1SMB.CONF(5) File Formats and Conventions SMB.CONF(5)
2
3
4
6 smb.conf - The configuration file for the Samba suite
7
9 The smb.conf file is a configuration file for the Samba suite.
10 smb.conf contains runtime configuration information for the Samba
11 programs. The complete description of the file format and possible
12 parameters held within are here for reference purposes.
13
15 The file consists of sections and parameters. A section begins with the
16 name of the section in square brackets and continues until the next
17 section begins. Sections contain parameters of the form:
18
19 name = value
20
21 The file is line-based - that is, each newline-terminated line
22 represents either a comment, a section name or a parameter.
23
24 Section and parameter names are not case sensitive.
25
26 Only the first equals sign in a parameter is significant. Whitespace
27 before or after the first equals sign is discarded. Leading, trailing
28 and internal whitespace in section and parameter names is irrelevant.
29 Leading and trailing whitespace in a parameter value is discarded.
30 Internal whitespace within a parameter value is retained verbatim.
31
32 Any line beginning with a semicolon (“;”) or a hash (“#”) character is
33 ignored, as are lines containing only whitespace.
34
35 Any line ending in a “\” is continued on the next line in the customary
36 UNIX fashion.
37
38 The values following the equals sign in parameters are all either a
39 string (no quotes needed) or a boolean, which may be given as yes/no,
40 1/0 or true/false. Case is not significant in boolean values, but is
41 preserved in string values. Some items such as create masks are
42 numeric.
43
45 Each section in the configuration file (except for the [global]
46 section) describes a shared resource (known as a “share”). The section
47 name is the name of the shared resource and the parameters within the
48 section define the shares attributes.
49
50 There are three special sections, [global], [homes] and [printers],
51 which are described under special sections. The following notes apply
52 to ordinary section descriptions.
53
54 A share consists of a directory to which access is being given plus a
55 description of the access rights which are granted to the user of the
56 service. Some housekeeping options are also specifiable.
57
58 Sections are either file share services (used by the client as an
59 extension of their native file systems) or printable services (used by
60 the client to access print services on the host running the server).
61
62 Sections may be designated guest services, in which case no password is
63 required to access them. A specified UNIX guest account is used to
64 define access privileges in this case.
65
66 Sections other than guest services will require a password to access
67 them. The client provides the username. As older clients only provide
68 passwords and not usernames, you may specify a list of usernames to
69 check against the password using the user = option in the share
70 definition. For modern clients such as Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000, this
71 should not be necessary.
72
73 The access rights granted by the server are masked by the access rights
74 granted to the specified or guest UNIX user by the host system. The
75 server does not grant more access than the host system grants.
76
77 The following sample section defines a file space share. The user has
78 write access to the path /home/bar. The share is accessed via the share
79 name foo:
80
81 [foo]
82 path = /home/bar
83 read only = no
84
85 The following sample section defines a printable share. The share is
86 read-only, but printable. That is, the only write access permitted is
87 via calls to open, write to and close a spool file. The guest ok
88 parameter means access will be permitted as the default guest user
89 (specified elsewhere):
90
91 [aprinter]
92 path = /usr/spool/public
93 read only = yes
94 printable = yes
95 guest ok = yes
96
97
99 The [global] section
100 Parameters in this section apply to the server as a whole, or are
101 defaults for sections that do not specifically define certain items.
102 See the notes under PARAMETERS for more information.
103
104 The [homes] section
105 If a section called [homes] is included in the configuration file,
106 services connecting clients to their home directories can be created on
107 the fly by the server.
108
109 When the connection request is made, the existing sections are scanned.
110 If a match is found, it is used. If no match is found, the requested
111 section name is treated as a username and looked up in the local
112 password file. If the name exists and the correct password has been
113 given, a share is created by cloning the [homes] section.
114
115 Some modifications are then made to the newly created share:
116
117 · The share name is changed from homes to the located
118 username.
119
120 · If no path was given, the path is set to the user's home
121 directory.
122
123
124 If you decide to use a path = line in your [homes] section, it may be
125 useful to use the %S macro. For example:
126
127 path = /data/pchome/%S
128
129 is useful if you have different home directories for your PCs than for
130 UNIX access.
131
132 This is a fast and simple way to give a large number of clients access
133 to their home directories with a minimum of fuss.
134
135 A similar process occurs if the requested section name is “homes”,
136 except that the share name is not changed to that of the requesting
137 user. This method of using the [homes] section works well if different
138 users share a client PC.
139
140 The [homes] section can specify all the parameters a normal service
141 section can specify, though some make more sense than others. The
142 following is a typical and suitable [homes] section:
143
144 [homes]
145 read only = no
146
147 An important point is that if guest access is specified in the [homes]
148 section, all home directories will be visible to all clients without a
149 password. In the very unlikely event that this is actually desirable,
150 it is wise to also specify read only access.
151
152 The browseable flag for auto home directories will be inherited from
153 the global browseable flag, not the [homes] browseable flag. This is
154 useful as it means setting browseable = no in the [homes] section will
155 hide the [homes] share but make any auto home directories visible.
156
157 The [printers] section
158 This section works like [homes], but for printers.
159
160 If a [printers] section occurs in the configuration file, users are
161 able to connect to any printer specified in the local host's printcap
162 file.
163
164 When a connection request is made, the existing sections are scanned.
165 If a match is found, it is used. If no match is found, but a [homes]
166 section exists, it is used as described above. Otherwise, the requested
167 section name is treated as a printer name and the appropriate printcap
168 file is scanned to see if the requested section name is a valid printer
169 share name. If a match is found, a new printer share is created by
170 cloning the [printers] section.
171
172 A few modifications are then made to the newly created share:
173
174 · The share name is set to the located printer name
175
176 · If no printer name was given, the printer name is set to the
177 located printer name
178
179 · If the share does not permit guest access and no username
180 was given, the username is set to the located printer name.
181
182
183 The [printers] service MUST be printable - if you specify otherwise,
184 the server will refuse to load the configuration file.
185
186 Typically the path specified is that of a world-writeable spool
187 directory with the sticky bit set on it. A typical [printers] entry
188 looks like this:
189
190 [printers]
191 path = /usr/spool/public
192 guest ok = yes
193 printable = yes
194
195 All aliases given for a printer in the printcap file are legitimate
196 printer names as far as the server is concerned. If your printing
197 subsystem doesn't work like that, you will have to set up a
198 pseudo-printcap. This is a file consisting of one or more lines like
199 this:
200
201 alias|alias|alias|alias...
202
203 Each alias should be an acceptable printer name for your printing
204 subsystem. In the [global] section, specify the new file as your
205 printcap. The server will only recognize names found in your
206 pseudo-printcap, which of course can contain whatever aliases you like.
207 The same technique could be used simply to limit access to a subset of
208 your local printers.
209
210 An alias, by the way, is defined as any component of the first entry of
211 a printcap record. Records are separated by newlines, components (if
212 there are more than one) are separated by vertical bar symbols (|).
213
214 Note
215 On SYSV systems which use lpstat to determine what printers are
216 defined on the system you may be able to use printcap name = lpstat
217 to automatically obtain a list of printers. See the printcap name
218 option for more details.
219
221 Starting with Samba version 3.0.23 the capability for non-root users to
222 add, modify, and delete their own share definitions has been added.
223 This capability is called usershares and is controlled by a set of
224 parameters in the [global] section of the smb.conf. The relevant
225 parameters are :
226
227 usershare allow guests
228 Controls if usershares can permit guest access.
229
230 usershare max shares
231 Maximum number of user defined shares allowed.
232
233 usershare owner only
234 If set only directories owned by the sharing user can be shared.
235
236 usershare path
237 Points to the directory containing the user defined share
238 definitions. The filesystem permissions on this directory control
239 who can create user defined shares.
240
241 usershare prefix allow list
242 Comma-separated list of absolute pathnames restricting what
243 directories can be shared. Only directories below the pathnames in
244 this list are permitted.
245
246 usershare prefix deny list
247 Comma-separated list of absolute pathnames restricting what
248 directories can be shared. Directories below the pathnames in this
249 list are prohibited.
250
251 usershare template share
252 Names a pre-existing share used as a template for creating new
253 usershares. All other share parameters not specified in the user
254 defined share definition are copied from this named share.
255
256 To allow members of the UNIX group foo to create user defined shares,
257 create the directory to contain the share definitions as follows:
258
259 Become root:
260
261 mkdir /usr/local/samba/lib/usershares
262 chgrp foo /usr/local/samba/lib/usershares
263 chmod 1770 /usr/local/samba/lib/usershares
264
265 Then add the parameters
266
267 usershare path = /usr/local/samba/lib/usershares
268 usershare max shares = 10 # (or the desired number of shares)
269
270 to the global section of your smb.conf. Members of the group foo may
271 then manipulate the user defined shares using the following commands.
272
273 net usershare add sharename path [comment] [acl] [guest_ok=[y|n]]
274 To create or modify (overwrite) a user defined share.
275
276 net usershare delete sharename
277 To delete a user defined share.
278
279 net usershare list wildcard-sharename
280 To list user defined shares.
281
282 net usershare info wildcard-sharename
283 To print information about user defined shares.
284
286 Parameters define the specific attributes of sections.
287
288 Some parameters are specific to the [global] section (e.g., security).
289 Some parameters are usable in all sections (e.g., create mask). All
290 others are permissible only in normal sections. For the purposes of the
291 following descriptions the [homes] and [printers] sections will be
292 considered normal. The letter G in parentheses indicates that a
293 parameter is specific to the [global] section. The letter S indicates
294 that a parameter can be specified in a service specific section. All S
295 parameters can also be specified in the [global] section - in which
296 case they will define the default behavior for all services.
297
298 Parameters are arranged here in alphabetical order - this may not
299 create best bedfellows, but at least you can find them! Where there are
300 synonyms, the preferred synonym is described, others refer to the
301 preferred synonym.
302
304 Many of the strings that are settable in the config file can take
305 substitutions. For example the option “path = /tmp/%u” is interpreted
306 as “path = /tmp/john” if the user connected with the username john.
307
308 These substitutions are mostly noted in the descriptions below, but
309 there are some general substitutions which apply whenever they might be
310 relevant. These are:
311
312 %U
313 session username (the username that the client wanted, not
314 necessarily the same as the one they got).
315
316 %G
317 primary group name of %U.
318
319 %h
320 the Internet hostname that Samba is running on.
321
322 %m
323 the NetBIOS name of the client machine (very useful).
324
325 This parameter is not available when Samba listens on port 445, as
326 clients no longer send this information. If you use this macro in
327 an include statement on a domain that has a Samba domain controller
328 be sure to set in the [global] section smb ports = 139. This will
329 cause Samba to not listen on port 445 and will permit include
330 functionality to function as it did with Samba 2.x.
331
332 %L
333 the NetBIOS name of the server. This allows you to change your
334 config based on what the client calls you. Your server can have a
335 “dual personality”.
336
337 %M
338 the Internet name of the client machine.
339
340 %R
341 the selected protocol level after protocol negotiation. It can be
342 one of CORE, COREPLUS, LANMAN1, LANMAN2, NT1, SMB2_02, SMB2_10,
343 SMB2_22, SMB2_24, SMB3_00, SMB3_02, SMB3_10, SMB3_11 or SMB2_FF.
344
345 %d
346 the process id of the current server process.
347
348 %a
349 The architecture of the remote machine. It currently recognizes
350 Samba (Samba), the Linux CIFS file system (CIFSFS), OS/2, (OS2),
351 Mac OS X (OSX), Windows for Workgroups (WfWg), Windows 9x/ME
352 (Win95), Windows NT (WinNT), Windows 2000 (Win2K), Windows XP
353 (WinXP), Windows XP 64-bit(WinXP64), Windows 2003 including 2003R2
354 (Win2K3), and Windows Vista (Vista). Anything else will be known as
355 UNKNOWN.
356
357 %I
358 the IP address of the client machine.
359
360 Before 4.0.0 it could contain IPv4 mapped IPv6 addresses, now it
361 only contains IPv4 or IPv6 addresses.
362
363 %J
364 the IP address of the client machine, colons/dots replaced by
365 underscores.
366
367 %i
368 the local IP address to which a client connected.
369
370 Before 4.0.0 it could contain IPv4 mapped IPv6 addresses, now it
371 only contains IPv4 or IPv6 addresses.
372
373 %j
374 the local IP address to which a client connected, colons/dots
375 replaced by underscores.
376
377 %T
378 the current date and time.
379
380 %t
381 the current date and time in a minimal format without colons
382 (YYYYYmmdd_HHMMSS).
383
384 %D
385 name of the domain or workgroup of the current user.
386
387 %w
388 the winbind separator.
389
390 %$(envvar)
391 the value of the environment variable envar.
392
393 The following substitutes apply only to some configuration options
394 (only those that are used when a connection has been established):
395
396 %S
397 the name of the current service, if any.
398
399 %P
400 the root directory of the current service, if any.
401
402 %u
403 username of the current service, if any.
404
405 %g
406 primary group name of %u.
407
408 %H
409 the home directory of the user given by %u.
410
411 %N
412 the name of your NIS home directory server. This is obtained from
413 your NIS auto.map entry. If you have not compiled Samba with the
414 --with-automount option, this value will be the same as %L.
415
416 %p
417 the path of the service's home directory, obtained from your NIS
418 auto.map entry. The NIS auto.map entry is split up as %N:%p.
419
420 There are some quite creative things that can be done with these
421 substitutions and other smb.conf options.
422
424 Samba supports name mangling so that DOS and Windows clients can use
425 files that don't conform to the 8.3 format. It can also be set to
426 adjust the case of 8.3 format filenames.
427
428 There are several options that control the way mangling is performed,
429 and they are grouped here rather than listed separately. For the
430 defaults look at the output of the testparm program.
431
432 These options can be set separately for each service.
433
434 The options are:
435
436 case sensitive = yes/no/auto
437 controls whether filenames are case sensitive. If they aren't,
438 Samba must do a filename search and match on passed names. The
439 default setting of auto allows clients that support case sensitive
440 filenames (Linux CIFSVFS and smbclient 3.0.5 and above currently)
441 to tell the Samba server on a per-packet basis that they wish to
442 access the file system in a case-sensitive manner (to support UNIX
443 case sensitive semantics). No Windows or DOS system supports
444 case-sensitive filename so setting this option to auto is that same
445 as setting it to no for them. Default auto.
446
447 default case = upper/lower
448 controls what the default case is for new filenames (ie. files that
449 don't currently exist in the filesystem). Default lower. IMPORTANT
450 NOTE: As part of the optimizations for directories containing large
451 numbers of files, the following special case applies. If the
452 options case sensitive = yes, preserve case = No, and short
453 preserve case = No are set, then the case of all incoming client
454 filenames, not just new filenames, will be modified. See additional
455 notes below.
456
457 preserve case = yes/no
458 controls whether new files (ie. files that don't currently exist in
459 the filesystem) are created with the case that the client passes,
460 or if they are forced to be the default case. Default yes.
461
462 short preserve case = yes/no
463 controls if new files (ie. files that don't currently exist in the
464 filesystem) which conform to 8.3 syntax, that is all in upper case
465 and of suitable length, are created upper case, or if they are
466 forced to be the default case. This option can be used with
467 preserve case = yes to permit long filenames to retain their case,
468 while short names are lowercased. Default yes.
469
470 By default, Samba 3.0 has the same semantics as a Windows NT server, in
471 that it is case insensitive but case preserving. As a special case for
472 directories with large numbers of files, if the case options are set as
473 follows, "case sensitive = yes", "case preserve = no", "short preserve
474 case = no" then the "default case" option will be applied and will
475 modify all filenames sent from the client when accessing this share.
476
478 Starting with Samba version 3.2.0, the capability to store Samba
479 configuration in the registry is available. The configuration is stored
480 in the registry key HKLM\Software\Samba\smbconf. There are two levels
481 of registry configuration:
482
483 1. Share definitions stored in registry are used. This is
484 triggered by setting the global parameter registry shares to
485 “yes” in smb.conf.
486
487 The registry shares are loaded not at startup but on demand
488 at runtime by smbd. Shares defined in smb.conf take priority
489 over shares of the same name defined in registry.
490
491 2. Global smb.conf options stored in registry are used. This
492 can be activated in two different ways:
493
494 Firstly, a registry only configuration is triggered by
495 setting config backend = registry in the [global] section of
496 smb.conf. This resets everything that has been read from
497 config files to this point and reads the content of the
498 global configuration section from the registry. This is the
499 recommended method of using registry based configuration.
500
501 Secondly, a mixed configuration can be activated by a
502 special new meaning of the parameter include = registry in
503 the [global] section of smb.conf. This reads the global
504 options from registry with the same priorities as for an
505 include of a text file. This may be especially useful in
506 cases where an initial configuration is needed to access the
507 registry.
508
509 Activation of global registry options automatically
510 activates registry shares. So in the registry only case,
511 shares are loaded on demand only.
512
513
514 Note: To make registry-based configurations foolproof at least to a
515 certain extent, the use of lock directory and config backend inside the
516 registry configuration has been disabled: Especially by changing the
517 lock directory inside the registry configuration, one would create a
518 broken setup where the daemons do not see the configuration they loaded
519 once it is active.
520
521 The registry configuration can be accessed with tools like regedit or
522 net (rpc) registry in the key HKLM\Software\Samba\smbconf. More
523 conveniently, the conf subcommand of the net(8) utility offers a
524 dedicated interface to read and write the registry based configuration
525 locally, i.e. directly accessing the database file, circumventing the
526 server.
527
529 In the SMB protocol, users, groups, and machines are represented by
530 their security identifiers (SIDs). On POSIX system Samba processes need
531 to run under corresponding POSIX user identities and with supplemental
532 POSIX groups to allow access to the files owned by those users and
533 groups. The process of mapping SIDs to POSIX users and groups is called
534 IDENTITY MAPPING or, in short, ID MAPPING.
535
536 Samba supports multiple ways to map SIDs to POSIX users and groups. The
537 configuration is driven by the idmap config DOMAIN : OPTION option
538 which allows one to specify identity mapping (idmap) options for each
539 domain separately.
540
541 Identity mapping modules implement different strategies for mapping of
542 SIDs to POSIX user and group identities. They are applicable to
543 different use cases and scenarios. It is advised to read the
544 documentation of the individual identity mapping modules before
545 choosing a specific scenario to use. Each identity management module is
546 documented in a separate manual page. The standard idmap backends are
547 tdb (idmap_tdb(8)), tdb2 (idmap_tdb2(8)), ldap (idmap_ldap(8)), rid
548 (idmap_rid(8)), hash (idmap_hash(8)), autorid (idmap_autorid(8)), ad
549 (idmap_ad(8)), nss (idmap_nss(8)), and rfc2307 (idmap_rfc2307(8)).
550
551 Overall, ID mapping configuration should be decided carefully. Changes
552 to the already deployed ID mapping configuration may create the risk of
553 losing access to the data or disclosing the data to the wrong parties.
554
555 This example shows how to configure two domains with idmap_rid(8), the
556 principal domain and a trusted domain, leaving the default id mapping
557 scheme at tdb.
558
559 [global]
560 security = domain
561 workgroup = MAIN
562
563 idmap config * : backend = tdb
564 idmap config * : range = 1000000-1999999
565
566 idmap config MAIN : backend = rid
567 idmap config MAIN : range = 5000000-5999999
568
569 idmap config TRUSTED : backend = rid
570 idmap config TRUSTED : range = 6000000-6999999
571
572
574 abort shutdown script (G)
575
576 This a full path name to a script called by smbd(8) that should
577 stop a shutdown procedure issued by the shutdown script.
578
579 If the connected user possesses the SeRemoteShutdownPrivilege,
580 right, this command will be run as root.
581
582 Default: abort shutdown script = ""
583
584 Example: abort shutdown script = /sbin/shutdown -c
585
586 access based share enum (S)
587
588 If this parameter is yes for a service, then the share hosted by
589 the service will only be visible to users who have read or write
590 access to the share during share enumeration (for example net view
591 \\sambaserver). The share ACLs which allow or deny the access to
592 the share can be modified using for example the sharesec command or
593 using the appropriate Windows tools. This has parallels to access
594 based enumeration, the main difference being that only share
595 permissions are evaluated, and security descriptors on files
596 contained on the share are not used in computing enumeration access
597 rights.
598
599 Default: access based share enum = no
600
601 acl allow execute always (S)
602
603 This boolean parameter controls the behaviour of smbd(8) when
604 receiving a protocol request of "open for execution" from a Windows
605 client. With Samba 3.6 and older, the execution right in the ACL
606 was not checked, so a client could execute a file even if it did
607 not have execute rights on the file. In Samba 4.0, this has been
608 fixed, so that by default, i.e. when this parameter is set to
609 "False", "open for execution" is now denied when execution
610 permissions are not present.
611
612 If this parameter is set to "True", Samba does not check execute
613 permissions on "open for execution", thus re-establishing the
614 behaviour of Samba 3.6. This can be useful to smoothen upgrades
615 from older Samba versions to 4.0 and newer. This setting is not
616 meant to be used as a permanent setting, but as a temporary relief:
617 It is recommended to fix the permissions in the ACLs and reset this
618 parameter to the default after a certain transition period.
619
620 Default: acl allow execute always = no
621
622 acl check permissions (S)
623
624 Please note this parameter is now deprecated in Samba 3.6.2 and
625 will be removed in a future version of Samba.
626
627 This boolean parameter controls what smbd(8) does on receiving a
628 protocol request of "open for delete" from a Windows client. If a
629 Windows client doesn't have permissions to delete a file then they
630 expect this to be denied at open time. POSIX systems normally only
631 detect restrictions on delete by actually attempting to delete the
632 file or directory. As Windows clients can (and do) "back out" a
633 delete request by unsetting the "delete on close" bit Samba cannot
634 delete the file immediately on "open for delete" request as we
635 cannot restore such a deleted file. With this parameter set to true
636 (the default) then smbd checks the file system permissions directly
637 on "open for delete" and denies the request without actually
638 deleting the file if the file system permissions would seem to deny
639 it. This is not perfect, as it's possible a user could have deleted
640 a file without Samba being able to check the permissions correctly,
641 but it is close enough to Windows semantics for mostly correct
642 behaviour. Samba will correctly check POSIX ACL semantics in this
643 case.
644
645 If this parameter is set to "false" Samba doesn't check permissions
646 on "open for delete" and allows the open. If the user doesn't have
647 permission to delete the file this will only be discovered at close
648 time, which is too late for the Windows user tools to display an
649 error message to the user. The symptom of this is files that appear
650 to have been deleted "magically" re-appearing on a Windows explorer
651 refresh. This is an extremely advanced protocol option which should
652 not need to be changed. This parameter was introduced in its final
653 form in 3.0.21, an earlier version with slightly different
654 semantics was introduced in 3.0.20. That older version is not
655 documented here.
656
657 Default: acl check permissions = yes
658
659 acl group control (S)
660
661 In a POSIX filesystem, only the owner of a file or directory and
662 the superuser can modify the permissions and ACLs on a file. If
663 this parameter is set, then Samba overrides this restriction, and
664 also allows the primary group owner of a file or directory to
665 modify the permissions and ACLs on that file.
666
667 On a Windows server, groups may be the owner of a file or directory
668 - thus allowing anyone in that group to modify the permissions on
669 it. This allows the delegation of security controls on a point in
670 the filesystem to the group owner of a directory and anything below
671 it also owned by that group. This means there are multiple people
672 with permissions to modify ACLs on a file or directory, easing
673 manageability.
674
675 This parameter allows Samba to also permit delegation of the
676 control over a point in the exported directory hierarchy in much
677 the same way as Windows. This allows all members of a UNIX group to
678 control the permissions on a file or directory they have group
679 ownership on.
680
681 This parameter is best used with the inherit owner option and also
682 on a share containing directories with the UNIX setgid bit set on
683 them, which causes new files and directories created within it to
684 inherit the group ownership from the containing directory.
685
686 This parameter was deprecated in Samba 3.0.23, but re-activated in
687 Samba 3.0.31 and above, as it now only controls permission changes
688 if the user is in the owning primary group. It is now no longer
689 equivalent to the dos filemode option.
690
691 Default: acl group control = no
692
693 acl map full control (S)
694
695 This boolean parameter controls whether smbd(8) maps a POSIX ACE
696 entry of "rwx" (read/write/execute), the maximum allowed POSIX
697 permission set, into a Windows ACL of "FULL CONTROL". If this
698 parameter is set to true any POSIX ACE entry of "rwx" will be
699 returned in a Windows ACL as "FULL CONTROL", is this parameter is
700 set to false any POSIX ACE entry of "rwx" will be returned as the
701 specific Windows ACL bits representing read, write and execute.
702
703 Default: acl map full control = yes
704
705 add group script (G)
706
707 This is the full pathname to a script that will be run AS ROOT by
708 smbd(8) when a new group is requested. It will expand any %g to the
709 group name passed. This script is only useful for installations
710 using the Windows NT domain administration tools. The script is
711 free to create a group with an arbitrary name to circumvent unix
712 group name restrictions. In that case the script must print the
713 numeric gid of the created group on stdout.
714
715 Default: add group script =
716
717 Example: add group script = /usr/sbin/groupadd %g
718
719 additional dns hostnames (G)
720
721 A list of additional DNS names by which this host can be identified
722
723 Default: additional dns hostnames = # empty string (no additional
724 dns names)
725
726 Example: additional dns hostnames = host2.example.com
727 host3.other.com
728
729 add machine script (G)
730
731 This is the full pathname to a script that will be run by smbd(8)
732 when a machine is added to Samba's domain and a Unix account
733 matching the machine's name appended with a "$" does not already
734 exist.
735
736 This option is very similar to the add user script, and likewise
737 uses the %u substitution for the account name. Do not use the %m
738 substitution.
739
740 Default: add machine script =
741
742 Example: add machine script = /usr/sbin/adduser -n -g machines -c
743 Machine -d /var/lib/nobody -s /bin/false %u
744
745 addport command (G)
746
747 Samba 3.0.23 introduced support for adding printer ports remotely
748 using the Windows "Add Standard TCP/IP Port Wizard". This option
749 defines an external program to be executed when smbd receives a
750 request to add a new Port to the system. The script is passed two
751 parameters:
752
753 · port name
754
755 · device URI
756
757 The deviceURI is in the format of
758 socket://<hostname>[:<portnumber>] or lpd://<hostname>/<queuename>.
759
760 Default: addport command =
761
762 Example: addport command = /etc/samba/scripts/addport.sh
763
764 addprinter command (G)
765
766 With the introduction of MS-RPC based printing support for Windows
767 NT/2000 clients in Samba 2.2, The MS Add Printer Wizard (APW) icon
768 is now also available in the "Printers..." folder displayed a share
769 listing. The APW allows for printers to be add remotely to a Samba
770 or Windows NT/2000 print server.
771
772 For a Samba host this means that the printer must be physically
773 added to the underlying printing system. The addprinter command
774 defines a script to be run which will perform the necessary
775 operations for adding the printer to the print system and to add
776 the appropriate service definition to the smb.conf file in order
777 that it can be shared by smbd(8).
778
779 The addprinter command is automatically invoked with the following
780 parameter (in order):
781
782 · printer name
783
784 · share name
785
786 · port name
787
788 · driver name
789
790 · location
791
792 · Windows 9x driver location
793
794 All parameters are filled in from the PRINTER_INFO_2 structure sent
795 by the Windows NT/2000 client with one exception. The "Windows 9x
796 driver location" parameter is included for backwards compatibility
797 only. The remaining fields in the structure are generated from
798 answers to the APW questions.
799
800 Once the addprinter command has been executed, smbd will reparse
801 the smb.conf to determine if the share defined by the APW exists.
802 If the sharename is still invalid, then smbd will return an
803 ACCESS_DENIED error to the client.
804
805 The addprinter command program can output a single line of text,
806 which Samba will set as the port the new printer is connected to.
807 If this line isn't output, Samba won't reload its printer shares.
808
809 Default: addprinter command =
810
811 Example: addprinter command = /usr/bin/addprinter
812
813 add share command (G)
814
815 Samba 2.2.0 introduced the ability to dynamically add and delete
816 shares via the Windows NT 4.0 Server Manager. The add share command
817 is used to define an external program or script which will add a
818 new service definition to smb.conf.
819
820 In order to successfully execute the add share command, smbd
821 requires that the administrator connects using a root account (i.e.
822 uid == 0) or has the SeDiskOperatorPrivilege. Scripts defined in
823 the add share command parameter are executed as root.
824
825 When executed, smbd will automatically invoke the add share command
826 with five parameters.
827
828 · configFile - the location of the global smb.conf file.
829
830 · shareName - the name of the new share.
831
832 · pathName - path to an **existing** directory on disk.
833
834 · comment - comment string to associate with the new
835 share.
836
837 · max connections Number of maximum simultaneous
838 connections to this share.
839
840 This parameter is only used to add file shares. To add printer
841 shares, see the addprinter command.
842
843 Default: add share command =
844
845 Example: add share command = /usr/local/bin/addshare
846
847 add user script (G)
848
849 This is the full pathname to a script that will be run AS ROOT by
850 smbd(8) under special circumstances described below.
851
852 Normally, a Samba server requires that UNIX users are created for
853 all users accessing files on this server. For sites that use
854 Windows NT account databases as their primary user database
855 creating these users and keeping the user list in sync with the
856 Windows NT PDC is an onerous task. This option allows smbd to
857 create the required UNIX users ON DEMAND when a user accesses the
858 Samba server.
859
860 When the Windows user attempts to access the Samba server, at login
861 (session setup in the SMB protocol) time, smbd(8) contacts the
862 password server and attempts to authenticate the given user with
863 the given password. If the authentication succeeds then smbd
864 attempts to find a UNIX user in the UNIX password database to map
865 the Windows user into. If this lookup fails, and add user script is
866 set then smbd will call the specified script AS ROOT, expanding any
867 %u argument to be the user name to create.
868
869 If this script successfully creates the user then smbd will
870 continue on as though the UNIX user already existed. In this way,
871 UNIX users are dynamically created to match existing Windows NT
872 accounts.
873
874 See also security, password server, delete user script.
875
876 Default: add user script =
877
878 Example: add user script = /usr/local/samba/bin/add_user %u
879
880 add user to group script (G)
881
882 Full path to the script that will be called when a user is added to
883 a group using the Windows NT domain administration tools. It will
884 be run by smbd(8) AS ROOT. Any %g will be replaced with the group
885 name and any %u will be replaced with the user name.
886
887 Note that the adduser command used in the example below does not
888 support the used syntax on all systems.
889
890 Default: add user to group script =
891
892 Example: add user to group script = /usr/sbin/adduser %u %g
893
894 administrative share (S)
895
896 If this parameter is set to yes for a share, then the share will be
897 an administrative share. The Administrative Shares are the default
898 network shares created by all Windows NT-based operating systems.
899 These are shares like C$, D$ or ADMIN$. The type of these shares is
900 STYPE_DISKTREE_HIDDEN.
901
902 See the section below on security for more information about this
903 option.
904
905 Default: administrative share = no
906
907 admin users (S)
908
909 This is a list of users who will be granted administrative
910 privileges on the share. This means that they will do all file
911 operations as the super-user (root).
912
913 You should use this option very carefully, as any user in this list
914 will be able to do anything they like on the share, irrespective of
915 file permissions.
916
917 Default: admin users =
918
919 Example: admin users = jason
920
921 afs share (S)
922
923 This parameter controls whether special AFS features are enabled
924 for this share. If enabled, it assumes that the directory exported
925 via the path parameter is a local AFS import. The special AFS
926 features include the attempt to hand-craft an AFS token if you
927 enabled --with-fake-kaserver in configure.
928
929 Default: afs share = no
930
931 afs token lifetime (G)
932
933 This parameter controls the lifetime of tokens that the AFS
934 fake-kaserver claims. In reality these never expire but this
935 lifetime controls when the afs client will forget the token.
936
937 Set this parameter to 0 to get NEVERDATE.
938
939 Default: afs token lifetime = 604800
940
941 afs username map (G)
942
943 If you are using the fake kaserver AFS feature, you might want to
944 hand-craft the usernames you are creating tokens for. For example
945 this is necessary if you have users from several domain in your AFS
946 Protection Database. One possible scheme to code users as
947 DOMAIN+User as it is done by winbind with the + as a separator.
948
949 The mapped user name must contain the cell name to log into, so
950 without setting this parameter there will be no token.
951
952 Default: afs username map =
953
954 Example: afs username map = %u@afs.samba.org
955
956 aio max threads (G)
957
958 The integer parameter specifies the maximum number of threads each
959 smbd process will create when doing parallel asynchronous IO calls.
960 If the number of outstanding calls is greater than this number the
961 requests will not be refused but go onto a queue and will be
962 scheduled in turn as outstanding requests complete.
963
964 Related command: aio read size
965
966 Related command: aio write size
967
968 Default: aio max threads = 100
969
970 aio read size (S)
971
972 If this integer parameter is set to a non-zero value, Samba will
973 read from files asynchronously when the request size is bigger than
974 this value. Note that it happens only for non-chained and
975 non-chaining reads and when not using write cache.
976
977 The only reasonable values for this parameter are 0 (no async I/O)
978 and 1 (always do async I/O).
979
980 Related command: write cache size
981
982 Related command: aio write size
983
984 Default: aio read size = 1
985
986 Example: aio read size = 0 # Always do reads synchronously
987
988 aio write behind (S)
989
990 If Samba has been built with asynchronous I/O support, Samba will
991 not wait until write requests are finished before returning the
992 result to the client for files listed in this parameter. Instead,
993 Samba will immediately return that the write request has been
994 finished successfully, no matter if the operation will succeed or
995 not. This might speed up clients without aio support, but is really
996 dangerous, because data could be lost and files could be damaged.
997
998 The syntax is identical to the veto files parameter.
999
1000 Default: aio write behind =
1001
1002 Example: aio write behind = /*.tmp/
1003
1004 aio write size (S)
1005
1006 If this integer parameter is set to a non-zero value, Samba will
1007 write to files asynchronously when the request size is bigger than
1008 this value. Note that it happens only for non-chained and
1009 non-chaining reads and when not using write cache.
1010
1011 The only reasonable values for this parameter are 0 (no async I/O)
1012 and 1 (always do async I/O).
1013
1014 Compared to aio read size this parameter has a smaller effect, most
1015 writes should end up in the file system cache. Writes that require
1016 space allocation might benefit most from going asynchronous.
1017
1018 Related command: write cache size
1019
1020 Related command: aio read size
1021
1022 Default: aio write size = 1
1023
1024 Example: aio write size = 0 # Always do writes synchronously
1025
1026 algorithmic rid base (G)
1027
1028 This determines how Samba will use its algorithmic mapping from
1029 uids/gid to the RIDs needed to construct NT Security Identifiers.
1030
1031 Setting this option to a larger value could be useful to sites
1032 transitioning from WinNT and Win2k, as existing user and group rids
1033 would otherwise clash with system users etc.
1034
1035 All UIDs and GIDs must be able to be resolved into SIDs for the
1036 correct operation of ACLs on the server. As such the algorithmic
1037 mapping can't be 'turned off', but pushing it 'out of the way'
1038 should resolve the issues. Users and groups can then be assigned
1039 'low' RIDs in arbitrary-rid supporting backends.
1040
1041 Default: algorithmic rid base = 1000
1042
1043 Example: algorithmic rid base = 100000
1044
1045 allocation roundup size (S)
1046
1047 This parameter allows an administrator to tune the allocation size
1048 reported to Windows clients. This is only useful for old SMB1
1049 clients because modern SMB dialects eliminated that bottleneck and
1050 have better performance by default. Using this parameter may cause
1051 difficulties for some applications, e.g. MS Visual Studio. If the
1052 MS Visual Studio compiler starts to crash with an internal error,
1053 set this parameter to zero for this share. Settings this parameter
1054 to a large value can also cause small files to allocate more space
1055 on the disk than needed.
1056
1057 This parameter is deprecated and will be removed in one of the next
1058 Samba releases.
1059
1060 The integer parameter specifies the roundup size in bytes.
1061
1062 Default: allocation roundup size = 0
1063
1064 Example: allocation roundup size = 1048576 # (to set it to the
1065 former default of 1 MiB)
1066
1067 allow dcerpc auth level connect (G)
1068
1069 This option controls whether DCERPC services are allowed to be used
1070 with DCERPC_AUTH_LEVEL_CONNECT, which provides authentication, but
1071 no per message integrity nor privacy protection.
1072
1073 Some interfaces like samr, lsarpc and netlogon have a hard-coded
1074 default of no and epmapper, mgmt and rpcecho have a hard-coded
1075 default of yes.
1076
1077 The behavior can be overwritten per interface name (e.g. lsarpc,
1078 netlogon, samr, srvsvc, winreg, wkssvc ...) by using 'allow dcerpc
1079 auth level connect:interface = yes' as option.
1080
1081 This option yields precedence to the implementation specific
1082 restrictions. E.g. the drsuapi and backupkey protocols require
1083 DCERPC_AUTH_LEVEL_PRIVACY. The dnsserver protocol requires
1084 DCERPC_AUTH_LEVEL_INTEGRITY.
1085
1086 Default: allow dcerpc auth level connect = no
1087
1088 Example: allow dcerpc auth level connect = yes
1089
1090 allow dns updates (G)
1091
1092 This option determines what kind of updates to the DNS are allowed.
1093
1094 DNS updates can either be disallowed completely by setting it to
1095 disabled, enabled over secure connections only by setting it to
1096 secure only or allowed in all cases by setting it to nonsecure.
1097
1098 Default: allow dns updates = secure only
1099
1100 Example: allow dns updates = disabled
1101
1102 allow insecure wide links (G)
1103
1104 In normal operation the option wide links which allows the server
1105 to follow symlinks outside of a share path is automatically
1106 disabled when unix extensions are enabled on a Samba server. This
1107 is done for security purposes to prevent UNIX clients creating
1108 symlinks to areas of the server file system that the administrator
1109 does not wish to export.
1110
1111 Setting allow insecure wide links to true disables the link between
1112 these two parameters, removing this protection and allowing a site
1113 to configure the server to follow symlinks (by setting wide links
1114 to "true") even when unix extensions is turned on.
1115
1116 It is not recommended to enable this option unless you fully
1117 understand the implications of allowing the server to follow
1118 symbolic links created by UNIX clients. For most normal Samba
1119 configurations this would be considered a security hole and setting
1120 this parameter is not recommended.
1121
1122 This option was added at the request of sites who had deliberately
1123 set Samba up in this way and needed to continue supporting this
1124 functionality without having to patch the Samba code.
1125
1126 Default: allow insecure wide links = no
1127
1128 allow nt4 crypto (G)
1129
1130 This option controls whether the netlogon server (currently only in
1131 'active directory domain controller' mode), will reject clients
1132 which does not support NETLOGON_NEG_STRONG_KEYS nor
1133 NETLOGON_NEG_SUPPORTS_AES.
1134
1135 This option was added with Samba 4.2.0. It may lock out clients
1136 which worked fine with Samba versions up to 4.1.x. as the effective
1137 default was "yes" there, while it is "no" now.
1138
1139 If you have clients without RequireStrongKey = 1 in the registry,
1140 you may need to set "allow nt4 crypto = yes", until you have fixed
1141 all clients.
1142
1143 "allow nt4 crypto = yes" allows weak crypto to be negotiated, maybe
1144 via downgrade attacks.
1145
1146 This option yields precedence to the 'reject md5 clients' option.
1147
1148 Default: allow nt4 crypto = no
1149
1150 allow trusted domains (G)
1151
1152 This option only takes effect when the security option is set to
1153 server, domain or ads. If it is set to no, then attempts to connect
1154 to a resource from a domain or workgroup other than the one which
1155 smbd is running in will fail, even if that domain is trusted by the
1156 remote server doing the authentication.
1157
1158 This is useful if you only want your Samba server to serve
1159 resources to users in the domain it is a member of. As an example,
1160 suppose that there are two domains DOMA and DOMB. DOMB is trusted
1161 by DOMA, which contains the Samba server. Under normal
1162 circumstances, a user with an account in DOMB can then access the
1163 resources of a UNIX account with the same account name on the Samba
1164 server even if they do not have an account in DOMA. This can make
1165 implementing a security boundary difficult.
1166
1167 Default: allow trusted domains = yes
1168
1169 allow unsafe cluster upgrade (G)
1170
1171 If set to no (the default), smbd checks at startup if other smbd
1172 versions are running in the cluster and refuses to start if so.
1173 This is done to protect data corruption in internal data structures
1174 due to incompatible Samba versions running concurrently in the same
1175 cluster. Setting this parameter to yes disables this safety check.
1176
1177 Default: allow unsafe cluster upgrade = no
1178
1179 apply group policies (G)
1180
1181 This option controls whether winbind will execute the gpupdate
1182 command defined in gpo update command on the Group Policy update
1183 interval. The Group Policy update interval is defined as every 90
1184 minutes, plus a random offset between 0 and 30 minutes. This
1185 applies Group Policy Machine polices to the client or KDC and
1186 machine policies to a server.
1187
1188 Default: apply group policies = no
1189
1190 Example: apply group policies = yes
1191
1192 async smb echo handler (G)
1193
1194 This parameter specifies whether Samba should fork the async smb
1195 echo handler. It can be beneficial if your file system can block
1196 syscalls for a very long time. In some circumstances, it prolongs
1197 the timeout that Windows uses to determine whether a connection is
1198 dead. This parameter is only for SMB1. For SMB2 and above TCP
1199 keepalives can be used instead.
1200
1201 Default: async smb echo handler = no
1202
1203 auth event notification (G)
1204
1205 When enabled, this option causes Samba (acting as an Active
1206 Directory Domain Controller) to stream authentication events across
1207 the internal message bus. Scripts built using Samba's python
1208 bindings can listen to these events by registering as the service
1209 auth_event.
1210
1211 This should be considered a developer option (it assists in the
1212 Samba testsuite) rather than a facility for external auditing, as
1213 message delivery is not guaranteed (a feature that the testsuite
1214 works around). Additionally Samba must be compiled with the jansson
1215 support for this option to be effective.
1216
1217 The authentication events are also logged via the normal logging
1218 methods when the log level is set appropriately.
1219
1220 Default: auth event notification = no
1221
1222 preload
1223
1224 This parameter is a synonym for auto services.
1225
1226 auto services (G)
1227
1228 This is a list of services that you want to be automatically added
1229 to the browse lists. This is most useful for homes and printers
1230 services that would otherwise not be visible.
1231
1232 Note that if you just want all printers in your printcap file
1233 loaded then the load printers option is easier.
1234
1235 Default: auto services =
1236
1237 Example: auto services = fred lp colorlp
1238
1239 available (S)
1240
1241 This parameter lets you "turn off" a service. If available = no,
1242 then ALL attempts to connect to the service will fail. Such
1243 failures are logged.
1244
1245 Default: available = yes
1246
1247 bind dns directory
1248
1249 This parameter is a synonym for binddns dir.
1250
1251 binddns dir (G)
1252
1253 This parameters defines the directory samba will use to store the
1254 configuration files for bind, such as named.conf. NOTE: The bind
1255 dns directory needs to be on the same mount point as the private
1256 directory!
1257
1258 Default: binddns dir = /var/lib/samba/bind-dns
1259
1260 bind interfaces only (G)
1261
1262 This global parameter allows the Samba admin to limit what
1263 interfaces on a machine will serve SMB requests. It affects file
1264 service smbd(8) and name service nmbd(8) in a slightly different
1265 ways.
1266
1267 For name service it causes nmbd to bind to ports 137 and 138 on the
1268 interfaces listed in the interfaces parameter. nmbd also binds to
1269 the "all addresses" interface (0.0.0.0) on ports 137 and 138 for
1270 the purposes of reading broadcast messages. If this option is not
1271 set then nmbd will service name requests on all of these sockets.
1272 If bind interfaces only is set then nmbd will check the source
1273 address of any packets coming in on the broadcast sockets and
1274 discard any that don't match the broadcast addresses of the
1275 interfaces in the interfaces parameter list. As unicast packets are
1276 received on the other sockets it allows nmbd to refuse to serve
1277 names to machines that send packets that arrive through any
1278 interfaces not listed in the interfaces list. IP Source address
1279 spoofing does defeat this simple check, however, so it must not be
1280 used seriously as a security feature for nmbd.
1281
1282 For file service it causes smbd(8) to bind only to the interface
1283 list given in the interfaces parameter. This restricts the networks
1284 that smbd will serve, to packets coming in on those interfaces.
1285 Note that you should not use this parameter for machines that are
1286 serving PPP or other intermittent or non-broadcast network
1287 interfaces as it will not cope with non-permanent interfaces.
1288
1289 If bind interfaces only is set and the network address 127.0.0.1 is
1290 not added to the interfaces parameter list smbpasswd(8) may not
1291 work as expected due to the reasons covered below.
1292
1293 To change a users SMB password, the smbpasswd by default connects
1294 to the localhost - 127.0.0.1 address as an SMB client to issue the
1295 password change request. If bind interfaces only is set then unless
1296 the network address 127.0.0.1 is added to the interfaces parameter
1297 list then smbpasswd will fail to connect in it's default mode.
1298 smbpasswd can be forced to use the primary IP interface of the
1299 local host by using its smbpasswd(8) -r remote machine parameter,
1300 with remote machine set to the IP name of the primary interface of
1301 the local host.
1302
1303 Default: bind interfaces only = no
1304
1305 blocking locks (S)
1306
1307 This parameter controls the behavior of smbd(8) when given a
1308 request by a client to obtain a byte range lock on a region of an
1309 open file, and the request has a time limit associated with it.
1310
1311 If this parameter is set and the lock range requested cannot be
1312 immediately satisfied, samba will internally queue the lock
1313 request, and periodically attempt to obtain the lock until the
1314 timeout period expires.
1315
1316 If this parameter is set to no, then samba will behave as previous
1317 versions of Samba would and will fail the lock request immediately
1318 if the lock range cannot be obtained.
1319
1320 Default: blocking locks = yes
1321
1322 block size (S)
1323
1324 This parameter controls the behavior of smbd(8) when reporting disk
1325 free sizes. By default, this reports a disk block size of 1024
1326 bytes.
1327
1328 Changing this parameter may have some effect on the efficiency of
1329 client writes, this is not yet confirmed. This parameter was added
1330 to allow advanced administrators to change it (usually to a higher
1331 value) and test the effect it has on client write performance
1332 without re-compiling the code. As this is an experimental option it
1333 may be removed in a future release.
1334
1335 Changing this option does not change the disk free reporting size,
1336 just the block size unit reported to the client.
1337
1338 Default: block size = 1024
1339
1340 Example: block size = 4096
1341
1342 browsable
1343
1344 This parameter is a synonym for browseable.
1345
1346 browseable (S)
1347
1348 This controls whether this share is seen in the list of available
1349 shares in a net view and in the browse list.
1350
1351 Default: browseable = yes
1352
1353 browse list (G)
1354
1355 This controls whether smbd(8) will serve a browse list to a client
1356 doing a NetServerEnum call. Normally set to yes. You should never
1357 need to change this.
1358
1359 Default: browse list = yes
1360
1361 cache directory (G)
1362
1363 Usually, most of the TDB files are stored in the lock directory.
1364 Since Samba 3.4.0, it is possible to differentiate between TDB
1365 files with persistent data and TDB files with non-persistent data
1366 using the state directory and the cache directory options.
1367
1368 This option specifies the directory for storing TDB files
1369 containing non-persistent data that will be kept across service
1370 restarts. The directory should be placed on persistent storage, but
1371 the data can be safely deleted by an administrator.
1372
1373 Default: cache directory = /var/lib/samba
1374
1375 Example: cache directory = /var/run/samba/locks/cache
1376
1377 casesignames
1378
1379 This parameter is a synonym for case sensitive.
1380
1381 case sensitive (S)
1382
1383 See the discussion in the section name mangling.
1384
1385 Default: case sensitive = auto
1386
1387 change notify (G)
1388
1389 This parameter specifies whether Samba should reply to a client's
1390 file change notify requests.
1391
1392 You should never need to change this parameter
1393
1394 Default: change notify = yes
1395
1396 change share command (G)
1397
1398 Samba 2.2.0 introduced the ability to dynamically add and delete
1399 shares via the Windows NT 4.0 Server Manager. The change share
1400 command is used to define an external program or script which will
1401 modify an existing service definition in smb.conf.
1402
1403 In order to successfully execute the change share command, smbd
1404 requires that the administrator connects using a root account (i.e.
1405 uid == 0) or has the SeDiskOperatorPrivilege. Scripts defined in
1406 the change share command parameter are executed as root.
1407
1408 When executed, smbd will automatically invoke the change share
1409 command with six parameters.
1410
1411 · configFile - the location of the global smb.conf file.
1412
1413 · shareName - the name of the new share.
1414
1415 · pathName - path to an **existing** directory on disk.
1416
1417 · comment - comment string to associate with the new
1418 share.
1419
1420 · max connections Number of maximum simultaneous
1421 connections to this share.
1422
1423 · CSC policy - client side caching policy in string form.
1424 Valid values are: manual, documents, programs, disable.
1425
1426 This parameter is only used to modify existing file share
1427 definitions. To modify printer shares, use the "Printers..." folder
1428 as seen when browsing the Samba host.
1429
1430 Default: change share command =
1431
1432 Example: change share command = /usr/local/bin/changeshare
1433
1434 check parent directory delete on close (S)
1435
1436 A Windows SMB server prevents the client from creating files in a
1437 directory that has the delete-on-close flag set. By default Samba
1438 doesn't perform this check as this check is a quite expensive
1439 operation in Samba.
1440
1441 Default: check parent directory delete on close = no
1442
1443 check password script (G)
1444
1445 The name of a program that can be used to check password
1446 complexity. The password is sent to the program's standard input.
1447
1448 The program must return 0 on a good password, or any other value if
1449 the password is bad. In case the password is considered weak (the
1450 program does not return 0) the user will be notified and the
1451 password change will fail.
1452
1453 In Samba AD, this script will be run AS ROOT by samba(8) without
1454 any substitutions.
1455
1456 Note that starting with Samba 4.11 the following environment
1457 variables are exported to the script:
1458
1459 · SAMBA_CPS_ACCOUNT_NAME is always present and contains
1460 the sAMAccountName of user, the is the same as the %u
1461 substitutions in the none AD DC case.
1462
1463 · SAMBA_CPS_USER_PRINCIPAL_NAME is optional in the AD DC
1464 case if the userPrincipalName is present.
1465
1466 · SAMBA_CPS_FULL_NAME is optional if the displayName is
1467 present.
1468
1469 Note: In the example directory is a sample program called
1470 crackcheck that uses cracklib to check the password quality.
1471
1472 Default: check password script = # Disabled
1473
1474 Example: check password script = /usr/local/sbin/crackcheck
1475
1476 cldap port (G)
1477
1478 This option controls the port used by the CLDAP protocol.
1479
1480 Default: cldap port = 389
1481
1482 Example: cldap port = 3389
1483
1484 client ipc max protocol (G)
1485
1486 The value of the parameter (a string) is the highest protocol level
1487 that will be supported for IPC$ connections as DCERPC transport.
1488
1489 Normally this option should not be set as the automatic negotiation
1490 phase in the SMB protocol takes care of choosing the appropriate
1491 protocol.
1492
1493 The value default refers to the latest supported protocol,
1494 currently SMB3_11.
1495
1496 See client max protocol for a full list of available protocols. The
1497 values CORE, COREPLUS, LANMAN1, LANMAN2 are silently upgraded to
1498 NT1.
1499
1500 Default: client ipc max protocol = default
1501
1502 Example: client ipc max protocol = SMB2_10
1503
1504 client ipc min protocol (G)
1505
1506 This setting controls the minimum protocol version that the will be
1507 attempted to use for IPC$ connections as DCERPC transport.
1508
1509 Normally this option should not be set as the automatic negotiation
1510 phase in the SMB protocol takes care of choosing the appropriate
1511 protocol.
1512
1513 The value default refers to the higher value of NT1 and the
1514 effective value of client min protocol.
1515
1516 See client max protocol for a full list of available protocols. The
1517 values CORE, COREPLUS, LANMAN1, LANMAN2 are silently upgraded to
1518 NT1.
1519
1520 Default: client ipc min protocol = default
1521
1522 Example: client ipc min protocol = SMB3_11
1523
1524 client ipc signing (G)
1525
1526 This controls whether the client is allowed or required to use SMB
1527 signing for IPC$ connections as DCERPC transport. Possible values
1528 are auto, mandatory and disabled.
1529
1530 When set to mandatory or default, SMB signing is required.
1531
1532 When set to auto, SMB signing is offered, but not enforced and if
1533 set to disabled, SMB signing is not offered either.
1534
1535 Connections from winbindd to Active Directory Domain Controllers
1536 always enforce signing.
1537
1538 Default: client ipc signing = default
1539
1540 client lanman auth (G)
1541
1542 This parameter determines whether or not smbclient(8) and other
1543 samba client tools will attempt to authenticate itself to servers
1544 using the weaker LANMAN password hash. If disabled, only server
1545 which support NT password hashes (e.g. Windows NT/2000, Samba,
1546 etc... but not Windows 95/98) will be able to be connected from the
1547 Samba client.
1548
1549 The LANMAN encrypted response is easily broken, due to its
1550 case-insensitive nature, and the choice of algorithm. Clients
1551 without Windows 95/98 servers are advised to disable this option.
1552
1553 Disabling this option will also disable the client plaintext auth
1554 option.
1555
1556 Likewise, if the client ntlmv2 auth parameter is enabled, then only
1557 NTLMv2 logins will be attempted.
1558
1559 Default: client lanman auth = no
1560
1561 client ldap sasl wrapping (G)
1562
1563 The client ldap sasl wrapping defines whether ldap traffic will be
1564 signed or signed and encrypted (sealed). Possible values are plain,
1565 sign and seal.
1566
1567 The values sign and seal are only available if Samba has been
1568 compiled against a modern OpenLDAP version (2.3.x or higher).
1569
1570 This option is needed in the case of Domain Controllers enforcing
1571 the usage of signed LDAP connections (e.g. Windows 2000 SP3 or
1572 higher). LDAP sign and seal can be controlled with the registry key
1573 "HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\
1574 NTDS\Parameters\LDAPServerIntegrity" on the Windows server side.
1575
1576 Depending on the used KRB5 library (MIT and older Heimdal versions)
1577 it is possible that the message "integrity only" is not supported.
1578 In this case, sign is just an alias for seal.
1579
1580 The default value is sign. That implies synchronizing the time with
1581 the KDC in the case of using Kerberos.
1582
1583 Default: client ldap sasl wrapping = sign
1584
1585 client max protocol (G)
1586
1587 The value of the parameter (a string) is the highest protocol level
1588 that will be supported by the client.
1589
1590 Possible values are :
1591
1592 · CORE: Earliest version. No concept of user names.
1593
1594 · COREPLUS: Slight improvements on CORE for efficiency.
1595
1596 · LANMAN1: First modern version of the protocol. Long
1597 filename support.
1598
1599 · LANMAN2: Updates to Lanman1 protocol.
1600
1601 · NT1: Current up to date version of the protocol. Used by
1602 Windows NT. Known as CIFS.
1603
1604 · SMB2: Re-implementation of the SMB protocol. Used by
1605 Windows Vista and later versions of Windows. SMB2 has
1606 sub protocols available.
1607
1608 · SMB2_02: The earliest SMB2 version.
1609
1610 · SMB2_10: Windows 7 SMB2 version.
1611
1612 · SMB2_22: Early Windows 8 SMB2 version.
1613
1614 · SMB2_24: Windows 8 beta SMB2 version.
1615
1616 By default SMB2 selects the SMB2_10 variant.
1617
1618 · SMB3: The same as SMB2. Used by Windows 8. SMB3 has sub
1619 protocols available.
1620
1621 · SMB3_00: Windows 8 SMB3 version. (mostly the
1622 same as SMB2_24)
1623
1624 · SMB3_02: Windows 8.1 SMB3 version.
1625
1626 · SMB3_10: early Windows 10 technical preview
1627 SMB3 version.
1628
1629 · SMB3_11: Windows 10 technical preview SMB3
1630 version (maybe final).
1631
1632 By default SMB3 selects the SMB3_11 variant.
1633
1634 Normally this option should not be set as the automatic negotiation
1635 phase in the SMB protocol takes care of choosing the appropriate
1636 protocol.
1637
1638 The value default refers to SMB3_11.
1639
1640 IPC$ connections for DCERPC e.g. in winbindd, are handled by the
1641 client ipc max protocol option.
1642
1643 Default: client max protocol = default
1644
1645 Example: client max protocol = LANMAN1
1646
1647 client min protocol (G)
1648
1649 This setting controls the minimum protocol version that the client
1650 will attempt to use.
1651
1652 Normally this option should not be set as the automatic negotiation
1653 phase in the SMB protocol takes care of choosing the appropriate
1654 protocol unless you connect to a legacy SMB1-only server.
1655
1656 See Related command: client max protocol for a full list of
1657 available protocols.
1658
1659 IPC$ connections for DCERPC e.g. in winbindd, are handled by the
1660 client ipc min protocol option.
1661
1662 Note that most command line tools support --option='client min
1663 protocol=NT1', so it may not be required to enable SMB1 protocols
1664 globally in smb.conf.
1665
1666 Default: client min protocol = SMB2_02
1667
1668 Example: client min protocol = NT1
1669
1670 client NTLMv2 auth (G)
1671
1672 This parameter determines whether or not smbclient(8) will attempt
1673 to authenticate itself to servers using the NTLMv2 encrypted
1674 password response.
1675
1676 If enabled, only an NTLMv2 and LMv2 response (both much more secure
1677 than earlier versions) will be sent. Older servers (including NT4 <
1678 SP4, Win9x and Samba 2.2) are not compatible with NTLMv2 when not
1679 in an NTLMv2 supporting domain
1680
1681 Similarly, if enabled, NTLMv1, client lanman auth and client
1682 plaintext auth authentication will be disabled. This also disables
1683 share-level authentication.
1684
1685 If disabled, an NTLM response (and possibly a LANMAN response) will
1686 be sent by the client, depending on the value of client lanman
1687 auth.
1688
1689 Note that Windows Vista and later versions already use NTLMv2 by
1690 default, and some sites (particularly those following 'best
1691 practice' security polices) only allow NTLMv2 responses, and not
1692 the weaker LM or NTLM.
1693
1694 When client use spnego is also set to yes extended security
1695 (SPNEGO) is required in order to use NTLMv2 only within NTLMSSP.
1696 This behavior was introduced with the patches for CVE-2016-2111.
1697
1698 Default: client NTLMv2 auth = yes
1699
1700 client plaintext auth (G)
1701
1702 Specifies whether a client should send a plaintext password if the
1703 server does not support encrypted passwords.
1704
1705 Default: client plaintext auth = no
1706
1707 client schannel (G)
1708
1709 This option is deprecated with Samba 4.8 and will be removed in
1710 future. At the same time the default changed to yes, which will be
1711 the hardcoded behavior in future.
1712
1713 This controls whether the client offers or even demands the use of
1714 the netlogon schannel. client schannel = no does not offer the
1715 schannel, client schannel = auto offers the schannel but does not
1716 enforce it, and client schannel = yes denies access if the server
1717 is not able to speak netlogon schannel.
1718
1719 Note that for active directory domains this is hardcoded to client
1720 schannel = yes.
1721
1722 This option yields precedence to the require strong key option.
1723
1724 Default: client schannel = yes
1725
1726 Example: client schannel = auto
1727
1728 client signing (G)
1729
1730 This controls whether the client is allowed or required to use SMB
1731 signing. Possible values are auto, mandatory and disabled.
1732
1733 When set to auto or default, SMB signing is offered, but not
1734 enforced.
1735
1736 When set to mandatory, SMB signing is required and if set to
1737 disabled, SMB signing is not offered either.
1738
1739 IPC$ connections for DCERPC e.g. in winbindd, are handled by the
1740 client ipc signing option.
1741
1742 Default: client signing = default
1743
1744 client use spnego principal (G)
1745
1746 This parameter determines whether or not smbclient(8) and other
1747 samba components acting as a client will attempt to use the
1748 server-supplied principal sometimes given in the SPNEGO exchange.
1749
1750 If enabled, Samba can attempt to use Kerberos to contact servers
1751 known only by IP address. Kerberos relies on names, so ordinarily
1752 cannot function in this situation.
1753
1754 This is a VERY BAD IDEA for security reasons, and so this parameter
1755 SHOULD NOT BE USED. It will be removed in a future version of
1756 Samba.
1757
1758 If disabled, Samba will use the name used to look up the server
1759 when asking the KDC for a ticket. This avoids situations where a
1760 server may impersonate another, soliciting authentication as one
1761 principal while being known on the network as another.
1762
1763 Note that Windows XP SP2 and later versions already follow this
1764 behaviour, and Windows Vista and later servers no longer supply
1765 this 'rfc4178 hint' principal on the server side.
1766
1767 This parameter is deprecated in Samba 4.2.1 and will be removed
1768 (along with the functionality) in a later release of Samba.
1769
1770 Default: client use spnego principal = no
1771
1772 client use spnego (G)
1773
1774 This variable controls whether Samba clients will try to use Simple
1775 and Protected NEGOciation (as specified by rfc2478) with supporting
1776 servers (including WindowsXP, Windows2000 and Samba 3.0) to agree
1777 upon an authentication mechanism. This enables Kerberos
1778 authentication in particular.
1779
1780 When client NTLMv2 auth is also set to yes extended security
1781 (SPNEGO) is required in order to use NTLMv2 only within NTLMSSP.
1782 This behavior was introduced with the patches for CVE-2016-2111.
1783
1784 Default: client use spnego = yes
1785
1786 cluster addresses (G)
1787
1788 With this parameter you can add additional addresses that nmbd will
1789 register with a WINS server. Similarly, these addresses will be
1790 registered by default when net ads dns register is called with
1791 clustering = yes configured.
1792
1793 Default: cluster addresses =
1794
1795 Example: cluster addresses = 10.0.0.1 10.0.0.2 10.0.0.3
1796
1797 clustering (G)
1798
1799 This parameter specifies whether Samba should contact ctdb for
1800 accessing its tdb files and use ctdb as a backend for its messaging
1801 backend.
1802
1803 Set this parameter to yes only if you have a cluster setup with
1804 ctdb running.
1805
1806 Default: clustering = no
1807
1808 comment (S)
1809
1810 This is a text field that is seen next to a share when a client
1811 does a queries the server, either via the network neighborhood or
1812 via net view to list what shares are available.
1813
1814 If you want to set the string that is displayed next to the machine
1815 name then see the server string parameter.
1816
1817 Default: comment = # No comment
1818
1819 Example: comment = Fred's Files
1820
1821 config backend (G)
1822
1823 This controls the backend for storing the configuration. Possible
1824 values are file (the default) and registry. When config backend =
1825 registry is encountered while loading smb.conf, the configuration
1826 read so far is dropped and the global options are read from
1827 registry instead. So this triggers a registry only configuration.
1828 Share definitions are not read immediately but instead registry
1829 shares is set to yes.
1830
1831 Note: This option can not be set inside the registry configuration
1832 itself.
1833
1834 Default: config backend = file
1835
1836 Example: config backend = registry
1837
1838 config file (G)
1839
1840 This allows you to override the config file to use, instead of the
1841 default (usually smb.conf). There is a chicken and egg problem here
1842 as this option is set in the config file!
1843
1844 For this reason, if the name of the config file has changed when
1845 the parameters are loaded then it will reload them from the new
1846 config file.
1847
1848 This option takes the usual substitutions, which can be very
1849 useful.
1850
1851 If the config file doesn't exist then it won't be loaded (allowing
1852 you to special case the config files of just a few clients).
1853
1854 No default
1855
1856 Example: config file = /usr/local/samba/lib/smb.conf.%m
1857
1858 copy (S)
1859
1860 This parameter allows you to "clone" service entries. The specified
1861 service is simply duplicated under the current service's name. Any
1862 parameters specified in the current section will override those in
1863 the section being copied.
1864
1865 This feature lets you set up a 'template' service and create
1866 similar services easily. Note that the service being copied must
1867 occur earlier in the configuration file than the service doing the
1868 copying.
1869
1870 Default: copy =
1871
1872 Example: copy = otherservice
1873
1874 create krb5 conf (G)
1875
1876 Setting this parameter to no prevents winbind from creating custom
1877 krb5.conf files. Winbind normally does this because the krb5
1878 libraries are not AD-site-aware and thus would pick any domain
1879 controller out of potentially very many. Winbind is site-aware and
1880 makes the krb5 libraries use a local DC by creating its own
1881 krb5.conf files.
1882
1883 Preventing winbind from doing this might become necessary if you
1884 have to add special options into your system-krb5.conf that winbind
1885 does not see.
1886
1887 Default: create krb5 conf = yes
1888
1889 create mode
1890
1891 This parameter is a synonym for create mask.
1892
1893 create mask (S)
1894
1895 When a file is created, the necessary permissions are calculated
1896 according to the mapping from DOS modes to UNIX permissions, and
1897 the resulting UNIX mode is then bit-wise 'AND'ed with this
1898 parameter. This parameter may be thought of as a bit-wise MASK for
1899 the UNIX modes of a file. Any bit not set here will be removed from
1900 the modes set on a file when it is created.
1901
1902 The default value of this parameter removes the group and other
1903 write and execute bits from the UNIX modes.
1904
1905 Following this Samba will bit-wise 'OR' the UNIX mode created from
1906 this parameter with the value of the force create mode parameter
1907 which is set to 000 by default.
1908
1909 This parameter does not affect directory masks. See the parameter
1910 directory mask for details.
1911
1912 Default: create mask = 0744
1913
1914 Example: create mask = 0775
1915
1916 csc policy (S)
1917
1918 This stands for client-side caching policy, and specifies how
1919 clients capable of offline caching will cache the files in the
1920 share. The valid values are: manual, documents, programs, disable.
1921
1922 These values correspond to those used on Windows servers.
1923
1924 For example, shares containing roaming profiles can have offline
1925 caching disabled using csc policy = disable.
1926
1927 Default: csc policy = manual
1928
1929 Example: csc policy = programs
1930
1931 ctdbd socket (G)
1932
1933 If you set clustering=yes, you need to tell Samba where ctdbd
1934 listens on its unix domain socket. The default path as of ctdb 1.0
1935 is /tmp/ctdb.socket which you have to explicitly set for Samba in
1936 smb.conf.
1937
1938 Default: ctdbd socket =
1939
1940 Example: ctdbd socket = /tmp/ctdb.socket
1941
1942 ctdb locktime warn threshold (G)
1943
1944 In a cluster environment using Samba and ctdb it is critical that
1945 locks on central ctdb-hosted databases like locking.tdb are not
1946 held for long. With the current Samba architecture it happens that
1947 Samba takes a lock and while holding that lock makes file system
1948 calls into the shared cluster file system. This option makes Samba
1949 warn if it detects that it has held locks for the specified number
1950 of milliseconds. If this happens, smbd will emit a debug level 0
1951 message into its logs and potentially into syslog. The most likely
1952 reason for such a log message is that an operation of the cluster
1953 file system Samba exports is taking longer than expected. The
1954 messages are meant as a debugging aid for potential cluster
1955 problems.
1956
1957 The default value of 0 disables this logging.
1958
1959 Default: ctdb locktime warn threshold = 0
1960
1961 ctdb timeout (G)
1962
1963 This parameter specifies a timeout in milliseconds for the
1964 connection between Samba and ctdb. It is only valid if you have
1965 compiled Samba with clustering and if you have set clustering=yes.
1966
1967 When something in the cluster blocks, it can happen that we wait
1968 indefinitely long for ctdb, just adding to the blocking condition.
1969 In a well-running cluster this should never happen, but there are
1970 too many components in a cluster that might have hickups. Choosing
1971 the right balance for this value is very tricky, because on a busy
1972 cluster long service times to transfer something across the cluster
1973 might be valid. Setting it too short will degrade the service your
1974 cluster presents, setting it too long might make the cluster itself
1975 not recover from something severely broken for too long.
1976
1977 Be aware that if you set this parameter, this needs to be in the
1978 file smb.conf, it is not really helpful to put this into a registry
1979 configuration (typical on a cluster), because to access the
1980 registry contact to ctdb is required.
