On Jan 14 11:57, Chris Roehrig wrote: > On Fri Jan 14 2022, at 2:04 AM, Corinna Vinschen <corinna-cyg...@cygwin.com> > wrote: > > These look like your standard Windows SIDs, so they are your SIDs for > > users cristina and croehrig on Windows. They should show up as such in > > ls -l output, unless the SID is actuall wrong, e. g., they map to your > > accounts on another machine or something like that. > > No those are the SIDs supplied by the Samba server (see below for my local > Windows SIDs). Here they are directly on the Linux machine: > housesrv[11]% smbcacls --numeric //housesrv/Users croehrig > Enter WORKGROUP\croehrig's password: > REVISION:1 > CONTROL:0x9004 > OWNER:S-1-5-21-751087815-2087572193-42305691-1000 > GROUP:S-1-22-2-601 > ACL:S-1-5-21-751087815-2087572193-42305691-1000:0/0x0/0x001f01ff > ACL:S-1-22-2-601:0/0x0/0x001200a9 > ACL:S-1-1-0:0/0x0/0x001200a9 > > (I think that Samba now uses a more complex IDMAP algorithm than when > the Cygwin document above was written and now provides a full domain > component to its SIDs.)
That may be so, but in my installation, Samba reports the Unix User ID as owner, i. e. $ icacls \\\\server\\corinna\\foo \\server\corinna\foo S-1-22-1-500:(R,W,D,WDAC,WO) S-1-22-2-11125:(R) Everyone:(R) and that's with Samba 4.15.3. I'm doing the mapping via the AD uidNumber and gidNumber fields. I'm using this setup for so long that I don't remember if I ever saw a "normal", Windows-like SID for the user returned by Samba. I never ran winbindd, up until Samba 4.15.3, which was the first one forcing me to do so when using AD support. > I just added those SIDs to /etc/passwd and /etc/groups (double > entries now) and it now works for the user, but (oddly) not the group: > > tyto[6]% ls -l //housesrv/Users/ ## NB: this is > a UNC path to the samba share > total 0 > drwxr-xr-x 1 cristina Unix_Group+603 0 Jan 12 16:06 cristina > drwxr-xr-x 1 croehrig Unix_Group+601 0 Jan 14 09:18 croehrig > [...] > tyto[10]% cat /etc/group > croehrig:S-1-22-2-601:601: > cristina:S-1-22-2-603:603: > croehrig:S-1-5-21-1290748074-662758565-4273641972-1006:601: > cristina:S-1-5-21-1290748074-662758565-4273641972-1008:603: Hmm, that's weird. I just tried this myself. First I created a stock /etc/group file with all local and AD accounts. Next I changed /etc/nsswitch.conf: - group: db + group: files Exit/restart Cygwin. `ls -l' now prints -rw-r--r-- 1 corinna Unknown+Group 13342 Jan 17 10:46 //calimero/corinna/foo Now I add this line to /etc/group: mygroup:S-1-22-2-11125:11125: Exit/restart Cygwin. Now `ls -l' prints -rw-r--r-- 1 corinna mygroup 13342 Jan 17 10:46 //calimero/corinna/foo So it works, apparently. Did you set `group: db' in /etc/nsswitch.conf, by any chance? Corinna -- Problem reports: https://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: https://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: https://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: https://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple