Samba-AD HowTo Was: RE: [Samba] Can't get single sign on to work after joining linux toan AD domain

boxyzzy at netscape.net boxyzzy at netscape.net
Wed Jun 27 13:40:25 GMT 2007


If you've been following the thread, "URGENT!  Windows Server 2003 SP2 
broke samba", I would certainly welcome cookbook instructions.  For 
once I get the current release of Samba built, "the quickest way is too 
slow" to get it implemented and back on the air.  -Charles

-----Original Message-----
From: Address for list subcriptions <lists at rmt.com.au>
To: Henrik Zagerholm <henke at mac.se>; Justin Ehrlichman 
<justin at jmantra.com>
Cc: samba at lists.samba.org
Sent: Tue, 26 Jun 2007 9:25 pm
Subject: Samba-AD HowTo Was: RE: [Samba] Can't get single sign on to 
work after joining linux toan AD domain



Hi all,

i've just gone through a fairly long and involved troubleshooting 
process trying
to do something similar to the problem described below and just as a 
general
observation, the documentation available for joining a Samba Server to 
an AD
domain tends to be disjointed and difficult to find.  The Samba By 
Example
doesn't really mention Samba in an AD network at all and the Official 
HOWTO is
useful but somewhat limited.  Is there an effort underway to bring this 
all
together in an AD HOWTO at all?

i would be happy to lend my ignorance to any efforts in that direction 
as a pair
of eyes with very little Samba knowledge behind them (i'm a Windows 
Admin by
trade).  i considered attempting to write it myself but i'm not sure 
that my
experience would be sufficient to make a decent job of it.

Perhaps someone from the Samba team could comment, or contact me 
regarding
producing an AD integrated Samba HOWTO.  As i said, i'm happy to 
provide what
assistance i can or if required, to make the attempt on my own at least 
to get a
first draft together.  i'll warn you though, my drafts may be in MS 
Word format
;)

Finally, if i'm missing some critical URL and the doco i'm after is 
just sitting
there waiting for me to find it, would someone please point it out?  
Please?

Cheers,

m.

Michael Cleghorn
System & Network Administrator

Risk Management Technologies
5 Ventnor Avenue
West Perth  WA  6005
AUSTRALIA

Tel: +61 8 9322 1711
Fax: +61 8 9322 1794

Web: www.rmt.com.au

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-----Original Message-----
From: samba-bounces+lists=rmt.com.au at lists.samba.org
[mailto:samba-bounces+lists=rmt.com.au at lists.samba.org]On Behalf Of
Henrik Zagerholm
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 2:49 AM
To: Justin Ehrlichman
Cc: samba at lists.samba.org
Subject: Re: [Samba] Can't get single sign on to work after joining
linux toan AD domain


First of all that guide is faulty as you need security = ADS and not
Domain.
I think you should look at the Samba By Example or the official How-
To on samba.org

If you then have problems/questions please post them here.

Cheers,
henrik
26 jun 2007 kl. 18:54 skrev Justin Ehrlichman:

> Hi all,
>
> I am trying to join PClinuxOS 2007 to an Active Directory domain, I
> was able to get it to join following a guide  off of Linux
> Magazine's website. I can't post the URL because you need to be
> registered to view the article so I have taken the liberty of
> copying and pasting the article at the end of this message. Anyways
> what is happening is while I was able to get linux to "join" the
> domain, I am still unable to sign onto the linux box with one of
> the domain user accounts.  When I do an wbinfo -g I am able to see
> all the domain groups. I am also able to view all the users using
> the -u switch. We are running Windows Server 2003 R2, I would post
> log files but I am not exactly sure where or what to look for.
> Here is the copy of the article as promised:
>
> /Listing One: smb.conf options for Winbind
>
> workgroup= MYWG
>
> security= Domain
>
> encrypt passwords= Yes
>
> password server= 192.168.1.1
>
> winbind use default domain= Yes
>
> idmap uid= 2000-25000
>
> idmap gid= 2000-25000
>
> template shell= /bin/bash
>
> template homedir= /home/% U
>
> The first four lines in Listing One are fairly straightforward, and
> might appear on any Samba server on the network. They set the
> workgroup/domain name, tell Samba to use domain-level security,
> enable encrypted passwords, and specify the password server system
> (that is, the domain controller). The remaining lines in this
> listing set Winbind-specific options.
>
> *The idmap uid and idmap gid options set the range of UID and GID
> numbers that Winbind (its NSS components, specifically) may assign.
> These UID and GID values should not be used by local users, but you
> can change them from the values set in Listing One, if you like.
> These options are necessary because NT domain controllers don't
> maintain Linux-style UID and GID numbers, so Winbind must make
> these values up itself.
>
> *The template shell and template homedir options set the default
> shell and home directory. The %U in the latter option stands in for
> the username. As with idmap uid and idmap gid, these options are
> necessary because NT domain controllers don't maintain the
> information.
>
> While you've now told your Linux system how to find the domain
> controller and manage accounts, you must still join the domain ---
> that is, notify the domain controller about the new member. This
> can be done using the net command:
> # net join member --U adminuser
>
> When you type this command, adminuser is the username of an
> administrative user on the domain controller. On Windows systems,
> this is likely to be Administrator. On domain controllers that use
> Linux and Samba, it could be something else, so check your domain
> controller configuration. Samba domain controllers may also need a
> machine trust account that's been prepared on the domain controller
> itself. (Samba domain controller configuration is well beyond the
> scope of this article.)
>
> Running the Daemon
>
> At this point, you can start running the Winbind daemon, winbindd:
> # /usr/sbin/winbindd --i
>
> This command runs the daemon and (because of the --i option) sends
> log information to standard output rather than to a log file.
> Launching the daemon in this way works well for testing, but in the
> long term, you're better off putting this command (without the --i
> option) in a startup script. In fact, if you installed Winbind from
> a Linux package, it should have come with a System V- like startup
> script to start Winbind, so look for such a script and use your
> distribution's System V package management utilities (such as
> chkconfig or rc-update) to activate it in your default runlevel.
>
> The Winbind daemon manages the actual connection to the domain
> controller. PAM and NSS then consult this daemon to do their jobs.
> You can check basic operations using the wbinfo command. The --t
> option causes this program to check the basic connection of Winbind
> to the domain controller. It should return a message like this:
> $ wbinfo --t
> checking the trust secret via RPC calls
> succeeded
>
> You can also use the --u option to obtain a list of accounts
> managed by the domain controller. If one or both of these calls
> fail, review your configuration and consult your log files for
> clues about what's going wrong.
>
> Configuring PAM
>
> PAM is controlled through files in /etc/pam.d/. For the most part,
> these files control how specific programs interact with PAM.
>
> For instance, /etc/pam.d/login tells the login program how to use
> PAM. These configurations vary greatly from one distribution to
> another, but they all consist of a series of stacks --- auth,
> account, session, and password. Each stack consists of one or more
> lines that begin with the relevant keyword. Each stack manages a
> particular sub-task, such as authentication (auth) or verifying
> account accessibility (account).
>
> Modifying a PAM configuration to include a new authentication tool,
> such as Winbind, is a matter of adding lines to one or more of the
> auth and account stacks, and possibly modifying other lines.
> Listing Two shows a typical PAM configuration file with Winbind
> support added. New lines or amendments to existing lines are
> highlighted in bold.
> Listing Two: A typical PAM configuration file with Winbind support
> auth requisite pam_securetty.so
> auth requisite pam_nologin.so
> auth required pam_env.so
> B
> auth required pam_unix.so nullok B
> account requisite pam_time.so
> B
> account required pam_unix.so
> session required pam_unix.so
> session optional pam_lastlog.so
> session optional pam_motd.so
> session optional pam_mail.so standard noenv
> password required pam_unix.so nullok min=6 max=255 md5
>
> This configuration adds lines to the auth and account stacks,
> inserting a call to pam_winbind.so just before a call to
> pam_unix.so. These calls are marked as sufficient, meaning that if
> Winbind gives its OK, subsequent modules need not succeed. This is
> very important when combining multiple authentication tools, such
> as Winbind and pam_unix.so (which is the standard tool that
> validates users against /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow).
>
> Other modules called in these stacks don't actually verify
> passwords; instead, they perform additional checks, such as
> verifying that root isn't logging in via telnet. You might
> optionally want to add another line to the end of the session stack:
> session required pam_mkhomedir.so
> skel=/etc/skel umask=0027
>
> (This line has been split for publication purposes, and should be
