Here are the key steps that need to be applied for Windows 7 and WinXp folder
redirection in Samba 3.x environments. Feel free to email me off list if you
need any more detail:
-- For Windows 7 be sure to create a proper default user profile on the
workstation using sysprep. It's crucial to the initial profile creation.
The first time a user logs onto the domain have a logon script (vbscript works
great for this) do the following:
-- Copy the applicable folder(s) from the users local profile to locations on
the server that are outside the user's remote profile path; for instance to a
folder in their home directory.
-- Alter the paths in
"HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\User Shell Folders" to
point to these new locations. The most critical folders, and maybe the only
ones you really need to redirect, are Application Data(AppData) and Desktop,
though you can redirect anything that's list in User Shell Folders including
Downloads.
-- Make sure the workstation's local GroupPolicy is set to not roam the folders
you've redirected. Windows will continue to copy them up and down from the
server's profile folder if you don't set this: User
Configuration\Administrative Templates\System\User Profiles \Exclude
directories in roaming profile
- You will want to look at a couple of other settings in the Local GroupPolicy
and tweak to your preferences
Computer Configuration\Administrative Templates\System\User Profiles
User Configuration\Administrative Templates\System\User Profiles
Here's the path structure we use:
Profile:
\\sambaserver\profiles\username\WinXP
\\sambaserver\profiles\username\WinXP.V2
Redirected:
\\sambaserver\homes\username\redirectedfolders\Desktop
\\sambaserver\homes\username\redirectedfolders\Favorites
\\sambaserver\homes\username\redirectedfolders\WinXP\AppData
\\sambaserver\homes\username\redirectedfolders\WinXP.V2\AppData
The first logon can be long depending on network performance and the number of
installed apps, up to a couple of minutes due to the copying of data from local
to remote drives. Subsequent logons should only take 5 to 10 seconds (again
depending on network performance) since the system is only copying a few
megabytes worth of data to and from the profile folder.
There are a couple of critical timeout issues that may need to be addressed if
you experience long Welcome screens after the initial logon:
When the following local GPO is left in its default setting Samba domain logons
are delayed for 30 seconds: "Computer Configuration\Administrative
Templates\System\User Profiles\Set maximum wait time for the network if the
user has a roaming user profile or remote home directory." Enable this and set
the value to 0 to work around this timeout.
A 30 second timeout can occur if you set the local GPO to "Run logon scripts
synchronously". The fix was to apply an old Vista reg setting. Can be Googled
as "Vista Run logon scripts synchronously".
.
Marc
On Jul 21, 2011, at 8:07 AM, Tanuki uk wrote:
> Hello,
> I'm quite new to Samba administration and I've inherited a working samba
> setup with roaming profiles however the login and logout times for users has
> been growing and I'm starting to think it's time do something about it. I'm
> thinking redirect some folders to a samba share on the network will speed up
> the login and logout times.
>
> Our setup has 25 Windows 7 workstations and about 10 laptop users(also on
> windows 7) all connecting to one Samba server. The laptops are often not on
> the main office network so i was planning to use offline file sync for the
> network drive i would be redirecing to, is this a bad idea for some reason?
>
> I've had a look around at various documentation and details seem
> quite scarce. However all the documentation I've found is targeted at
> Windows XP or suggests using domain wide Group Policy Objects (GPO's). My
> understanding is that GPO's can only be used if you have a Windows AD server
> or Samba 4 however I don't have a Windows server and Samba 4 is abit too
> bleeding edge for a production deployment(?).
>
> If anyone can point me to some good documentation it would be really useful,
> I would love to see an updated "The Official Samba HOWTO and Reference
> Guide" or similar. Thought's comments or insights are also more then
> welcome.
>
> Thanks,
> Tanuki
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