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Configure Samba Server as per note 680617

Former Member
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Hi,

I am installing Dialog Instance on Windows. CI(ERP 6.0) and DB(Oracle) are in Unix.

As per note 680617INST APPl. Server in Heterogenous SAP System Environment, I am configuring Samba Server.

in that note it has been mentioned as :-

<b>On Unix, release the /usr/sap directory as SAPMNT. ( using SAMBA)</b>

<i>--> is this to be achieved in writing in config file

of samba .. if yes where ? need details. </i>

<b>The user who is performing installation on the windows host as well as the <sapsid>adm and SAPService<SAPSID> Windows users created during the installation must have read and write authorization on this share directory and its subdirectories.</b>

<i>--> How to achieve this. what we should do on the

Unix side ?</i>

My Best Regards

Paguras

Message was edited by:

PAGURAS to add more clarity to the Question

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Answers (2)

ravi_raman2
Active Contributor
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Paguras,

Look for a file called smb.conf......../etc/samba is where i would look for it......................

More details on samba config here............

Samba uses /etc/samba/smb.conf as its configuration file. If you change this configuration file, the changes will not take effect until you restart the Samba daemon with the command service smb restart.

The default configuration file (smb.conf) in Red Hat Linux 8.0 allows users to view their Linux home directories as a Samba share on the Windows machine after they log in using the same username and password. It also shares any printers configured for the Red Hat Linux system as Samba shared printers. In other words, you can attach a printer to your Red Hat Linux system and print to it from the Windows machines on your network.

To specify the Windows workgroup and description string, edit the following lines in your smb.conf file:

workgroup = WORKGROUPNAME

server string = BRIEF COMMENT ABOUT SERVER

Replace WORKGROUPNAME with the name of the Windows workgroup to which this machine should belong. The BRIEF COMMENT ABOUT SERVER is optional and will be the Windows comment about the Samba system.

To create a Samba share directory on your Linux system, add the following section to your smb.conf file (after modifying it to reflect your needs and your system):

[sharename]

comment = Insert a comment here

path = /home/share/

valid users = tfox carole

public = no

writable = yes

printable = no

create mask = 0765

The above example allows the users tfox and carole to read and write to the directory /home/share, on the Samba server, from a Samba client.

Samba Passwords

In Red Hat Linux 8.0 encrypted passwords are enabled by default because it is more secure. If encrypted passwords are not used, plain text passwords are used, which can be intercepted by someone using a network packet sniffer. It is recommended that encrypted passwords be used.

The Microsoft SMB Protocol originally used plaintext passwords. However, Windows 2000 and Windows NT 4.0 with Service Pack 3 or higher require encrypted Samba passwords. To use Samba between a Red Hat Linux system and a system with Windows 2000 or Windows NT 4.0 Service Pack 3 or higher, you can either edit your Windows registry to use plaintext passwords or configure Samba on your Linux system to use encrypted passwords. If you choose to modify your registry, you must do so for all your Windows NT or 2000 machines — this is risky and may cause further conflicts.

To configure Samba on your Red Hat Linux system to use encrypted passwords, follow these steps:

1.

Create a separate password file for Samba. To create one based on your existing /etc/passwd file, at a shell prompt, type the following command:

cat /etc/passwd | mksmbpasswd.sh > /etc/samba/smbpasswd

If the system uses NIS, type the following command:

ypcat passwd | mksmbpasswd.sh > /etc/samba/smbpasswd

The mksmbpasswd.sh script is installed in your /usr/bin directory with the samba package.

2.

Change the permissions of the Samba password file so that only root has read and write permissions:

chmod 600 /etc/samba/smbpasswd

3.

The script does not copy user passwords to the new file. To set each Samba user's password, use the command (replace username with each user's username):

smbpasswd username

A Samba user account will not be active until a Samba password is set for it.

4.

Encrypted passwords must be enabled in the Samba configuration file. In the file smb.conf, verify that the following lines are not commented out:

encrypt password = yes

smb passwd file = /etc/samba/smbpasswd

5.

Make sure the smb service is started by typing the command service smb restart at a shell prompt.

6.

If you want the smb service to start automatically, use ntsysv, chkconfig, or Services Configuration Tool to enable it at runtime. Refer to Chapter 13 for details.

Tip Tip

Read /usr/share/doc/samba-<version>/docs/htmldocs/ENCRYPTION.html to learn more about encrypted passwords. (replace <version> with the version number of Samba that you have installed).

The pam_smbpass PAM module can be used to sync users' Samba passwords with their system passwords when the passwd command is used. If a user invokes the passwd command, the password he uses to log in to the Red Hat Linux system as well as the password he must provide to connect to a Samba share are changed.

To enable this feature, add the following line to /etc/pam.d/system-auth below the pam_cracklib.so invocation:

password required /lib/security/pam_smbpass.so nullok use_authtok try_first_pass

Hope that helps

Ravi Raman

former_member433984
Active Contributor
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may be <a href="https://service.sap.com/sap/support/notes/97993">Note 97993 - Central NT/UNIX transport directory</a> with small sample would be halpful for you...

best regards