> recombined into a single line if you add it.) This automatically
> creates a home directory for the user if one doesn't exist. This
> can be handy if you want users to be able to log into the Linux
> system without your having to manually create home directories for
> them.
>
> On some distributions, you must change the PAM configuration files
> for all of the services that you want to use Winbind. For instance,
> if you want to use domain accounts for text-mode console logins,
> logins via the GNOME Display Manager (GDM), for X screensaver
> password prompts, and for POP mail retrieval, you would have to
> modify the login, gdm, xscreensaver, and pop files in /etc/pam.d/.
> This can be tedious, so some distributions use a module called
> pam_stack.so instead of pam_unix.so. The pam_stack.so module calls
> an entire stack of PAM modules itself, as specified in the file
> defined by the service= option to this module (typically /etc/pam.d/
> system-auth). The end result is that, if your system uses
> pam_stack.so, you can probably modify system-auth rather than all
> of the other files. This can be a great time-saver, but if you want
> to use Winbind for some services but not others, you'll still have
> to modify the individual files.
>
> One service requires a special note: passwd. This service (and its /
> etc/pam.d/passwd configuration file) controls how the passwd
> command interacts with PAM. For a Winbind configuration, it's
> probably best to leave this configuration alone. Users can then use
> the passwd command to change their local passwords (if they exist),
> and use smbpasswd to change their passwords on the domain
> controller. Alternatively, if you add a call to pam_winbind.so to
> the password stack, then the passwd command changes the password on
> the domain controller.
>
> If a server or other program is running, you may need to restart it
> before you can use any new authentication tools you've defined in
> PAM. In the case of many login tools, logging in and then logging
> out again does the trick. You may need to restart some servers via
> their startup scripts, though.
>
> Configuring NSS
>
> At this point, your system should be able to use the NT domain
> controller for authenticating users; however, they must still have
> accounts defined locally, in /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow. Thus,
> implementing this system isn't likely to save a lot of effort.
>
> The final step is to link NSS to Winbind. You can do this by
> editing the /etc/nsswitch.conf file. Look for two lines in this
> file that begin with passwd and group, and add the string winbind
> to these lines. These two lines are ordinarily separated by one
> called shadow, but you don't modify that line. The result might
> look something like this:
> passwd: files winbind
> shadow: files
> group: files winbind
>
> Some distributions use other options instead of or in addition to
> files; compat is one popular alternative. The key is to add winbind
> to the passwd and shadow lines, rather than use precisely the
> configuration shown here.
>
> When you're done with this, NSS will use both its original
> configuration and Winbind for the purposes for which /etc/passwd
> and /etc/shadow are normally used. This will enable you to use your
> normal Linux-only local accounts and groups, such as root and any
> users you want to define locally, without the help of the domain
> controller.
>
> While you're modifying /etc/nsswitch.conf, you might want to change
> one other line: hosts. This line tells the system what tools to use
> to resolve hostnames. If you add wins to this line, Linux will use
> NetBIOS name resolution methods in addition to any other methods
> (such as /etc/hosts and DNS). The order of items on this line
> defines the order Linux uses.
>
> For instance, you might end up with a line like this:
> hosts: files wins dns
>
> This configuration isn't strictly necessary, and it requires its
> own library (libnss_wins.so, installed much like libnss_winbind.so,
> as described earlier). Still, it can be handy if your system is
> running on a network that uses NetBIOS names locally and you don't
> want to maintain all your local names in /etc/hosts or run a local
> DNS server.
>
> You needn't restart anything to have NSS begin using the new
> configuration you've specified in /etc/nsswitch.conf. You may want
> to check that the NSS portion of the configuration is working by
> using getent. This command returns information on user and group
> database entries. In particular, typing getent passwd returns user
> information, and getent group returns group information. On Linux
> systems with default configurations, these commands' outputs are
> similar to what you'd get by typing cat /etc/passwd or cat /etc/
> group. On a system with a working Winbind NSS configuration, you
> should see the contents of these files plus accounts maintained by
> the NT domain controller. If you don't see these accounts, review
> your configuration and consult your log files (on both the Linux
> system and the domain controller) for clues.
>
> Testing the Configuration
>
> At this point, everything should be working, and you should have
> tested the Winbind and NSS subsystems. To test PAM and everything
> else, you should try an ordinary login using a domain account ---
> that is, one that's defined on the domain controller but not on the
> local system. You can do this via whatever login methods you chose
> to configure in PAM, and in fact you should test all of these login
> methods, to be sure there's not a problem with some of them but not
> others.
>
> Be sure to test both valid and invalid logins, that is, correct
> usernames and passwords, correct usernames and incorrect passwords,
> and incorrect usernames. Some configurations will enable anybody to
> log in, using correct or incorrect passwords. Presumably that's not
> what you want to do! You should also test your local accounts while
> you're at it --- some types of configurations will disable those
> accounts, but you should leave them enabled. If nothing else, root
> should be defined locally, not via the domain controller.
>
> Roderick W. Smith is the author or co-author of over a dozen books,
> including Linux in a Windows World and The Definitive Guide to
> Samba 3. He can be reached at rodsmith at rodsbooks.com.
> /
> --
>
> Justin Ehrlichman
>
> Computer Technician
>
> Online Stores Inc.
>
> 724-925-5600 ext 610
>
> Justin.ehrlichman at onlinestores.com
> <mailto:Justin.ehrlichman at onlinestores.com>
>
> www.onlinestores.com
>
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