Craig White wrote: > On Mon, 2010-02-08 at 20:13 -0700, Trent Shipley wrote: > >> Craig White wrote: >> >> >>> On Mon, 2010-02-08 at 18:38 -0700, Trent Shipley wrote: >>> >>> >>>> This is for curiosity, I'm not presently trying to implement Windows >>>> networking using a Linux box as the Primary Domain Controller. How >>>> would a Linux PDC emulate Active Directory Services? Do you still need >>>> a server grade Windows license running to provide ADS? >>>> >>>> >>> ---- >>> yes, or if you are really adventurous, you could build a very alpha >>> version of Samba 4 which is still too green for packaging yet for any >>> distro. >>> >>> Craig >>> >>> >>> >> I'm taking that as "yes" you can run a SAMBA server as a Windows PDC, >> but there's really no point because you still need Windows Server 2nnn >> to host the active directory. >> >> I have 6 physical machines I would like to network. >> >> * OS X Snow Leopard on late model iMac. >> * OS X Snow Leopard on newish Macbook. >> * Dual boot: OS X Snow Leopard/Vista on late model Macbook. >> * Ubuntu 9.10 desktop (favorite computer) on older Dell Inspiron. >> * Ubuntu 9.10 netbook (used as an e-reader) on HP. >> * Ubuntu 9.10 host/Win7 guest/XP guest on Lenovo desktop (possible new >> favorite computer). >> >> What are some options? >> > ---- > Active Directory is an enhanced networking schema that is hardly useful > for non-Windows systems since the primary benefits are kerberos to aid > SSO and Windows Group Policy Objects but the GPO and SSO really only > relates to Windows machines anyway. You can use Samba as a server and > provide CIFS (Microsoft's Common Internet File Sharing) services without > Active Directory. > > Unless you have a slug of Windows systems to maintain or are running > Exchange Server (which requires AD since Win2K3 Server), there's hardly > any incentive to run AD. > > That said, considering that most of your systems are Linux, I would > consider using NFS and installing the free SFU on the Windows system > (Services For Unix) which is available from Microsoft and it's free. > > Craig > > > A little BingO shows that Microsoft changed the name to "Subsystem for UNIX-based Applications Overview" with Vista and Server 2003 (?). It is treated as a known package by 2008 (r2) and Win 7. --------------------------------------------------- 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