgroup = MDKGROUP + +# netbios name is the name you will see in "Network Neighbourhood", +# but defaults to your hostname +# netbios name = + +# server string is the equivalent of the NT Description field + server string = Samba Server %v + +# Message command is run by samba when a "popup" message is sent to it. +# The example below is for use with LinPopUp: +; message command = /usr/bin/linpopup "%f" "%m" %s; rm %s + +# 2. Printing Options: +# CHANGES TO ENABLE PRINTING ON ALL CUPS PRINTERS IN THE NETWORK +# (as cups is now used in linux-mandrake 7.2 by default) +# if you want to automatically load your printer list rather +# than setting them up individually then you'll need this + printcap name = lpstat + load printers = yes + +# printcap cache time, so samba will automatically load new cups printers + printcap cache time = 60 + +# It should not be necessary to spell out the print system type unless +# yours is non-standard. Currently supported print systems include: +# bsd, sysv, plp, lprng, aix, hpux, qnx, cups + printing = cups + +# Samba 2.2 supports the Windows NT-style point-and-print feature. To +# use this, you need to be able to upload print drivers to the samba +# server. The printer admins (or root) may install drivers onto samba. +# Note that this feature uses the print$ share, so you will need to +# enable it below. +# Printer admins are now defined by granting the SePrintOperatorPrivilege, ie: +# run: net rpc rights grant 'DOMAIN\Printer Operators' SePrintOperatorPrivilege + +# 3. Logging Options: +# this tells Samba to use a separate log file for each machine +# that connects + log file = /var/log/samba/%m.log + +# Put a capping on the size of the log files (in Kb). + max log size = 50 + +# Set the log (verbosity) level (0 <= log level <= 10) +# log level = 3 + +# 4. Security and Domain Membership Options: +# This option is important for security. It allows you to restrict +# connections to machines which are on your local network. The +# following example restricts access to two C class networks and +# the "loopback" interface. For more examples of the syntax see +# the smb.conf man page. Do not enable this if (tcp/ip) name resolution does +# not work for all the hosts in your network. +# hosts allow = 192.168.1. 192.168.2. 127. + +# Uncomment this if you want a guest account, you must add this to /etc/passwd +# otherwise the user "nobody" is used +# guest account = pcguest +# Allow users to map to guest: + map to guest = bad user + +# Security mode. Most people will want user level security. See +# security_level.txt for details. + security = user +# Use password server option only with security = server or security = domain +# When using security = domain, you should use password server = * +# password server = +# password server = * + +# Password Level allows matching of _n_ characters of the password for +# all combinations of upper and lower case. +# password level = 8 +# username level = 8 + +# You may wish to use password encryption. Please read +# ENCRYPTION.txt, Win95.txt and WinNT.txt in the Samba documentation. +# Do not enable this option unless you have read those documents +# Encrypted passwords are required for any use of samba in a Windows NT domain +# The smbpasswd file is only required by a server doing authentication, thus +# members of a domain do not need one. + encrypt passwords = yes + smb passwd file = /etc/samba/smbpasswd + +# The following are needed to allow password changing from Windows to +# also update the Linux system password. +# NOTE: Use these with 'encrypt passwords' and 'smb passwd file' above. +# NOTE2: You do NOT need these to allow workstations to change only +# the encrypted SMB passwords. They allow the Unix password +# to be kept in sync with the SMB password. +; unix password sync = Yes +# You either need to setup a passwd program and passwd chat, or +# enable pam password change +; pam password change = yes +# passwd program = /usr/bin/passwd '%u' +; passwd chat = *New*UNIX*password* %n\n *Re*ype*new*UNIX*password* %n\n \ +;*passwd:*all*authentication*tokens*updated*successfully* + +# Unix users can map to different SMB User names +; username map = /etc/samba/smbusers + +# Using the following line enables you to customise your configuration +# on a per machine basis. The %m gets replaced with the netbios name +# of the machine that is connecting +# include = /etc/samba/smb.conf.%m + +# Options for using winbind. Winbind allows you to do all account and +# authentication from a Windows or samba domain controller, creating +# accounts on the fly, and maintaining a mapping of Windows RIDs to unix uid's +# and gid's. winbind uid and winbind gid are the only required parameters. +# +# winbind uid is the range of uid's winbind can use when mapping RIDs to uid's +# idmap uid = 10000-20000 +# +# winbind gid is the range of uid's winbind can use when mapping RIDs to gid's +# idmap gid = 10000-20000 +# +# winbind separator is the character a user must use between their domain +# name and username, defaults to "\" +# winbind separator = + +# +# winbind use default domain allows you to have winbind return usernames +# in the form user instead of DOMAIN+user for the domain listed in the +# workgroup parameter. +# winbind use default domain = yes +# +# template homedir determines the home directory for winbind users, with +# %D expanding to their domain name and %U expanding to their username: +# template homedir = /home/%D/%U + +# When using winbind, you may want to have samba create home directories +# on the fly for authenticated users. Ensure that /etc/pam.d/samba is +# using 'service=system-auth-winbind' in pam_stack modules, and then +# enable obedience of pam restrictions below: +# obey pam restrictions = yes + +# +# template shell determines the shell users authenticated by winbind get +# template shell = /bin/bash + +# 5. Browser Control and Networking Options: +# Configure Samba to use multiple interfaces +# If you have multiple network interfaces then you must list them +# here. See the man page for details. +# interfaces = 192.168.12.2/24 192.168.13.2/24 + +# Configure remote browse list synchronisation here +# request announcement to, or browse list sync from: +# a specific host or from / to a whole subnet (see below) +# remote browse sync = 192.168.3.25 192.168.5.255 +# Cause this host to announce itself to local subnets here +# remote announce = 192.168.1.255 192.168.2.44 + +# set local master to no if you don't want Samba to become a master +# browser on your network. Otherwise the normal election rules apply +# local master = no + +# OS Level determines the precedence of this server in master browser +# elections. The default value should be reasonable +# os level = 33 + +# Domain Master specifies Samba to be the Domain Master Browser. This +# allows Samba to collate browse lists between subnets. Don't use this +# if you already have a Windows NT domain controller doing this job +# domain master = yes + +# Preferred Master causes Samba to force a local browser election on startup +# and gives it a slightly higher chance of winning the election +# preferred master = yes + +# 6. Domain Control Options: +# Enable this if you want Samba to be a domain logon server for +# Windows95 workstations or Primary Domain Controller for WinNT and Win2k +# domain logons = yes + +# if you enable domain logons then you may want a per-machine or +# per user logon script +# run a specific logon batch file per workstation (machine) +# logon script = %m.bat +# run a specific logon batch file per username +# logon script = %u.bat + +# Where to store roaming profiles for WinNT and Win2k +# %L substitutes for this servers netbios name, %u is username +# You must uncomment the [Profiles] share below +# logon path = \\%L\Profiles\%u + +# Where to store roaming profiles for Win9x. Be careful with this as it also +# impacts where Win2k finds it's /HOME share +# logon home = \\%L\%u\.profile + + +# The add user script is used by a domain member to add local user accounts +# that have been authenticated by the domain controller, or when adding +# users via the Windows NT Tools (ie User Manager for Domains). + +# Scripts for file (passwd, smbpasswd) backend: +# add user script = /usr/sbin/useradd -s /bin/false '%u' +# delete user script = /usr/sbin/userdel '%s' +# add user to group script = /usr/bin/gpasswd -a '%u' '%g' +# delete user from group script = /usr/bin/gpasswd -d '%u' '%g' +# set primary group script = /usr/sbin/usermod -g '%g' '%u' +# add group script = /usr/sbin/groupadd %g && getent group '%g'|awk -F: '{print $3}' +# delete group script = /usr/sbin/groupdel '%g' + +# Scripts for LDAP backend (assumes nss_ldap is in use on the domain controller, +# and needs configuration in smbldap_conf.pm +# add user script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-useradd -m '%u' +# delete user script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-userdel '%u' +# add user to group script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-groupmod -m '%u' '%g' +# delete user from group script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-groupmod -x '%u' '%g' +# set primary group script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-usermod -g '%g' '%u' +# add group script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-groupadd '%g' && /usr/sbin/smbldap-groupshow %g|awk '/^gidNumber:/ {print $2}' +# delete group script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-groupdel '%g' + + +# The add machine script is use by a samba server configured as a domain +# controller to add local machine accounts when adding machines to the domain. +# The script must work from the command line when replacing the macros, +# or the operation will fail. Check that groups exist if forcing a group. +# Script for domain controller for adding machines: +# add machine script = /usr/sbin/useradd -d /dev/null -g machines -c 'Machine Account' -s /bin/false -M '%u' +# Script for domain controller with LDAP backend for adding machines (please +# configure in /etc/samba/smbldap_conf.pm first): +# add machine script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-useradd -w -d /dev/null -c 'Machine Account' -s /bin/false '%u' + +# Domain groups: +# Domain groups are now configured by using the 'net groupmap' tool + +# Enable priveleges, ie allowing members of Domain Admins to join machines +# to the domain +# enable privileges = yes + +# Samba Password Database configuration: +# Samba now has runtime-configurable password database backends. Multiple +# passdb backends may be used, but users will only be added to the first one +# Default: +# passdb backend = smbpasswd guest +# TDB backen with fallback to smbpasswd and guest +# passdb backend = tdbsam smbpasswd guest +# LDAP with fallback to smbpasswd guest +# Enable SSL by using an ldaps url, or enable tls with 'ldap ssl' below. +# passdb backend = ldapsam:ldaps://ldap.mydomain.com smbpasswd guest +# Use the samba2 LDAP schema: +# passdb backend = ldapsam_compat:ldaps://ldap.mydomain.com smbpasswd guest + +# Idmap settings (set idmap uid and idmap gid above): +# Idmap backend to use: +# idmap backend = ldap:ldap://ldap.mydomain.com + +# LDAP configuration for Domain Controlling: +# The account (dn) that samba uses to access the LDAP server +# This account needs to have write access to the LDAP tree +# You will need to give samba the password for this dn, by +# running 'smbpasswd -w mypassword' +# ldap admin dn = cn=root,dc=mydomain,dc=com +# ldap ssl = start_tls +# start_tls should run on 389, but samba defaults incorrectly to 636 +# ldap port = 389 +# ldap suffix = dc=mydomain,dc=com +# Seperate suffixes are available for machines, users, groups, and idmap, if +# ldap suffix appears first, it is appended to the specific suffix. +# Example for a unix-ish directory layout: +# ldap machine suffix = ou=Hosts +# ldap user suffix = ou=People +# ldap group suffix = ou=Group +# ldap idmap suffix = ou=Idmap +# Example for AD-ish layout: +# ldap machine suffix = cn=Computers +# ldap user suffix = cn=Users +# ldap group suffix = cn=Groups +# ldap idmap suffix = cn=Idmap + + +# 7. Name Resolution Options: +# All NetBIOS names must be resolved to IP Addresses +# 'Name Resolve Order' allows the named resolution mechanism to be specified +# the default order is "host lmhosts wins bcast". "host" means use the unix +# system gethostbyname() function call that will use either /etc/hosts OR +# DNS or NIS depending on the settings of /etc/host.config, /etc/nsswitch.conf +# and the /etc/resolv.conf file. "host" therefore is system configuration +# dependant. This parameter is most often of use to prevent DNS lookups +# in order to resolve NetBIOS names to IP Addresses. Use with care! +# The example below excludes use of name resolution for machines that are NOT +# on the local network segment +# - OR - are not deliberately to be known via lmhosts or via WINS. +# name resolve order = wins lmhosts bcast + +# Windows Internet Name Serving Support Section: +# WINS Support - Tells the NMBD component of Samba to enable it's WINS Server +# wins support = yes + +# WINS Server - Tells the NMBD components of Samba to be a WINS Client +# Note: Samba can be either a WINS Server, or a WINS Client, but NOT both +# wins server = w.x.y.z + +# WINS Proxy - Tells Samba to answer name resolution queries on +# behalf of a non WINS capable client, for this to work there must be +# at least one WINS Server on the network. The default is NO. +# wins proxy = yes + +# DNS Proxy - tells Samba whether or not to try to resolve NetBIOS names +# via DNS nslookups. The built-in default for versions 1.9.17 is yes, +# this has been changed in version 1.9.18 to no. + dns proxy = no + +# 8. File Naming Options: +# Case Preservation can be handy - system default is _no_ +# NOTE: These can be set on a per share basis +# preserve case = no +# short preserve case = no +# Default case is normally upper case for all DOS files +# default case = lower +# Be very careful with case sensitivity - it can break things! +# case sensitive = no + +# Enabling internationalization: +# you can match a Windows code page with a UNIX character set. +# Windows: 437 (US), 737 (GREEK), 850 (Latin1 - Western European), +# 852 (Eastern Eu.), 861 (Icelandic), 932 (Cyrillic - Russian), +# 936 (Japanese - Shift-JIS), 936 (Simpl. Chinese), 949 (Korean Hangul), +# 950 (Trad. Chin.). +# UNIX: ISO8859-1 (Western European), ISO8859-2 (Eastern Eu.), +# ISO8859-5 (Russian Cyrillic), KOI8-R (Alt-Russ. Cyril.) +# This is an example for french users: +# dos charset = 850 +# unix charset = ISO8859-1 + + +#============================ Share Definitions ============================== +[homes] + comment = Home Directories + browseable = no + writable = yes +# You can enable VFS recycle bin and on-access virus-scanning on a per +# share basis: +# Uncomment the next 2 lines (make sure you create a .recycle folder in +# the base of the share and ensure all users will have write access to it. +# For virus scanning, install samba-vscan-clamav and ensure the clamd service +# is running +# vfs objects = vscan-clamav recycle +# vscan-clamav: config-file = /etc/samba/vscan-clamav.conf + +# Un-comment the following and create the netlogon directory for Domain Logons +# [netlogon] +# comment = Network Logon Service +# path = /var/lib/samba/netlogon +# guest ok = yes +# writable = no + +#Uncomment the following 2 lines if you would like your login scripts to +#be created dynamically by ntlogon (check that you have it in the correct +#location (the default of the ntlogon rpm available in contribs) +#root preexec = /usr/bin/ntlogon -u '%u' -g '%g' -o %a -d /var/lib/samba/netlogon/ +#root postexec = rm -f '/var/lib/samba/netlogon/%u.bat' + +# Un-comment the following to provide a specific roving profile share +# the default is to use the user's home directory +#[Profiles] +# path = /var/lib/samba/profiles +# browseable = no +# guest ok = yes +# writable = yes +# This script can be enabled to create profile directories on the fly +# You may want to turn off guest acces if you enable this, as it +# hasn't been thoroughly tested. +#root preexec = PROFILE='/var/lib/samba/profiles/%u'; if [ ! -e $PROFILE ]; \ +# then mkdir -pm700 $PROFILE; chown '%u':'%g' $PROFILE;fi +# If you want read-only profiles, fake permissions so windows clients think +# they have written to the files +# vfs objects = fake_perms + +# NOTE: If you have a CUPS print system there is no need to +# specifically define each individual printer. +# You must configure the samba printers with the appropriate Windows +# drivers on your Windows clients or upload the printer driver to the +# server from Windows (NT/2000/XP). On the Samba server no filtering is +# done. If you wish that the server provides the driver and the clients +# send PostScript ("Generic PostScript Printer" under Windows), you have +# to use 'printcap name = cups' or swap the 'print command' line below +# with the commented one. Note that print commands only work if not using +# 'printing=cups' +[printers] + comment = All Printers + path = /var/spool/samba + browseable = no +# to allow user 'guest account' to print. + guest ok = yes + writable = no + printable = yes + create mode = 0700 +# ===================================== +# print command: see above for details. +# ===================================== + print command = lpr-cups -P %p -o raw %s -r # using client side printer drivers. +# print command = lpr-cups -P %p %s # using cups own drivers (use generic PostScript on clients). +# If you install drivers on the server, you will want to uncomment this so +# clients request the driver + use client driver = yes + +# This share is used for Windows NT-style point-and-print support. +# To be able to install drivers, you need to be either root, or listed +# in the printer admin parameter above. Note that you also need write access +# to the directory and share definition to be able to upload the drivers. +# For more information on this, please see the Printing Support Section of +# /usr/share/doc/samba-/docs/Samba-HOWTO-Collection.pdf +# +# A special case is using the CUPS Windows Postscript driver, which allows +# all features available via CUPS on the client, by publishing the ppd file +# and the cups driver by using the 'cupsaddsmb' tool. This requires the +# installation of the CUPS driver (http://www.cups.org/windows.php) +# on the server, but doesn't require you to use Windows at all :-). +[print$] + path = /var/lib/samba/printers + browseable = yes + write list = @adm root + guest ok = yes + inherit permissions = yes + # Settings suitable for Winbind: + # write list = @"Domain Admins" root + # force group = +@"Domain Admins" + +# A useful application of samba is to make a PDF-generation service +# To streamline this, install windows postscript drivers (preferably colour) +# on the samba server, so that clients can automatically install them. +# Note that this only works if 'printing' is *not* set to 'cups' + +[pdf-gen] + path = /var/tmp + guest ok = No + printable = Yes + comment = PDF Generator (only valid users) + printing = bsd + #print command = /usr/share/samba/scripts/print-pdf file path win_path recipient IP & + print command = /usr/share/samba/scripts/print-pdf "%s" "%H" "//%L/%u" "%m" "%I" "%J" & + lpq command = /bin/true + +# A share allowing administrators to set ACLs on, or access for backup purposes +# all files (as root). +#[admin] +# path = / +# admin users = @"Domain Admins" +# valid users = @"Domain Admins" +# browseable = no +# writeable = yes + +# This one is useful for people to share files +;[tmp] +; comment = Temporary file space +; path = /tmp +; read only = no +; public = yes + +# A publicly accessible directory, but read only, except for people in +# the "staff" group +;[public] +; comment = Public Stuff +; path = /home/samba/public +; public = yes +; writable = no +; write list = @staff +# Audited directory through experimental VFS audit.so module: +# Uncomment next line. +# vfs object = /usr/lib/samba/vfs/audit.so + +# Other examples. +# +# A private printer, usable only by Fred. Spool data will be placed in Fred's +# home directory. Note that fred must have write access to the spool directory, +# wherever it is. +;[fredsprn] +; comment = Fred's Printer +; valid users = fred +; path = /homes/fred +; printer = freds_printer +; public = no +; writable = no +; printable = yes + +# A private directory, usable only by Fred. Note that Fred requires write +# access to the directory. +;[fredsdir] +; comment = Fred's Service +; path = /usr/somewhere/private +; valid users = fred +; public = no +; writable = yes +; printable = no + +# a service which has a different directory for each machine that connects +# this allows you to tailor configurations to incoming machines. You could +# also use the %u option to tailor it by user name. +# The %m gets replaced with the machine name that is connecting. +;[pchome] +; comment = PC Directories +; path = /usr/pc/%m +; public = no +; writable = yes + +# The following two entries demonstrate how to share a directory so that two +# users can place files there that will be owned by the specific users. In this +# setup, the directory should be writable by both users and should have the +# sticky bit set on it to prevent abuse. Obviously this could be extended to +# as many users as required. +;[myshare] +; comment = Mary's and Fred's stuff +; path = /usr/somewhere/shared +; valid users = mary fred +; public = no +; writable = yes +; printable = no +; create mask = 0765 + --- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/smbprint.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/smbprint 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,77 @@ +#!/bin/sh + +# This script is an input filter for printcap printing on a unix machine. It +# uses the smbclient program to print the file to the specified smb-based +# server and service. +# For example you could have a printcap entry like this +# +# smb:lp=/dev/null:sd=/usr/spool/smb:sh:if=/usr/local/samba/smbprint +# +# which would create a unix printer called "smb" that will print via this +# script. You will need to create the spool directory /usr/spool/smb with +# appropriate permissions and ownerships for your system. + +# Set these to the server and service you wish to print to +# In this example I have a WfWg PC called "lapland" that has a printer +# exported called "printer" with no password. + +# +# Script further altered by hamiltom@ecnz.co.nz (Michael Hamilton) +# so that the server, service, and password can be read from +# a /var/spool/lpd/PRINTNAME/.config file. +# +# In order for this to work the /etc/printcap entry must include an +# accounting file (af=...): +# +# cdcolour:\ +# :cm=CD IBM Colorjet on 6th:\ +# :sd=/var/spool/lpd/cdcolour:\ +# :af=/var/spool/lpd/cdcolour/acct:\ +# :if=/usr/local/etc/smbprint:\ +# :mx=0:\ +# :lp=/dev/null: +# +# The /usr/var/spool/lpd/PRINTNAME/.config file should contain: +# server=PC_SERVER +# service=PR_SHARENAME +# password="password" +# +# E.g. +# server=PAULS_PC +# service=CJET_371 +# password="" + +# +# Debugging log file, change to /dev/null if you like. +# +# logfile=/tmp/smb-print.log +logfile=/dev/null + + +# +# The last parameter to the filter is the accounting file name. +# Extract the directory name from the file name. +# Concat this with /.config to get the config file. +# +eval acct_file=\${$#} +spool_dir=`dirname $acct_file` +config_file=$spool_dir/.config + +# Should read the following variables set in the config file: +# server +# service +# password +eval `cat $config_file` + +# +# Some debugging help, change the >> to > if you want to same space. +# +echo "server $server, service $service" >> $logfile + +( +# NOTE You may wish to add the line `echo translate' if you want automatic +# CR/LF translation when printing. +# echo translate + echo "print -" + cat +) | /usr/bin/smbclient "//$server/$service" $password -U $server -N >> $logfile --- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/smbusers.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/smbusers 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +# Unix_name = SMB_name1 SMB_name2 ... +root = administrator admin +nobody = guest pcguest smbguest --- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/smb-winbind.conf.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/smb-winbind.conf 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,539 @@ + +# This is the main Samba configuration file. You should read the +# smb.conf(5) manual page in order to understand the options listed +# here. Samba has a huge number of configurable options (perhaps too +# many!) most of which are not shown in this example +# +# Any line which starts with a ; (semi-colon) or a # (hash) +# is a comment and is ignored. In this example we will use a # +# for commentry and a ; for parts of the config file that you +# may wish to enable +# +# NOTE: Whenever you modify this file you should run the command "testparm" +# to check that you have not made any basic syntactic errors. +# +#======================= Global Settings ===================================== +[global] + +# 1. Server Naming Options: +# workgroup = NT-Domain-Name or Workgroup-Name + workgroup = MDKGROUP + +# netbios name is the name you will see in "Network Neighbourhood", +# but defaults to your hostname +# netbios name = + +# server string is the equivalent of the NT Description field + server string = Samba Server %v + +# Message command is run by samba when a "popup" message is sent to it. +# The example below is for use with LinPopUp: +; message command = /usr/bin/linpopup "%f" "%m" %s; rm %s + +# 2. Printing Options: +# CHANGES TO ENABLE PRINTING ON ALL CUPS PRINTERS IN THE NETWORK +# (as cups is now used in linux-mandrake 7.2 by default) +# if you want to automatically load your printer list rather +# than setting them up individually then you'll need this + printcap name = lpstat + load printers = yes + +# printcap cache time, so samba will automatically load new cups printers + printcap cache time = 60 + +# It should not be necessary to spell out the print system type unless +# yours is non-standard. Currently supported print systems include: +# bsd, sysv, plp, lprng, aix, hpux, qnx, cups + printing = cups + +# Samba 2.2 supports the Windows NT-style point-and-print feature. To +# use this, you need to be able to upload print drivers to the samba +# server. The printer admins (or root) may install drivers onto samba. +# Note that this feature uses the print$ share, so you will need to +# enable it below. +# printer admin = @ +# printer admin = @adm +# This should work well for winbind: + printer admin = @"Domain Admins" + +# 3. Logging Options: +# this tells Samba to use a separate log file for each machine +# that connects + log file = /var/log/samba/log.%m + +# Put a capping on the size of the log files (in Kb). + max log size = 50 + +# Set the log (verbosity) level (0 <= log level <= 10) +# log level = 3 + +# 4. Security and Domain Membership Options: +# This option is important for security. It allows you to restrict +# connections to machines which are on your local network. The +# following example restricts access to two C class networks and +# the "loopback" interface. For more examples of the syntax see +# the smb.conf man page. Do not enable this if (tcp/ip) name resolution does +# not work for all the hosts in your network. +# hosts allow = 192.168.1. 192.168.2. 127. + +# Uncomment this if you want a guest account, you must add this to /etc/passwd +# otherwise the user "nobody" is used +# guest account = pcguest +# Allow users to map to guest: + map to guest = bad user + +# Security mode. Most people will want user level security. See +# security_level.txt for details. + security = domain +# Use password server option only with security = server or security = domain +# When using security = domain, you should use password server = * +# password server = +# password server = * + +# Password Level allows matching of _n_ characters of the password for +# all combinations of upper and lower case. +# password level = 8 +# username level = 8 + +# You may wish to use password encryption. Please read +# ENCRYPTION.txt, Win95.txt and WinNT.txt in the Samba documentation. +# Do not enable this option unless you have read those documents +# Encrypted passwords are required for any use of samba in a Windows NT domain +# The smbpasswd file is only required by a server doing authentication, thus +# members of a domain do not need one. + encrypt passwords = yes + smb passwd file = /etc/samba/smbpasswd + +# The following are needed to allow password changing from Windows to +# also update the Linux system password. +# NOTE: Use these with 'encrypt passwords' and 'smb passwd file' above. +# NOTE2: You do NOT need these to allow workstations to change only +# the encrypted SMB passwords. They allow the Unix password +# to be kept in sync with the SMB password. +; unix password sync = Yes +# You either need to setup a passwd program and passwd chat, or +# enable pam password change +; pam password change = yes +# passwd program = /usr/bin/passwd '%u' +; passwd chat = *New*UNIX*password* %n\n *Re*ype*new*UNIX*password* %n\n \ +;*passwd:*all*authentication*tokens*updated*successfully* + +# Unix users can map to different SMB User names +; username map = /etc/samba/smbusers + +# Using the following line enables you to customise your configuration +# on a per machine basis. The %m gets replaced with the netbios name +# of the machine that is connecting +# include = /etc/samba/smb.conf.%m + +# Options for using winbind. Winbind allows you to do all account and +# authentication from a Windows or samba domain controller, creating +# accounts on the fly, and maintaining a mapping of Windows RIDs to unix uid's +# and gid's. winbind uid and winbind gid are the only required parameters. +# +# winbind uid is the range of uid's winbind can use when mapping RIDs to uid's +# idmap uid = 10000-20000 +# +# winbind gid is the range of uid's winbind can use when mapping RIDs to gid's +# idmap gid = 10000-20000 +# +# winbind separator is the character a user must use between their domain +# name and username, defaults to "\" +# winbind separator = + +# +# winbind use default domain allows you to have winbind return usernames +# in the form user instead of DOMAIN+user for the domain listed in the +# workgroup parameter. +# winbind use default domain = yes +# +# template homedir determines the home directory for winbind users, with +# %D expanding to their domain name and %U expanding to their username: +# template homedir = /home/%D/%U + +# When using winbind, you may want to have samba create home directories +# on the fly for authenticated users. Ensure that /etc/pam.d/samba is +# using 'service=system-auth-winbind' in pam_stack modules, and then +# enable obedience of pam restrictions below: +# obey pam restrictions = yes + +# +# template shell determines the shell users authenticated by winbind get +# template shell = /bin/bash + +# 5. Browser Control and Networking Options: +# Most people will find that this option gives better performance. +# See speed.txt and the manual pages for details + socket options = TCP_NODELAY SO_RCVBUF=8192 SO_SNDBUF=8192 + +# Configure Samba to use multiple interfaces +# If you have multiple network interfaces then you must list them +# here. See the man page for details. +# interfaces = 192.168.12.2/24 192.168.13.2/24 + +# Configure remote browse list synchronisation here +# request announcement to, or browse list sync from: +# a specific host or from / to a whole subnet (see below) +# remote browse sync = 192.168.3.25 192.168.5.255 +# Cause this host to announce itself to local subnets here +# remote announce = 192.168.1.255 192.168.2.44 + +# set local master to no if you don't want Samba to become a master +# browser on your network. Otherwise the normal election rules apply +# local master = no + +# OS Level determines the precedence of this server in master browser +# elections. The default value should be reasonable +# os level = 33 + +# Domain Master specifies Samba to be the Domain Master Browser. This +# allows Samba to collate browse lists between subnets. Don't use this +# if you already have a Windows NT domain controller doing this job +# domain master = yes + +# Preferred Master causes Samba to force a local browser election on startup +# and gives it a slightly higher chance of winning the election +# preferred master = yes + +# 6. Domain Control Options: +# Enable this if you want Samba to be a domain logon server for +# Windows95 workstations or Primary Domain Controller for WinNT and Win2k +# domain logons = yes + +# if you enable domain logons then you may want a per-machine or +# per user logon script +# run a specific logon batch file per workstation (machine) +# logon script = %m.bat +# run a specific logon batch file per username +# logon script = %u.bat + +# Where to store roaming profiles for WinNT and Win2k +# %L substitutes for this servers netbios name, %u is username +# You must uncomment the [Profiles] share below +# logon path = \\%L\Profiles\%u + +# Where to store roaming profiles for Win9x. Be careful with this as it also +# impacts where Win2k finds it's /HOME share +# logon home = \\%L\%u\.profile + + +# The add user script is used by a domain member to add local user accounts +# that have been authenticated by the domain controller, or when adding +# users via the Windows NT Tools (ie User Manager for Domains). + +# Scripts for file (passwd, smbpasswd) backend: +# add user script = /usr/sbin/useradd -s /bin/false '%u' +# delete user script = /usr/sbin/userdel '%s' +# add user to group script = /usr/bin/gpasswd -a '%u' '%g' +# delete user from group script = /usr/bin/gpasswd -d '%u' '%g' +# set primary group script = /usr/sbin/usermod -g '%g' '%u' +# add group script = /usr/sbin/groupadd %g && getent group '%g'|awk -F: '{print $3}' +# delete group script = /usr/sbin/groupdel '%g' + +# Scripts for LDAP backend (assumes nss_ldap is in use on the domain controller, +# and needs configuration in smbldap_conf.pm +# add user script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-useradd -m '%u' +# delete user script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-userdel '%u' +# add user to group script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-groupmod -m '%u' '%g' +# delete user from group script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-groupmod -x '%u' '%g' +# set primary group script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-usermod -g '%g' '%u' +# add group script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-groupadd '%g' && /usr/sbin/smbldap-groupshow %g|awk '/^gidNumber:/ {print $2}' +# delete group script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-groupdel '%g' + + +# The add machine script is use by a samba server configured as a domain +# controller to add local machine accounts when adding machines to the domain. +# The script must work from the command line when replacing the macros, +# or the operation will fail. Check that groups exist if forcing a group. +# Script for domain controller for adding machines: +# add machine script = /usr/sbin/useradd -d /dev/null -g machines -c 'Machine Account' -s /bin/false -M '%u' +# Script for domain controller with LDAP backend for adding machines (please +# configure in /etc/samba/smbldap_conf.pm first): +# add machine script = /usr/sbin/smbldap-useradd -w -d /dev/null -c 'Machine Account' -s /bin/false '%u' + +# Domain groups: +# Domain groups are now configured by using the 'net groupmap' tool + +# Enable priveleges, ie allowing members of Domain Admins to join machines +# to the domain +# enable privileges = yes + +# Samba Password Database configuration: +# Samba now has runtime-configurable password database backends. Multiple +# passdb backends may be used, but users will only be added to the first one +# Default: +# passdb backend = smbpasswd guest +# TDB backen with fallback to smbpasswd and guest +# passdb backend = tdbsam smbpasswd guest +# LDAP with fallback to smbpasswd guest +# Enable SSL by using an ldaps url, or enable tls with 'ldap ssl' below. +# passdb backend = ldapsam:ldaps://ldap.mydomain.com smbpasswd guest +# Use the samba2 LDAP schema: +# passdb backend = ldapsam_compat:ldaps://ldap.mydomain.com smbpasswd guest + +# Idmap settings (set idmap uid and idmap gid above): +# Idmap backend to use: +# idmap backend = ldap:ldap://ldap.mydomain.com + +# LDAP configuration for Domain Controlling: +# The account (dn) that samba uses to access the LDAP server +# This account needs to have write access to the LDAP tree +# You will need to give samba the password for this dn, by +# running 'smbpasswd -w mypassword' +# ldap admin dn = cn=root,dc=mydomain,dc=com +# ldap ssl = start_tls +# start_tls should run on 389, but samba defaults incorrectly to 636 +# ldap port = 389 +# ldap suffix = dc=mydomain,dc=com +# Seperate suffixes are available for machines, users, groups, and idmap, if +# ldap suffix appears first, it is appended to the specific suffix. +# Example for a unix-ish directory layout: +# ldap machine suffix = ou=Hosts +# ldap user suffix = ou=People +# ldap group suffix = ou=Group +# ldap idmap suffix = ou=Idmap +# Example for AD-ish layout: +# ldap machine suffix = cn=Computers +# ldap user suffix = cn=Users +# ldap group suffix = cn=Groups +# ldap idmap suffix = cn=Idmap + + +# 7. Name Resolution Options: +# All NetBIOS names must be resolved to IP Addresses +# 'Name Resolve Order' allows the named resolution mechanism to be specified +# the default order is "host lmhosts wins bcast". "host" means use the unix +# system gethostbyname() function call that will use either /etc/hosts OR +# DNS or NIS depending on the settings of /etc/host.config, /etc/nsswitch.conf +# and the /etc/resolv.conf file. "host" therefore is system configuration +# dependant. This parameter is most often of use to prevent DNS lookups +# in order to resolve NetBIOS names to IP Addresses. Use with care! +# The example below excludes use of name resolution for machines that are NOT +# on the local network segment +# - OR - are not deliberately to be known via lmhosts or via WINS. +# name resolve order = wins lmhosts bcast + +# Windows Internet Name Serving Support Section: +# WINS Support - Tells the NMBD component of Samba to enable it's WINS Server +# wins support = yes + +# WINS Server - Tells the NMBD components of Samba to be a WINS Client +# Note: Samba can be either a WINS Server, or a WINS Client, but NOT both +# wins server = w.x.y.z + +# WINS Proxy - Tells Samba to answer name resolution queries on +# behalf of a non WINS capable client, for this to work there must be +# at least one WINS Server on the network. The default is NO. +# wins proxy = yes + +# DNS Proxy - tells Samba whether or not to try to resolve NetBIOS names +# via DNS nslookups. The built-in default for versions 1.9.17 is yes, +# this has been changed in version 1.9.18 to no. + dns proxy = no + +# 8. File Naming Options: +# Case Preservation can be handy - system default is _no_ +# NOTE: These can be set on a per share basis +# preserve case = no +# short preserve case = no +# Default case is normally upper case for all DOS files +# default case = lower +# Be very careful with case sensitivity - it can break things! +# case sensitive = no + +# Enabling internationalization: +# you can match a Windows code page with a UNIX character set. +# Windows: 437 (US), 737 (GREEK), 850 (Latin1 - Western European), +# 852 (Eastern Eu.), 861 (Icelandic), 932 (Cyrillic - Russian), +# 936 (Japanese - Shift-JIS), 936 (Simpl. Chinese), 949 (Korean Hangul), +# 950 (Trad. Chin.). +# UNIX: ISO8859-1 (Western European), ISO8859-2 (Eastern Eu.), +# ISO8859-5 (Russian Cyrillic), KOI8-R (Alt-Russ. Cyril.) +# This is an example for french users: +# dos charset = 850 +# unix charset = ISO8859-1 + + +#============================ Share Definitions ============================== +[homes] + comment = Home Directories + browseable = no + writable = yes +# You can enable VFS recycle bin and on-access virus-scanning on a per +# share basis: +# Uncomment the next 2 lines (make sure you create a .recycle folder in +# the base of the share and ensure all users will have write access to it. +# For virus scanning, install samba-vscan-clamav and ensure the clamd service +# is running +# vfs objects = vscan-clamav recycle +# vscan-clamav: config-file = /etc/samba/vscan-clamav.conf + +# Un-comment the following and create the netlogon directory for Domain Logons +# [netlogon] +# comment = Network Logon Service +# path = /var/lib/samba/netlogon +# guest ok = yes +# writable = no + +#Uncomment the following 2 lines if you would like your login scripts to +#be created dynamically by ntlogon (check that you have it in the correct +#location (the default of the ntlogon rpm available in contribs) +#root preexec = /usr/bin/ntlogon -u '%u' -g '%g' -o %a -d /var/lib/samba/netlogon/ +#root postexec = rm -f '/var/lib/samba/netlogon/%u.bat' + +# Un-comment the following to provide a specific roving profile share +# the default is to use the user's home directory +#[Profiles] +# path = /var/lib/samba/profiles +# browseable = no +# guest ok = yes +# writable = yes +# This script can be enabled to create profile directories on the fly +# You may want to turn off guest acces if you enable this, as it +# hasn't been thoroughly tested. +#root preexec = PROFILE='/var/lib/samba/profiles/%u'; if [ ! -e $PROFILE ]; \ +# then mkdir -pm700 $PROFILE; chown '%u':'%g' $PROFILE;fi +# If you want read-only profiles, fake permissions so windows clients think +# they have written to the files +# vfs objects = fake_perms + +# NOTE: If you have a CUPS print system there is no need to +# specifically define each individual printer. +# You must configure the samba printers with the appropriate Windows +# drivers on your Windows clients or upload the printer driver to the +# server from Windows (NT/2000/XP). On the Samba server no filtering is +# done. If you wish that the server provides the driver and the clients +# send PostScript ("Generic PostScript Printer" under Windows), you have +# to use 'printcap name = cups' or swap the 'print command' line below +# with the commented one. Note that print commands only work if not using +# 'printing=cups' +[printers] + comment = All Printers + path = /var/spool/samba + browseable = no +# to allow user 'guest account' to print. + guest ok = yes + writable = no + printable = yes + create mode = 0700 +# ===================================== +# print command: see above for details. +# ===================================== + print command = lpr-cups -P %p -o raw %s -r # using client side printer drivers. +# print command = lpr-cups -P %p %s # using cups own drivers (use generic PostScript on clients). +# If you install drivers on the server, you will want to uncomment this so +# clients request the driver + use client driver = yes + +# This share is used for Windows NT-style point-and-print support. +# To be able to install drivers, you need to be either root, or listed +# in the printer admin parameter above. Note that you also need write access +# to the directory and share definition to be able to upload the drivers. +# For more information on this, please see the Printing Support Section of +# /usr/share/doc/samba-/docs/Samba-HOWTO-Collection.pdf +# +# A special case is using the CUPS Windows Postscript driver, which allows +# all features available via CUPS on the client, by publishing the ppd file +# and the cups driver by using the 'cupsaddsmb' tool. This requires the +# installation of the CUPS driver (http://www.cups.org/windows.php) +# on the server, but doesn't require you to use Windows at all :-). +[print$] + path = /var/lib/samba/printers + browseable = yes + write list = @adm root + guest ok = yes + inherit permissions = yes + # Settings suitable for Winbind: + # write list = @"Domain Admins" root + # force group = +@"Domain Admins" + +# A useful application of samba is to make a PDF-generation service +# To streamline this, install windows postscript drivers (preferably colour) +# on the samba server, so that clients can automatically install them. +# Note that this only works if 'printing' is *not* set to 'cups' + +[pdf-gen] + path = /var/tmp + guest ok = No + printable = Yes + comment = PDF Generator (only valid users) + printing = bsd + #print command = /usr/share/samba/scripts/print-pdf file path win_path recipient IP & + print command = /usr/share/samba/scripts/print-pdf "%s" "%H" "//%L/%u" "%m" "%I" "%J" & + lpq command = /bin/true + +# A share allowing administrators to set ACLs on, or access for backup purposes +# ll files (as root). +#[admin] +# path = / +# admin users = @"Domain Admins" +# valid users = @"Domain Admins" +# browseable = no +# writeable = yes + +# This one is useful for people to share files +;[tmp] +; comment = Temporary file space +; path = /tmp +; read only = no +; public = yes + +# A publicly accessible directory, but read only, except for people in +# the "staff" group +;[public] +; comment = Public Stuff +; path = /home/samba/public +; public = yes +; writable = no +; write list = @staff +# Audited directory through experimental VFS audit.so module: +# Uncomment next line. +# vfs object = /usr/lib/samba/vfs/audit.so + +# Other examples. +# +# A private printer, usable only by Fred. Spool data will be placed in Fred's +# home directory. Note that fred must have write access to the spool directory, +# wherever it is. +;[fredsprn] +; comment = Fred's Printer +; valid users = fred +; path = /homes/fred +; printer = freds_printer +; public = no +; writable = no +; printable = yes + +# A private directory, usable only by Fred. Note that Fred requires write +# access to the directory. +;[fredsdir] +; comment = Fred's Service +; path = /usr/somewhere/private +; valid users = fred +; public = no +; writable = yes +; printable = no + +# a service which has a different directory for each machine that connects +# this allows you to tailor configurations to incoming machines. You could +# also use the %u option to tailor it by user name. +# The %m gets replaced with the machine name that is connecting. +;[pchome] +; comment = PC Directories +; path = /usr/pc/%m +; public = no +; writable = yes + +# The following two entries demonstrate how to share a directory so that two +# users can place files there that will be owned by the specific users. In this +# setup, the directory should be writable by both users and should have the +# sticky bit set on it to prevent abuse. Obviously this could be extended to +# as many users as required. +;[myshare] +; comment = Mary's and Fred's stuff +; path = /usr/somewhere/shared +; valid users = mary fred +; public = no +; writable = yes +; printable = no +; create mask = 0765 + --- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/system-auth-winbind.pamd.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/system-auth-winbind.pamd 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +#%PAM-1.0 + +auth required /lib/security/pam_env.so +auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_winbind.so +auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_unix.so likeauth nullok use_first_pass +auth required /lib/security/pam_deny.so + +account sufficient /lib/security/pam_winbind.so +account required /lib/security/pam_unix.so + +password required /lib/security/pam_cracklib.so retry=3 +password sufficient /lib/security/pam_unix.so nullok use_authtok md5 shadow +password required /lib/security/pam_deny.so + +session required /lib/security/pam_mkhomedir.so skel=/etc/skel/ umask=0022 +session required /lib/security/pam_limits.so +session required /lib/security/pam_unix.so --- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/winbind.init.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/winbind.init 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,93 @@ +#!/bin/sh +# +# chkconfig: 345 81 45 +# description: Starts and stops the Samba winbind daemon to provide \ +# user and group information from a domain controller to linux. + +# Source function library. +if [ -f /etc/init.d/functions ] ; then + . /etc/init.d/functions +elif [ -f /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions ] ; then + . /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions +else + exit 0 +fi + +# Source networking configuration. +. /etc/sysconfig/network + +# Check that networking is up. +[ ${NETWORKING} = "no" ] && exit 0 + +# Check that smb.conf exists. +[ -f /etc/samba/smb.conf ] || exit 0 + +RETVAL=0 + + +start() { + echo -n "Starting Winbind services: " + RETVAL=1 + if [ "`grep -i -E '(idmap|winbind) uid' /etc/samba/smb.conf | egrep -v [\#\;]`" -a "`grep -i -E '(idmap|winbind) gid' /etc/samba/smb.conf | egrep -v [\#\;]`" ]; then + daemon winbindd + RETVAL=$? + else + echo "Winbind is not configured in /etc/samba/smb.conf, not starting" + fi + echo + [ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && touch /var/lock/subsys/winbind || \ + RETVAL=1 + return $RETVAL +} +stop() { + echo -n "Shutting down Winbind services: " + RETVAL=1 + #if [ "`grep -i -E '(idmap|winbind) uid' /etc/samba/smb.conf | egrep -v [\#\;]`" -a "`grep -i -E '(idmap|winbind) gid' /etc/samba/smb.conf | egrep -v [\#\;]`" ]; then + killproc winbindd + RETVAL=$? + #fi + echo + [ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && rm -f /var/lock/subsys/winbind + return $RETVAL +} +restart() { + stop + start +} +reload() { + export TMPDIR="/var/tmp" + echo -n "Checking domain trusts: " + killproc winbindd -HUP + RETVAL=$? + echo + return $RETVAL +} +mdkstatus() { + status winbindd +} + +case "$1" in + start) + start + ;; + stop) + stop + ;; + restart) + restart + ;; + reload) + reload + ;; + status) + mdkstatus + ;; + condrestart) + [ -f /var/lock/subsys/winbindd ] && restart || : + ;; + *) + echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart|status|condrestart}" + exit 1 +esac + +exit $? --- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/wrepld.init.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/wrepld.init 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,93 @@ +#!/bin/sh +# +# chkconfig: 345 81 45 +# description: Starts and stops the Samba wrepld daemon to provide \ +# WINS replication services between WINS partner servers. + +# Source function library. +if [ -f /etc/init.d/functions ] ; then + . /etc/init.d/functions +elif [ -f /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions ] ; then + . /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions +else + exit 0 +fi + +# Source networking configuration. +. /etc/sysconfig/network + +# Check that networking is up. +[ ${NETWORKING} = "no" ] && exit 0 + +# Check that smb.conf exists. +[ -f /etc/samba/smb.conf ] || exit 0 + +RETVAL=0 + + +start() { + echo -n "Starting WINS Replication services: " + RETVAL=1 + if [ "`grep -i 'wins partners' /etc/samba/smb.conf | egrep -v [\#\;]`" ]; then + daemon wrepld + RETVAL=$? + else + echo "WINS replication is not configured in /etc/samba/smb.conf, not starting" + fi + echo + [ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && touch /var/lock/subsys/wrepld || \ + RETVAL=1 + return $RETVAL +} +stop() { + echo -n "Shutting down WINS replication services: " + RETVAL=1 + if [ "`grep -i 'wins partners' /etc/samba/smb.conf | egrep -v [\#\;]`" ]; then + killproc wrepld + RETVAL=$? + fi + echo + [ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && rm -f /var/lock/subsys/wrepld + return $RETVAL +} +restart() { + stop + start +} +reload() { + export TMPDIR="/var/tmp" + echo -n "Reloading WINS replication: " + killproc wrepld -HUP + RETVAL=$? + echo + return $RETVAL +} +mdkstatus() { + status wrepld +} + +case "$1" in + start) + start + ;; + stop) + stop + ;; + restart) + restart + ;; + reload) + reload + ;; + status) + mdkstatus + ;; + condrestart) + [ -f /var/lock/subsys/wrepld ] && restart || : + ;; + *) + echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart|status|condrestart}" + exit 1 +esac + +exit $? --- samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/smb.init.mdk 2006-07-11 13:28:27.000000000 +0200 +++ samba-3.0.23/packaging/Mandrake/smb.init 2006-07-11 13:31:22.000000000 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,95 @@ +#!/bin/sh +# +# chkconfig: 35 91 9 +# description: Starts and stops the Samba smbd and nmbd daemons \ +# used to provide SMB network services. + +# Source function library. +if [ -f /etc/init.d/functions ] ; then + . /etc/init.d/functions +elif [ -f /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions ] ; then + . /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions +else + exit 0 +fi + +# Source networking configuration. +. /etc/sysconfig/network + +# Check that networking is up. +[ ${NETWORKING} = "no" ] && exit 0 + +# Check that smb.conf exists. +[ -f /etc/samba/smb.conf ] || exit 0 + +RETVAL=0 + + +start() { + export TMPDIR="/var/tmp" + echo -n "Starting SMB services: " + daemon smbd -D + RETVAL=$? + echo + echo -n "Starting NMB services: " + daemon nmbd -D + RETVAL2=$? + echo + [ $RETVAL -eq 0 -a $RETVAL2 -eq 0 ] && touch /var/lock/subsys/smb || \ + RETVAL=1 + return $RETVAL +} +stop() { + echo -n "Shutting down SMB services: " + killproc smbd + RETVAL=$? + echo + echo -n "Shutting down NMB services: " + killproc nmbd + RETVAL2=$? + [ $RETVAL -eq 0 -a $RETVAL2 -eq 0 ] && rm -f /var/lock/subsys/smb + echo "" + return $RETVAL +} +restart() { + stop + start +} +reload() { + export TMPDIR="/var/tmp" + echo -n "Reloading smb.conf file: " + killproc smbd -HUP + RETVAL=$? + echo + return $RETVAL +} +mdkstatus() { + status smbd + status nmbd +} + +case "$1" in + start) + start + ;; + stop) + stop + ;; + restart) + restart + ;; + reload) + reload + ;; + status) + mdkstatus + ;; + condrestart) + [ -f /var/lock/subsys/smb ] && restart || : + ;; + *) + echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart|status|condrestart}" + exit 1 +esac + +exit $?