Mailinglist Archive: opensuse (4344 mails)
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Re: [SLE] How do I get the correct file ownerships to show in the client machines?
- From: Markus Natter <markus.natter@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 10 Aug 2005 09:30:06 +0200
- Message-id: <3c4c76b405081000308671fe2@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Art,
again, I would not recommend you to start with setting up a LDAP
server in this case..
except you want to play around with it, hours and hours, read many
fn.. manuals..
If you are bored, or you got your primary problems solved, you could
start to take a look at LDAP, which is an interesting field.. but not
now, as you might get frustrated if nothing works. Start walking
first, then try to build a ferrari.. ;)
1. NFS
You could use NFS on windows too, if you'd install the windoze
services for unix (SFU),
you'd have to import your passwd / group file in the sfu snapin and
generate user mappings. (which windoze user should act as which unix
user..)
NFS is simple to setup on Linux, on Windoze you might spend some
minutes to work..
If your primary target is just filesharing, I'd go this way.
2. Samba
Is another possibility. You could also run it parallel to NFS, of
course. It's a bit more complicated here, and there are as well some
caveats.. but you could give it a try, and there is a lot of help in
the internet, and the shipped sample configs are quiet good to start
with. The advantage of samba is to share your printers configured in
cups with your windoze, printing to PDFs, specifying detailed ACLs (
but do you need them?) ...
If you'd use LDAP, you could use e.g. the LDAP Account Manager (LAM)
to manage samba and unix account settings in one web based tool (I'm
not sure, if YaST could deal with both user account types..).
To let Windoze authenticate against LDAP, I think it's possible, yet
not easy (Kerberos Ticket handling..), and you should really not try
by now.
hope this helps,
Markus
again, I would not recommend you to start with setting up a LDAP
server in this case..
except you want to play around with it, hours and hours, read many
fn.. manuals..
If you are bored, or you got your primary problems solved, you could
start to take a look at LDAP, which is an interesting field.. but not
now, as you might get frustrated if nothing works. Start walking
first, then try to build a ferrari.. ;)
1. NFS
You could use NFS on windows too, if you'd install the windoze
services for unix (SFU),
you'd have to import your passwd / group file in the sfu snapin and
generate user mappings. (which windoze user should act as which unix
user..)
NFS is simple to setup on Linux, on Windoze you might spend some
minutes to work..
If your primary target is just filesharing, I'd go this way.
2. Samba
Is another possibility. You could also run it parallel to NFS, of
course. It's a bit more complicated here, and there are as well some
caveats.. but you could give it a try, and there is a lot of help in
the internet, and the shipped sample configs are quiet good to start
with. The advantage of samba is to share your printers configured in
cups with your windoze, printing to PDFs, specifying detailed ACLs (
but do you need them?) ...
If you'd use LDAP, you could use e.g. the LDAP Account Manager (LAM)
to manage samba and unix account settings in one web based tool (I'm
not sure, if YaST could deal with both user account types..).
To let Windoze authenticate against LDAP, I think it's possible, yet
not easy (Kerberos Ticket handling..), and you should really not try
by now.
hope this helps,
Markus
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