Interview with Andrew Tridgell, Samba Man 110
Henry Griggs
sent us an interesting interview and article with
Andrew Tridgell, aka the Samba Master. He talks about working with, and against Microsoft. I found it interesting that some groups would help, and other wouldn't-although now Samba is a recognized threat. How many of you folks use Samba, at work and such?
Seems like a good time for this question. (Score:1)
Too funny.. (Score:1)
If so, I'm sure I can talk the boss into it.
Oh, is there any sort of surveys on how much stress Samba can take on given hardware?
We use ... (Score:1)
No formal survey, just my opinions when I've moved large files to & fro both at work and at home.
Using for a 100 client PDC (Score:1)
On the other hand, a year or more ago I used it and it was fine (for Win95 back then). Then when I wanted to stop it, I removed the one line, and it still would read/write to that directory... Go figure. And yes, I restarted Samba after making the change.
Dammit Jim, I'm a CFO not a programmer (Score:1)
Then again, our two NT "experts" only have one chant when something goes wrong, "Repair or rebuild, that's all I can think of."
Please, somebody hire me to take me away from this nonsense!!
Editor needed (Score:1)
Nah, that was Andrew Ridgley.
Samba BUGS, god danm it (Score:1)
cd to the source directory.
type "patch < patchfile"
(Last post had my "<" eaten)
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MS Proxy (Score:1)
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Using it at work! (Score:1)
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Don Rude - AKA - RudeDude
Four OS's at least (Score:1)
We use ... (Score:1)
It's wicked fast, super reliable, and decently easy to administrate. Couldn't ask for anything more, really.
The NT users can't tell the difference between the Linux Samba box and the NT server it replaced, except it's alot faster now
Too funny.. (Score:1)
Here at the University of Kansas, student mail and web servers (Digital Unix boxes) are running Samba. I'm not sure what the usage is on SMB to these things, but with 25-30,000 students, it's probably WAY more than an NT box could handle.
Also, I'm not sure what experiments you've been running, but I'm never seen an NT box able to keep up with Samba -- performance or stability.
Samba at work (Score:1)
We have no NT servers.
Samba rocks! (Score:1)
This early experience with SAMBA was only the first of a series of lessons for me: while MicroSuck markets their supposed solutions, there is usually a much better solution to be found in the unix community, and almost always GNU or opens source in licensing.
Oh, and if the MicroSuck sysadmin from hell (Scott) happens to read this: good - you are reading
I couldn't help it. Maybe Rob could do a story on past sysadmins that we've all hated and what they had in common....
Samba BUGS, god danm it (Score:1)
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samba at work (Score:1)
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Long time few problems (Score:1)
Samba works great on mainframes too! (Score:1)
mainframe, and it works like a charm. We've been
using it for years on production UNIX servers,
and now it looks like Samba on MVS will give
Windows users a pretty impressive alternative to
another flaky NT server...instead they map a
drive to Big Iron. Very cool. Tell your MVS/Cobol guys to check it out.
doesn't every one use samba? (Score:1)
SAMBA saves the day... (Score:1)
Pat
Watch out for passwords and NetBEUI (Score:1)
had with Samba were:
1. old versions of Samba couldn't do MS encryption of the passwords (which is on by default on Win98
and WinNT and can be disabled in the registry). If I had only RTFM before I started...
2. If you have a mix of WinXX and Unix and want to browse, turn off NetBEUI on the PCs. WinXX boxes
like to default to NetBEUI if both it and TCP/IP are enabled which leaves TCP/IP only clients like
Unix boxes in the dark.
Maybe a poll: "Where do you use Samba?" (Score:1)
This would make a great poll topic! Possibly choices like:
+At work +At home +At school +At work & home
etc etc
samba use (Score:1)
If this works out good over the next few months, I may use it when I network a friend's office.
Sighh, site is /.:ed (not amusing anymore) (Score:1)
Samba at work (Score:1)
Thousands of people... (Score:1)
Samba at work (Score:1)
Been using Samba for nearly a year, but it will never get "officially" used. Ah well. Anyway, I'm using it to give me access to the intranet directories for editing, and have it set up for a global share mapped by username (i.e. roaming private drive: where you log in, it follows.) Pretty handy, since we don't use profiles. But then again, I'm not allowed to map anyone to it or allow them to use it. So I use it as an instantly available backup when I give people new boxes.
BTW, it's on a desktop P133 w/128MB ram, and IDE disks (not using software RAID,) running Caldera 1.3, and it STILL outperforms the P66 10K-RPM SCSI RAID5 NT PDC by a factor of 2. (Enough acronyms in a row for any PHB ;-)
Samba rocks.
Watch out for passwords and NetBEUI (Score:1)
Was talking to my roomate who mentioned that I should use NetBEUI... Of course I use TCP/IP only but the problems persist, no matter what service pack I have.
At first I thought it was SAMBA. But his 98 station gives me the "unable to resolv path" error, so that took the blame off SAMBA.
Samba? Everywhere! (Score:1)
Using for a 100 client PDC (Score:1)
It is saving a lot in licensing costs, to say the least.
Know of any PDC documentation? (Score:1)
All it does is authenticate passwords, serve roaming profiles, serve files, and serve printers.
The PDC support is very young, you should be able to find help on the samba web site at www.samba.org
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
SAMBA on an SGI O2 (oops) (Score:1)
This summer I had the honor of installing SAMBA
on a new O2 the company had for running SurfCAM.
Quick, painless, and frighteningly easy once I
downloaded the package from SGI's freeware site.
Sure beat FTP-ing crap all over the place.
Samba at work, home, and school (Score:1)
Long live OSS!
Samba Usage (Score:1)
Go samba!
The Pentagon let him in?(!) (Score:1)
from this piece.
It shows what kind of world is created when free
software is used: one of mutual trust,
cooperation, and admiration; rather than one
filled with lawyers enforcing dubious claims of
"Intellectual Property".
"Intellectual Property" that will be abandoned
once it is no longer profitable.
The enormous cost to humanity, both financially
and psychologically, of using proprietary
software and protocols has yet to be tallied.
Cheers to all Andrew and all of the Samba
developers!
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"The Internet interprets censorship as damage,
Samba at work (Score:1)
samba rocks, netatalk too (Score:1)
the linux box is so stable that samba interruptions from reboots or crashes aren't a factor- they don't happen. i think it's been up for about four months now, and the reason it went down then was the power went out on a weekend and nobody got there by the time the ups pooped out.
Does Samba run on NT? (Score:1)
TridgeWELL?? Who's he?? (Score:1)
http://samba.anu.edu.au/~tridge
NTFS vs. Unix file permissions (Score:1)
For example: I have a "Budgets" share. Under Budgets are directories for 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2000. Under 1999 there is a separate directory for each of 20 business units. Under the "Networks" business unit directory are 10 subdirectories for each of the departments in Networks. Each departmental manager needs R/W access to his departmental directory. The BU manager needs R/W access to all the departmental directories, and the IT director needs R access to the lot. The Finance group needs R/W access to all the BU directories. The Management team needs R access to everything. Everyone else needs List access to the directories. Certain people may need specific access to particular files anywhere in that directory structure.
I don't think you can get that functionality with Unix and Samba, whereas it's trivial with NT.
Graeme
Does Samba run on NT? nope (Score:1)
Samba and how i use it (Score:1)
Within the next few weeks, i will be doing a demo of linux, samba, and squid for one of my mom's coworkers, the network admin where she works. There NT internet proxy has been hacked 3 times that i know of, so i hope to show them that there is an alternitive to winnt, and it's very very bad security. As once said in a file that i read many years ago, OEM's will allways keep bugs so you, the consumer will pay to have them fixed when somebody hacks you.
oh, btw, my linux box hosts 4 windows boxes, and the only problems i have had was minor password problems, and when i screwed up my hosts file.
i hope that samba lives forever.
Long Live Linux, and Samba!
Samba is indeed cool. (Score:1)
SMB (Score:1)
Microsoft used to love Samba, they saw it as a way to transition people from unix to NT. Now that it's being used in reverse to move people from NT to Unix, they're not so happy.
As for MS changing the protocol, I doubt they have the balls. Too many big customers are using Samba, OS/2, various DOS clients, WfW, etc. They know SMB is essentially legacy, so their latest efforts revolve distributed file systems, Active-Directory based security, etc.
Terabytes of data. (Score:1)
doesn't every one use samba? (Score:1)
Samba BUGS, god danm it (Score:1)
What about Luke? (Score:1)
Too funny.. (Score:1)
NT is not good enough to be a production NT server yet. Even if Samba is flaky, it's not like anyone who's used NT could tell the difference, unless Samba is down more than it is up.
Too funny.. (Score:1)
I was just gathering resources to back up my POV that we should not be using NT for our PDC's, but rather samba. Needless to say, most of the existing doc's were rather dry, but this piece is a great caketopper!
Now let's hope my guys see the proper way of thinking...
Too funny.. (Score:1)
I'm pretty convinced of the stability of it - we've been using it for years now in varying capacities... The trick for me now is to convince the powers that be that Samba is a viable replacement for NT as a PDC.
It's the same arguement that I have to make in favor of Hylafax. We've had it running on a production server since early '95. But now that we want to use it for our own purposes, everyone wants to know why Hyla is better than Winfax...
In our environment, OS/Linux wares make a ton of sense, but it's sometimes tough to get people to accept that we can't call a 1-800 number an beg for support on it either.
This will change in time, but it makes for interesting challenges from time to time.
OTOH, the job is getting easier. The same people that were asking about Samba/Hyla were also quite impressed with the price on Star Office vs. that of Word.
Samba is great (Score:1)
I use samba at home for our network, works out really well. I am still using version 1.9.18p8, but I'll switch to 2.x once I've got the time, as for right now, what I have works :) I can't seem to get public access to work on some directories, even though they are set to public = yes (it keeps asking for a username/password), but I'm sure that's an error on my part, not a problem with samba.
:)
My site contains 100% GPL'd source code
Time to reboot (Score:1)
Why the penguin icon here? (Score:1)
--B
Seems like a good time for this question. (Score:1)
Now imagine dropping a Unix box into place that can handle running your NT domain. Oh, the convenience... Sweet, happy penguins dancing in the cubicles...
(In my defense, I don't use NT either--I just spend too much time tracking Samba development.
Watch out for passwords and NetBEUI (Score:1)
Samba & Linux 2.0 (Score:1)
Seems like a good time for this question. (Score:1)
Attempting installation... (Score:1)
free software, I have taken on this task. Gosh, I hope I do it well, otherwise it will hurt the reputation of free software around here.
G
"An bfuil cead agam dul amok???"
Yup, Samba in use here at work and at home (Score:1)
I use it at home too, because I thought it would be cool to use a Linux server and still haven't managed to ditch all my Win95 legacy apps.
I must admit that it grinds a little on a 20MHz 386 with 8Mb RAM... :)
Vik :v)
Private and Company Use for years (Score:1)
Very satisfied!
Samba at work (Score:1)
Editor needed (Score:1)
No offense meant to Andrew. I've sat in an audience in Australia, spellbound, listening to him speak. He packs maximum information into short times, and he's incredibly entertaining.
Major Use of Samba (Score:1)
Major Use of Samba (Score:1)
Samba dances nicely with Netatalk (Score:1)