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CentOS 5.

3 Samba Standalone Server With tdbsam Backend

By Falko Timme
Published: 2009-07-03 12:52

CentOS 5.3 Samba Standalone Server With tdbsam Backend


Version 1.0
Author: Falko Timme <ft [at] falkotimme [dot] com>
Last edited 04/20/2009

This tutorial explains the installation of a Samba fileserver on CentOS 5.3 and how to configure it to share files over the SMB protocol as well as how to
add users. Samba is configured as a standalone server, not as a domain controller. In the resulting setup, every user has his own home directory accessible
via the SMB protocol and all users have a shared directory with read-/write access.

I do not issue any guarantee that this will work for you!

1 Preliminary Note
I'm using a CentOS 5.3 system here with the hostname server1.example.com and the IP address 192.168.0.100.

Please make sure that SELinux is disabled as shown in chapter 6 of this tutorial: The Perfect Server - CentOS 5.3 x86_64 [ISPConfig 2] - Page 3

2 Installing Samba
Connect to your server on the shell and install the Samba packages:

yum install cups-libs samba samba-common

Edit the smb.conf file:

vi /etc/samba/smb.conf

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Make sure you see the following lines in the [global] section:

[...]
# Backend to store user information in. New installations should
# use either tdbsam or ldapsam. smbpasswd is available for backwards
# compatibility. tdbsam requires no further configuration.

security = user
passdb backend = tdbsam
[...]

This enables Linux system users to log in to the Samba server.

Then create the system startup links for Samba and start it:

chkconfig --levels 235 smb on

/etc/init.d/smb start

3 Adding Samba Shares


Now I will add a share that is accessible by all users.

Create the directory for sharing the files and change the group to the users group:

mkdir -p /home/shares/allusers

chown -R root:users /home/shares/allusers/

chmod -R ug+rwx,o+rx-w /home/shares/allusers/

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At the end of the file /etc/samba/smb.conf add the following lines:

vi /etc/samba/smb.conf

[...]
[allusers]
comment = All Users
path = /home/shares/allusers
valid users = @users
force group = users
create mask = 0660
directory mask = 0771
writable = yes

If you want all users to be able to read and write to their home directories via Samba, add the following lines to /etc/samba/smb.conf (make sure you
comment out or remove the other [homes] section in the smb.conf file!):

[...]
[homes]
comment = Home Directories
browseable = no
valid users = %S
writable = yes
create mask = 0700
directory mask = 0700

Now we restart Samba:

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/etc/init.d/smb restart

4 Adding And Managing Users


In this example, I will add a user named tom. You can add as many users as you need in the same way, just replace the username tom with the desired
username in the commands.

useradd tom -m -G users

Set a password for tom in the Linux system user database. If the user tom should not be able to log into the Linux system, skip this step.

passwd tom

-> Enter the password for the new user.

Now add the user to the Samba user database:

smbpasswd -a tom

-> Enter the password for the new user.

Now you should be able to log in from your Windows workstation with the file explorer (address is \192.168.0.100 or \192.168.0.100tom for tom's
home directory) using the username tom and the chosen password and store files on the Linux server either in tom's home directory or in the public shared
directory.

5 Links
- Samba: http://www.samba.org/
- CentOS: http://www.centos.org/

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