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0. Samba Team Notes: This package is targeted at the woody release of debian distribution running on a 2.4.x kernel. This package has been made by Simo Sorce on behalf of the Samba Team. Do not use Debian BTS to report bugs, it's not a debian project package. Thanks to Eloy Paris and Steve "Vorlon" Langasek for the work they've done and continue to do on debian unstable packages. That made me possible to build up debian packages for the Team. ATTENTION: This package works correctly only with recent 2.4.x kernels due to deep optimizations that samba uses when compiled on such kernels. Original README.Debian foolows. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Samba for Debian ---------------- This package was built by Eloy Paris <peloy@debian.org> and Steve Langasek <vorlon@debian.org>, current maintainers of the Samba packages for Debian, based on previous work from Bruce Perens <Bruce@Pixar.com>, Andrew Howell <andrew@it.com.au>, Klee Dienes <klee@debian.org> and Michael Meskes <meskes@topsystem.de>, all previous maintainers of the packages samba and sambades (merged together for longer than we can remember.) Contents of this README file: 1. Notes 2. Upgrading from Samba 2.2 3. Packages Generated from the Samba Sources 4. Support for NT Domains 5. Reporting bugs 1. Notes -------- - As of Samba 2.0.6-1, the Debian version of Samba is compiled with Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) support. PAM support was discontinued during the libc5 -> libc6 migration process and I never brought it back until 2.0.6-1. - The smbfs package does not support the 2.0.x Linux kernels anymore. This has been the case since the very first packages of the CVS sources that eventually became Samba 2.2. To use the smbfs package you need to run a 2.2.x kernel or later. - Starting with the Debian packages for Samba 2.2, the Samba log files (for nmbd and smbd) have been moved to a new location: /var/log/samba/. The files also have new names: log.nmbd and log.smbd. The old files (/var/log/{nmb,smb} were moved to the new location. 2. Upgrading from Samba 2.2 --------------------------- Samba 3.0 provides greatly improved support for modern Windows systems, including support for Unicode and LDAP. In the process, Samba 3.0 necessarily also breaks backward compatiblity with past releases. These issues are documented herein; if you are aware of other problems related to upgrading from Samba 2.2, please let us know at <samba@packages.debian.org>. Samba and LDAP -------------- Starting with Samba 2.999+3.0cvs20020723-1 we are building Samba with LDAP support. However, the LDAP schema for Samba 3.0 differs substantially from the schema used by many sites with Samba 2.2 (not enabled in the Debian packages). If upgrading from an LDAP-enabled 2.2, you will need to run the convertSambaAccount script found in /usr/share/doc/samba-doc/examples/LDAP. A copy of the schema itself can also be found at /usr/share/doc/samba-doc/examples/LDAP/samba.schema. Character Sets -------------- Samba 3.0 introduces support for negotiating Unicode (UCS-2LE) with Windows clients. Owing to the close similarity between Windows and Unix NLS charsets, in the past, many users were able to pass filenames containing non-ASCII characters between clients and servers without configuring Samba to know what character set was in use. Now, Samba must be able to convert Unix filenames to Unicode before sending to the client, so Samba must know what character set the filenames are being converted from. If you will be sharing files with non-ASCII names, and the filenames are not encoded with UTF-8, you will need to tell Samba which character set to use with the 'unix charset' option. If you had previously specified 'character set' and 'client code page' options under 2.2, these settings should be automatically converted for you. 3. Packages Generated from the Samba Sources -------------------------------------------- Currently, the Samba sources produce the following binary packages: samba: A LanManager like file and printer server for Unix. samba-common: Samba common files used by both the server and the client. smbclient: A LanManager like simple client for Unix. swat: Samba Web Administration Tool samba-doc: Samba documentation. smbfs: Mount and umount commands for the smbfs (works with 2.2.x and above kernels, not with 2.0.x kernels.) libpam-smbpass: pluggable authentication module for SMB password database. libsmbclient: Shared library that allows applications to talk to SMB servers. libsmbclient-dev: libsmbclient shared libraries. winbind: Service to resolve user and group information from a Windows NT server. python2.2-samba: Python bindings that allow access to various aspects of Samba. Please note that the package smbwrapper (a shared library that provides SMB client services that existed between Samba 2.0.0-1 and Samba-2.0.5a-4 does not exist any more. The reason is that starting with Samba 2.0.6-1, that code does not even compile, and the upstream author (Andrew Tridgell) recommended to disable the compilation of smbwrapper until some issues with glibc2.1 get cleared out (the problem is with glibc, not with Samba itself). 4. Support for NT Domains ------------------------- Samba 2.2 includes preliminary support for NT domains. A Samba server can now be part of a Windows NT domain whose Primary Domain Controller is a Windows NT server. This feature is supposed to be stable although I haven't tried it myself. Read the documentation in the samba-doc package for help on how to do this (hint: "security = domain" in the smb.conf file). Samba 2.2 has also experimental support for Primary Domain Controller. This means that a Samba server can act now as a PDC. There are no special flags needed to compile Samba with NT domain PDC support. Please read the NTDOM PDC FAQ at www.samba.org (Documentation section). Please note that NT domain PDC support is far from complete and is still experimental. 5. Reporting Bugs ----------------- **** NOTE: This package is distributed by the Samba Team based on Debian packages, please submit bus to https://bugzilla.samba.org instead **** If you believe you have found a bug please make sure the possible bug also exists in the latest version of Samba that is available for the unstable Debian distribution. If you are running Debian stable this means that you will probably have to build your own packages. And if the problem does not exist in the latest version of Samba we have packaged it means that you will have to run the version of Samba you built yourself since it is not easy to upload new packages to the stable distribution, unless they fix critical security problems. If you can reproduce the problem in the latest version of Samba then it is likely to be a real bug. Your best shot is to search the Samba mailing lists to see if it is something that has already been reported and fixed - if it is a simple fix we can add the patch to our packages without waiting for a new Samba release. If you decide that your problem deserves to be submitted to the Debian Bug Tracking System (BTS) we expect you to be responsive if we request more information. If we request more information and do not receive any in a reasonable time frame expect to see your bug closed without explanation - we can't fix bugs we can't reproduce, and most of the time we need more information to be able to reproduce them. When submitting a bug to the Debian BTS please include the version of the Debian package you are using as well as the Debian distribution you are using. Think _twice_ about the severity you assign to the bug: we are _very_ sensitive about bug severities; the fact that it doesn't work for you doesn't mean that the severity must be such that it holds a major Debian release. In fact, that it doesn't work for you it doesn't mean that it doesn't work for others. So again: think _twice_. Eloy A. Paris <peloy@debian.org> Steve Langasek <vorlon@debian.org>