Using Samba

Using Samba

Robert Eckstein, David Collier-Brown, Peter Kelly
1st Edition November 1999
1-56592-449-5, Order Number: 4495
416 pages, $34.95

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Table of Contents


Previous: 8.4 WinPopup Messages Chapter 8
Additional Samba Information
Next: 8.6 Miscellaneous Options
 

8.5 Recently Added Options

Samba has several options that appeared around the time of Samba 2.0, but either were not entirely supported or were in the process of being developed. With Samba 2.0.7, several more were introduced. We will give you a brief overview of their workings in this section. These options are shown in Table 8.9.


Table 8.9: Recently Added Options

Option

Parameters

Function

Default

Scope

change notify timeout

numerical (number of seconds)

Sets the interval between checks when a client asks to wait for a change in a specified directory.

60

Global

machine password timeout

numerical (number of seconds)

Sets the renewal interval for NT domain machine passwords.

604,800 (1 week)

Global

stat cache

boolean

If yes, Samba will cache recent name mappings.

yes

Global

stat cache size

numerical

Sets the size of the stat cache.

50

Global

utmp

boolean

Turns on logging of Samba users in the utmp file. Requires --with-utmp.

no

Share

utmp dir

string (pathname)

Sets the directory where Samba expects to find the utmp/utmpx file.

None

Share

inherit permissions

boolean

Sets the permissions of newly created directories to the same as their parent.

no

Share

write cache size

numerical (bytes)

Sets the size of a write cache (buffer) used for oplocked files.

0

Share

source environment

string (pathname)

Sets a file to read environment variable from.

None

Global

min password length

numerical (number of characters)

Sets the minimum length of a new password which Samba will try to update the password file with .

5

Global

netbios scope

string

Sets the NetBIOS scope.

None

Global

8.5.1 change notify timeout

The change notify timeout global option emulates a Windows NT SMB feature called change notification. This allows a client to request that a Windows NT server periodically monitor a specific directory on a share for any changes. If any changes occur, the server will notify the client.

As of version 2.0, Samba will perform this function for its clients. However, performing these checks too often can slow the server down considerably. This option sets the time period that Samba should wait between such checks. The default is one minute (60 seconds); however, you can use this option to specify an alternate time that Samba should wait between performing checks:

[global]
	change notify timeout = 30

8.5.2 machine password timeout

The machine password timeout global option sets a retention period for NT domain machine passwords. The default is currently set to the same time period that Windows NT 4.0 uses: 604,800 seconds (one week). Samba will periodically attempt to change the machine account password, which is a password used specifically by another server to report changes to it. This option specifies the number of seconds that Samba should wait before attempting to change that password. The following example changes it to a single day, by specifying the following:

[global]
	machine password timeout = 86400

8.5.3 stat cache

The stat cache global option turns on caching of recent case-insensitive name mappings. The default is yes. The Samba team recommends that you never change this parameter.

8.5.4 stat cache size

The stat cache size global option sets the size of the cache entries to be used for the stat cache option. The default here is 50. Again, the Samba team recommends that you never change this parameter.

===

8.5.5 utmp

If you specified --with-utmp when configuring, this option will turn on utmp logging of users: they will appear in the utmp file and you will be able to see if they are on with last(1). It defaults to no.

8.5.6 utmp dir

If utmp is set, the utmp dir option will change the directory Samba looks in for the utmp files. If it is not set, the default system location will be used.

8.5.7 inherit permissions

This option causes new files and directories to be created with the same permissions as the directory they're in. For example, subdirectories will inherit setgid bits from their parents. This option will override the create mask, directory mask, force create mode and force directory mode options, but not the map archive, map hidden and map system options. It will never set the setuid bit. This option defaults to off.

8.5.8 write cache size

The write cache size share option sets the size of a cache used by Samba while writing oplocked files. The files will be written in cachesize blocks, so you can tune Samba's write size to the optimum size for your filesystem or RAID disk array.

The caching applies to the first 10 files opened with oplocks if set, and defaults to zero (off) initially.

As with all caching schemes, data that hasn't been written will be lost if the system crashes.

8.5.9 source environment

This options specifies a file of environment variables that Samba will read on startup. The variables set in this files can then be used in smb.conf files as $%name. For example, HOME=/home/sofia in the environment file could be used in a smb.conf file as "path = "$HOME"

If the pathname begins with a "|" (pipe) symbol, Samba will attempt to run it and read its standard output.

8.5.10 min password length

This option sets the minimum length, in characters, of a plain text password that Samba will accept when performing UNIX password changing. This is used to tell Samba about system-defined minimums, so it can return an appropriate error to the client.

8.5.11 netbios scope

This sets the NetBIOS scope that Samba will operate under: Samba will not communicate with any machine with a different scope. This should not be set unless every machine on your LAN also sets this value. It was a predecessor to workgroups, and the Samba team recommends against using it.


Previous: 8.4 WinPopup Messages Next: 8.6 Miscellaneous Options
8.4 WinPopup Messages Book Index 8.6 Miscellaneous Options

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