On Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 4:42 PM, John H Terpstra - Samba Team<[email protected]> wrote: > John Drescher wrote: >> On Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 4:00 PM, David >> Christensen<[email protected]> wrote: >>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- >>> Hash: SHA1 >>> >>> David Christensen wrote: >>>> John Drescher wrote: >>>>> On Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 12:38 PM, David >>>>> Christensen<[email protected]> wrote: >>>>>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- >>>>>> Hash: SHA1 >>>>>> >>>>>> I configured samba to work with an FDS backend using a howto from the >>>>>> Fedora Directory Server site. The howto had me create a Administrator >>>>>> user in LDAP with UID/GID of 0. Now when anyone logs in as root and do >>>>>> a whoami it comes back as Administrator. If I delete the Administrator >>>>>> user in LDAP samba will break, how do I get around this issue and still >>>>>> provide samba the access level it needs? >>>>>> >>>>> put files first in your /etc/nsswitch.conf >>>>> passwd: files ldap >>>>> shadow: files ldap >>>>> group: files ldap >>>>> John >>>> Looks like that is the way my nsswitch.conf is already configured. >>> I am attempting to use the username map attribute in smb.conf to map >>> root=Administrator but its not working, the Administrator account is >>> still squashing root, do I need to delete the Administrator account from >>> ldap or modify it in some way? >>> >> I do not know. I have user Administrator in my ldap but whoami shows root. > > You possibly have a file /etc/samba/smbusers in which there is a mapping > as follows: > > root = administrator > > Tell me it's not true! >
sysserv0 ~ # cat /etc/samba/smbusers # Unix_name = SMB_name1 SMB_name2 ... # $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/net-fs/samba/files/config/smbusers,v 1.1 2007/09/07 21:07:40 dev-zero Exp $ root = administrator admin nobody = guest pcguest smbguest John -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba
