Goto
www.samba.org join the SAMBA maillist and ask. Winbind is part of
the SAMBA suite.
Cheers,
Davidm
On Wed, 2003-07-02 at 12:44, Kurt Granroth wrote:
> Ah, if only it was so easy. That is indeed the correct high-level answer
> since SAMBA will have to be involved if this is to work at all. However, I
> am usually pretty good at RTFMs and searching for existing docs and I
> typically won't post a question to PLUG (or other Linux forums) without first
> exhausting all of my other avenues.
>
> I'm at the point where pointers to more places to search just won't help since
> I've doubtlessly already searched there. I need links to actual documents
> that describe how real people did exactly what I'm describing (0% theory,
> 100% practice).
>
> On Wednesday 02 July 2003 12:16 pm, David Mandala wrote:
> > Very possible, the SAMBA package has what you need and it more the
> > likely already installed. Go to www.samba.org and look at the faq's. You
> > want to convert the Linux box to windows authentication and that has
> > worked for at least 2 years now.
> >
> > On Wed, 2003-07-02 at 12:06, Kurt Granroth wrote:
> > > Does anybody know of a case-study or HOWTO on fully integrating a Linux
> > > workstation into an existing Windows NT domain?
> > >
> > > I've got CUPS using the network printer using
> > > smb://username:password@DOMAIN and mounting shares back and forth works
> > > great... but there are a couple of problems doing things like that:
> > >
> > > 1. CUPS requires you to setup the printer to use an individual's domain
> > > credentials. If there are multiple users on the machine, that one
> > > person's credentials are using used. Not to mention that the username
> > > and password are freely viewable using 'ps' while printing.
> > >
> > > 2. Login user names and passwords are different between the Linux and
> > > Windows boxes. Yes, you can manually keep them in sync... but it's a
> > > pain.
> > >
> > > What I would like to do is make the Windows domain think that my Linux
> > > box is just another host in its domain. That means several things:
> > >
> > > 1. Login using the NT domain server as the authenticator. Mounting
> > > shares will no longer need a password since it's already supplied.
> > > 2. A Linux user will be able to print to a network printer in the domain
> > > using their own credentials (but hopefully not have to supply them again
> > > since they are already logged in).
> > >
> > > Is this even possible? If so, were can I find docs on how this is done?
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--
David IS Mandala
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