On Sat, 2009-02-28 at 16:38 -0700, Craig White wrote: > On Sat, 2009-02-28 at 16:21 -0700, Alex Dean wrote: > > I have set up an Ubuntu file server on my home network. I have 2 OSX > > workstations (mine and my wife's), and an Ubuntu laptop. We each have > > an account on each computer. I'm trying to figure out how to allow my > > user account on any computer to mount my home directory on the file > > server, and to allow my wife's account on any computer mount her home > > directory on the file server. > > > > I don't want to move our home directories entirely onto the > > fileserver. Primarily we want to continue using the local machines as > > we always have. We just want to add the ability to easily store files > > on the network and have them accessible from any other machine. > > > > I have had no problems creating exports on the file server, and I've > > had no problems mounting those exports from the client machines. The > > problems thusfar have been uid mismatches. I could probably change > > uids everywhere so they all match on all machines, but this seems 1. > > klunky and 2. really insecure. > > > > I think there are ways to solve this kind of problem with Kerberos or > > LDAP, but those are technologies I know very little about. If someone > > could point me in the right direction, I'd really appreciate it. How > > would you solve this problem? I'm happy to research and learn what I > > need to learn, but I find I'm having a hard time even getting started. > ---- > I like LDAP but most would probably consider this overkill for a home > network. > > Apple starts numbering uid's at 500 (first user) and increments each new > user from there. Ubuntu starts numbering users at 1000. > > The following link explains how you can change the uid #'s on the Macs > to conform - this solved my particular problem on a network where some > Macintosh users saving files on a Windows server would cause issues but > the same principal applies. There are instructions for both Tiger and > Leopard. > > http://www.makemacwork.com/office-2004-wont-save-to-server.htm ---- I should point out that my testing of NFS on Tiger were good until the user actually tried to use NFS via the Macintosh GUI. There obviously is a latency when copying/moving files via the Finder through NFS mounts that didn't exist when simply using the terminal application and I found that compiling and using 'Netatalk' (AFP over TCP) was a much better solution for the Mac users. Perhaps Apple has fixed the problem in Leopard but I would doubt it. I do have another network where the users all have 'home' directories which come from Netatalk automounts of a Linux server and authentication (and obviously the uid's) are handled by LDAP but you really have to want to do that as it wasn't simple to set up. Craig --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss