On Mon, 2013-07-01 at 19:55 -0500, Ricky Nance wrote: > > > I feel like I am saying what has already been said, so if you could be > more specific about what kind of hierarchy you have, I could give you > a more specific answer. For the most part, if its serving files and in > a domain, but not providing authentication itself, its a 'member > server', if its NOT in a domain, but simply serving files to any and > all windows clients, its a simple file server, if its in a domain and > providing the domain with username/password authentication its a > domain server (or domain controller).
Phew, I think I'm getting there. OK, I have: 1. a 4.0.6 DC It serves these files selfishly: [netlogon] path = /usr/local/samba/var/locks/sysvol/hh3.site/scripts read only = No [sysvol] path = /usr/local/samba/var/locks/sysvol read only = No 2. A 4.0.6 box joined to the domain. It serves profiles, home directories, stuff that groups can rw to and anything else you can throw at it e.g. [users] path = /home/users read only = No [profiles] path = /home/profiles read only = No [shared] path = /home/shared read only = No /home/profiles and /home/shared have ace's set to mimic what we would otherwise have to set in smb.conf Do I have this? 1. is a domain controller and a file server. 2. is a member server and a file server. Another question, why do you say: '...its a domain server (or domain controller).' Which _is_ it? If it's the same thing then why does it have two names? This thread may seem like a waste of space to many, but it's merely the tip of the iceberg for us. Our main problem is that we are not dealing with native English speakers. The grammatical and interpretational problems which this list and the samba documentation in general throw up are at times insurmountable. Thank you all for the patience which you afford us. -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba