Yes, I know this is really a Samba problem. I'm asking on this list because I really feel that a number of the users of ntlm_auth, winbindd are Radius admins.
This is in regards to the "munged" nt-key bug in Winbindd. Most of the suggestions have been to simply upgrade Samba. From my reading, this all seems to go back to Samba 3.2.X'ish ? Well we are(were) running Samba 3.5.6. I figured that was relatively safe? Actually, I had noticed that the bug did still seem to exist, but would only occur after running Winbindd for a "while". I found other admins on the net reporting the same thing. We all seemed to adopt the same solution. Simply re-start Winbindd when the problem arose. This scheme worked very well for over a year. Then around 16:40 last Friday afternoon, something in our environment changed and this "bug" seemed to get tweaked all of the time. The radius servers just seemed to start to melt down. Actually, after a few hours 4 of 10 of our backend servers seemed to find a somewhat "stable" situation. In any case, I tried installing an older version of Samba 3.0.31 as there was some reference that nobody had seemed to see this problem with that version. However, that version did not do authentication at all against our win2008R2 directories. I found a bug report about that, and it basically said, "yes we know, we don't intend to fix it in 3.0.31 as that is an old version, upgrade". So, in any case, I did upgrade to the latest Samba 3.5.16 and things "seem" to be working now. After all said above, my real question is, has anybody seen anything somewhat definitive on this bug that would indicate the source of the problem has really been found and fixed ? Or, does it just seem that other changes to Winbindd have just "seemed" to make this bug go away (or hide better) ? The reason I ask, is that we use Freeradius here and we are a large R1 University with associated medical center. Our radius architecture is beginning to support not only the Campus, but the medical center as well. The plan is to really bring ALL of the medical center Wireless that requires authentication into our Freeradius architecture. Believe it or not, there are becoming more and more medical devices that are starting to have some wireless capabilities now. >From what I can tell, most of the use is to simply gather data about the device and ship it off to some master data gathering tool for analysis at a later time. However, I'm not sure, but some EKG devices in the future might start using this to actually ship the EKG results in real time to a doctor that is actually remotely located. This and other potential real time uses start to scare me a bit ??? I know that these devices should have some other backup capabilities for transmitting the data, but...... Thanks, Robert Robert Roll Computer Professional University of Utah (801) 581-7655 - List info/subscribe/unsubscribe? See http://www.freeradius.org/list/users.html