[Samba] Samba AD: gidNumber?

Rowland Penny rowlandpenny241155 at gmail.com
Thu Oct 29 17:49:55 UTC 2015


On 29/10/15 17:27, Viktor Trojanovic wrote:
>
>
> On 29.10.2015 17:54, Rowland Penny wrote:
>> On 29/10/15 16:21, Viktor Trojanovic wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> On 27.10.2015 16:16, Rowland Penny wrote:
>>>> On 27/10/15 14:58, Viktor Trojanovic wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On 27.10.2015 13:54, Rowland Penny wrote:
>>>>>> [...]
>>>>>>> Yes, I meant the administrator. I did your suggested change on 
>>>>>>> my member server and restarted it. 'getent passwd administrator' 
>>>>>>> is still not returning anything, though. Or is that the wrong 
>>>>>>> way to check if it worked?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> If you ran the same command on the DC, it will return something, 
>>>>>> but on a member server it won't, because the range you set in 
>>>>>> smb.conf is (if you followed the wiki, 10000-99999) above '0' and 
>>>>>> anything that is outside the range is ignored. This is not a 
>>>>>> problem, remember that Administrator is mapped to root on the 
>>>>>> member server, so if you want to log into the member server, you 
>>>>>> would so as root. From windows, Administrator becomes root and 
>>>>>> carries out any changes etc as root.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Rowland
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Ok, all understood, thank you. But how can I check if it worked 
>>>>> with the users? I manually changed the Nisdomain and uidNumber for 
>>>>> two users using ADUC (to 10001 and 10002, respectively), I 
>>>>> restarted Samba (was this even necessary?), and getent passwd 
>>>>> <username> will still not return anything.
>>>>>
>>>>> In other words, what is the quickest way to check if my member 
>>>>> server setup worked out alright?
>>>>
>>>> OK, if you compiled samba yourself and you want to test getent on 
>>>> the member server, see this that I posted earlier:
>>>>
>>>> https://lists.samba.org/archive/samba/2015-October/195319.html
>>>>
>>>> If you are using distro packages, the wiki pages should give you a 
>>>> good idea of what you need.
>>>>
>>>> Rowland
>>>>
>>>>
>>> So, I spent quite some time researching it all a bit more in depth 
>>> but I get stuck at the same point, although I at least seem to have 
>>> a better understanding of how things should be now.
>>>
>>> So, my smb.conf on the member server looks exactly like the one in 
>>> the wiki, except that I also added ACL support as suggested on the 
>>> wiki page "Shares with Windows ACLs". My filesystem is XFS and has 
>>> ACL built-in.
>>>
>>> I do get proper results for wbinfo -u and wbinfo -g, but the id and 
>>> getent commands just won't work. I'm trying it on users and groups 
>>> that have a uidNumber or gidNumber defined, respectively.
>>>
>>> This is how my nsswitch.conf looks like:
>>>
>>> passwd: compat winbind
>>> group: compat winbind
>>> hosts:compat dns
>>> networks: compat dns
>>>
>>> My Samba came from a package but I verified that libnss_winbind.so.2 
>>> is properly linked.
>>>
>>> smbd, nmbd and winbindd are properly started with no errors in the 
>>> logs, I'm joined to the AD, I can browse the member server from my 
>>> windows machine being logged in as Administrator. But I still can't 
>>> seem to change ACLs on any objects in the share from within Windows, 
>>> I'm getting error messages "Error when applying security" (I'm 
>>> translating freely from German).
>>>
>>> Do you have any idea what's going wrong here?
>>>
>>> Viktor
>>
>> OK, If I remember correctly, we are talking about a domain member 
>> here, not a DC. If you are using the default smb.conf from here:
>>
>> https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Setup_Samba_as_an_AD_Domain_Member
>>
> No. I'm using the smb.conf from 
> https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Setup_a_Samba_AD_Member_Server
>
>> with the 'ad' setup from here:
>>
>> https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Idmap_config_ad
>>
> Those lines are already implemented in the smb.conf retrieved from 
> https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Setup_a_Samba_AD_Member_Server

OK, what is the difference between a 'domain member' and a 'member 
server', well to be honest, not much. You can think of a 'domain member' 
being the same as a normal windows workstation that a user logs into and 
it doesn't share anything. You can turn a 'domain member' into a 'member 
server' very easily, just make it share something :-) if you share 
printers from it, it becomes a 'Print Server' , add data shares and it 
becomes a 'File Server', I think you get the idea here :-)

Your smb.conf from the 'member server' page is equivalent to the one you 
can create from the three pages I posted.

>> with the acl support lines from here:
>>
>> https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Shares_with_Windows_ACLs#ACL_support_on_domain_members 
>>
>>
> Those exact 3 lines, yes.
>> then getent should work, but they are a few caveats, the users must 
>> have a uidNumber inside the range 10000-99999 and Domain Users (at 
>> least) must have a gidNumber inside the same range. Any users or 
>> groups outside this range will be ignored and *all* users will be 
>> ignored if Domain Users either doesn't have a gidNumber or it is 
>> outside the range.
>>
> The user I'm trying to return has a uidNumber of 10002, and Domain 
> Users is set to gidNumber 10000. I have not set those attributes for 
> other groups and did not expect them to show up with getent.
>
>> Time must be synchronised between the machines, within 5 mins if 
>> remember correctly.
> Time is synced and well within 5 mins. Kerberos would fail otherwise 
> and I am able to request k-tickets for any user without issues.
>> The domain member must be joined to the domain (obviously)
> Of course.
>> The domain member must be using the DC has its DNS server
>>
>> /etc/resolv.conf
>> search samdom.example.com
>> nameserver 192.168.0.3 <-- this is the ip of the DC
>>
> My DC has a fixed IP and that's exactly how my resolv.conf looks like, 
> no other lines.

Yes but does your 'member server' have a fixed ip ?

>> You only need this in /etc/krb5.conf
>>
>> [libdefaults]
>>         default_realm = SAMDOM.EXAMPLE.COM
>>         dns_lookup_realm = false
>>         dns_lookup_kdc = true
>>
> That's exactly what I have. As mentioned, Kerberos seems to work 
> properly.
>
>> Ideally your domain member should have a fixed ip, but if you are 
>> using dhcp, check that the ipaddress isn't 127.0.0.1 or even worse 
>> 127.0.1.1. If you using Ubuntu with Network Manager, stop it using 
>> dnsmasq.
>>
> See above.
>> Check that pam is setup correctly, on debian you can do this by 
>> running 'pam-auth-update'
>>
> I don't have pam setup since I don't need the users to log in to 
> Linux. It is nowhere mentioned, neither on the wiki nor on the book 
> that this is a prerequisite for getent to work.

Applying Hand brake screeching to a halt :-D

If pam is not set up you will not get 'getent' to work. Can you please 
refresh my memory and tell me what OS you are using. Pam is not required 
on a DC unless you require your users to actually log into it, but it is 
definitely needed on a 'domain member' (or as you call it, a 'member 
server')

There is a mention of setting up PAM on the page you referred to:

https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Setup_a_Samba_AD_Member_Server#Setting_up_PAM_authentication

Though it is a bit unclear that it is required to make 'getent' work, I 
will not update this page because there is a very good chance it will 
get a massive overhaul soon, but I will look into whether any other Pam 
info specifies that it is needed on a domain member.

Rowland
>> If everything seems correct, but 'getent passwd' doesn't return any 
>> domain users, try 'getent passwd adomainuser', later samba versions 
>> only return individual records.
>>
> I tried that, it doesn't return any values.
>> Rowland
>>
>>
>>
> Do you see some issue with my config? Obviously, most of the things 
> seem to work, it's just this bloody acl mapping..
>




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