1981
1982 Setting ctdb timeout to n makes any process waiting longer than n
1983 milliseconds for a reply by the cluster panic. Setting it to 0 (the
1984 default) makes Samba block forever, which is the highly recommended
1985 default.
1986
1987 Default: ctdb timeout = 0
1988
1989 cups connection timeout (G)
1990
1991 This parameter is only applicable if printing is set to cups.
1992
1993 If set, this option specifies the number of seconds that smbd will
1994 wait whilst trying to contact to the CUPS server. The connection
1995 will fail if it takes longer than this number of seconds.
1996
1997 Default: cups connection timeout = 30
1998
1999 Example: cups connection timeout = 60
2000
2001 cups encrypt (G)
2002
2003 This parameter is only applicable if printing is set to cups and if
2004 you use CUPS newer than 1.0.x.It is used to define whether or not
2005 Samba should use encryption when talking to the CUPS server.
2006 Possible values are auto, yes and no
2007
2008 When set to auto we will try to do a TLS handshake on each CUPS
2009 connection setup. If that fails, we will fall back to unencrypted
2010 operation.
2011
2012 Default: cups encrypt = no
2013
2014 cups options (S)
2015
2016 This parameter is only applicable if printing is set to cups. Its
2017 value is a free form string of options passed directly to the cups
2018 library.
2019
2020 You can pass any generic print option known to CUPS (as listed in
2021 the CUPS "Software Users' Manual"). You can also pass any printer
2022 specific option (as listed in "lpoptions -d printername -l") valid
2023 for the target queue. Multiple parameters should be space-delimited
2024 name/value pairs according to the PAPI text option ABNF
2025 specification. Collection values ("name={a=... b=... c=...}") are
2026 stored with the curley brackets intact.
2027
2028 You should set this parameter to raw if your CUPS server error_log
2029 file contains messages such as "Unsupported format
2030 'application/octet-stream'" when printing from a Windows client
2031 through Samba. It is no longer necessary to enable system wide raw
2032 printing in /etc/cups/mime.{convs,types}.
2033
2034 Default: cups options = ""
2035
2036 Example: cups options = "raw media=a4"
2037
2038 cups server (G)
2039
2040 This parameter is only applicable if printing is set to cups.
2041
2042 If set, this option overrides the ServerName option in the CUPS
2043 client.conf. This is necessary if you have virtual samba servers
2044 that connect to different CUPS daemons.
2045
2046 Optionally, a port can be specified by separating the server name
2047 and port number with a colon. If no port was specified, the default
2048 port for IPP (631) will be used.
2049
2050 Default: cups server = ""
2051
2052 Example: cups server = mycupsserver
2053
2054 Example: cups server = mycupsserver:1631
2055
2056 dcerpc endpoint servers (G)
2057
2058 Specifies which DCE/RPC endpoint servers should be run.
2059
2060 Default: dcerpc endpoint servers = epmapper, wkssvc, rpcecho, samr,
2061 netlogon, lsarpc, drsuapi, dssetup, unixinfo, browser, eventlog6,
2062 backupkey, dnsserver
2063
2064 Example: dcerpc endpoint servers = rpcecho
2065
2066 deadtime (G)
2067
2068 The value of the parameter (a decimal integer) represents the
2069 number of minutes of inactivity before a connection is considered
2070 dead, and it is disconnected. The deadtime only takes effect if the
2071 number of open files is zero.
2072
2073 This is useful to stop a server's resources being exhausted by a
2074 large number of inactive connections.
2075
2076 Most clients have an auto-reconnect feature when a connection is
2077 broken so in most cases this parameter should be transparent to
2078 users.
2079
2080 Using this parameter with a timeout of a few minutes is recommended
2081 for most systems.
2082
2083 A deadtime of zero indicates that no auto-disconnection should be
2084 performed.
2085
2086 Default: deadtime = 10080
2087
2088 Example: deadtime = 15
2089
2090 debug class (G)
2091
2092 With this boolean parameter enabled, the debug class (DBGC_CLASS)
2093 will be displayed in the debug header.
2094
2095 For more information about currently available debug classes, see
2096 section about log level.
2097
2098 Default: debug class = no
2099
2100 debug encryption (G)
2101
2102 This option will make the smbd server and client code using libsmb
2103 (smbclient, smbget, smbspool, ...) dump the Session Id, the
2104 decrypted Session Key, the Signing Key, the Application Key, the
2105 Encryption Key and the Decryption Key every time an SMB3+ session
2106 is established. This information will be printed in logs at level
2107 0.
2108
2109 Warning: access to these values enables the decryption of any
2110 encrypted traffic on the dumped sessions. This option should only
2111 be enabled for debugging purposes.
2112
2113 Default: debug encryption = no
2114
2115 debug hires timestamp (G)
2116
2117 Sometimes the timestamps in the log messages are needed with a
2118 resolution of higher that seconds, this boolean parameter adds
2119 microsecond resolution to the timestamp message header when turned
2120 on.
2121
2122 Note that the parameter debug timestamp must be on for this to have
2123 an effect.
2124
2125 Default: debug hires timestamp = yes
2126
2127 debug pid (G)
2128
2129 When using only one log file for more then one forked
2130 smbd(8)-process there may be hard to follow which process outputs
2131 which message. This boolean parameter is adds the process-id to the
2132 timestamp message headers in the logfile when turned on.
2133
2134 Note that the parameter debug timestamp must be on for this to have
2135 an effect.
2136
2137 Default: debug pid = no
2138
2139 debug prefix timestamp (G)
2140
2141 With this option enabled, the timestamp message header is prefixed
2142 to the debug message without the filename and function information
2143 that is included with the debug timestamp parameter. This gives
2144 timestamps to the messages without adding an additional line.
2145
2146 Note that this parameter overrides the debug timestamp parameter.
2147
2148 Default: debug prefix timestamp = no
2149
2150 debug uid (G)
2151
2152 Samba is sometimes run as root and sometime run as the connected
2153 user, this boolean parameter inserts the current euid, egid, uid
2154 and gid to the timestamp message headers in the log file if turned
2155 on.
2156
2157 Note that the parameter debug timestamp must be on for this to have
2158 an effect.
2159
2160 Default: debug uid = no
2161
2162 dedicated keytab file (G)
2163
2164 Specifies the absolute path to the kerberos keytab file when
2165 kerberos method is set to "dedicated keytab".
2166
2167 Default: dedicated keytab file =
2168
2169 Example: dedicated keytab file = /usr/local/etc/krb5.keytab
2170
2171 default case (S)
2172
2173 See the section on name mangling. Also note the short preserve case
2174 parameter.
2175
2176 Default: default case = lower
2177
2178 default devmode (S)
2179
2180 This parameter is only applicable to printable services. When smbd
2181 is serving Printer Drivers to Windows NT/2k/XP clients, each
2182 printer on the Samba server has a Device Mode which defines things
2183 such as paper size and orientation and duplex settings. The device
2184 mode can only correctly be generated by the printer driver itself
2185 (which can only be executed on a Win32 platform). Because smbd is
2186 unable to execute the driver code to generate the device mode, the
2187 default behavior is to set this field to NULL.
2188
2189 Most problems with serving printer drivers to Windows NT/2k/XP
2190 clients can be traced to a problem with the generated device mode.
2191 Certain drivers will do things such as crashing the client's
2192 Explorer.exe with a NULL devmode. However, other printer drivers
2193 can cause the client's spooler service (spoolsv.exe) to die if the
2194 devmode was not created by the driver itself (i.e. smbd generates a
2195 default devmode).
2196
2197 This parameter should be used with care and tested with the printer
2198 driver in question. It is better to leave the device mode to NULL
2199 and let the Windows client set the correct values. Because drivers
2200 do not do this all the time, setting default devmode = yes will
2201 instruct smbd to generate a default one.
2202
2203 For more information on Windows NT/2k printing and Device Modes,
2204 see the MSDN documentation.
2205
2206 Default: default devmode = yes
2207
2208 default
2209
2210 This parameter is a synonym for default service.
2211
2212 default service (G)
2213
2214 This parameter specifies the name of a service which will be
2215 connected to if the service actually requested cannot be found.
2216 Note that the square brackets are NOT given in the parameter value
2217 (see example below).
2218
2219 There is no default value for this parameter. If this parameter is
2220 not given, attempting to connect to a nonexistent service results
2221 in an error.
2222
2223 Typically the default service would be a guest ok, read-only
2224 service.
2225
2226 Also note that the apparent service name will be changed to equal
2227 that of the requested service, this is very useful as it allows you
2228 to use macros like %S to make a wildcard service.
2229
2230 Note also that any "_" characters in the name of the service used
2231 in the default service will get mapped to a "/". This allows for
2232 interesting things.
2233
2234 Default: default service =
2235
2236 Example: default service = pub
2237
2238 defer sharing violations (G)
2239
2240 Windows allows specifying how a file will be shared with other
2241 processes when it is opened. Sharing violations occur when a file
2242 is opened by a different process using options that violate the
2243 share settings specified by other processes. This parameter causes
2244 smbd to act as a Windows server does, and defer returning a
2245 "sharing violation" error message for up to one second, allowing
2246 the client to close the file causing the violation in the meantime.
2247
2248 UNIX by default does not have this behaviour.
2249
2250 There should be no reason to turn off this parameter, as it is
2251 designed to enable Samba to more correctly emulate Windows.
2252
2253 Default: defer sharing violations = yes
2254
2255 delete group script (G)
2256
2257 This is the full pathname to a script that will be run AS ROOT by
2258 smbd(8) when a group is requested to be deleted. It will expand any
2259 %g to the group name passed. This script is only useful for
2260 installations using the Windows NT domain administration tools.
2261
2262 Default: delete group script =
2263
2264 deleteprinter command (G)
2265
2266 With the introduction of MS-RPC based printer support for Windows
2267 NT/2000 clients in Samba 2.2, it is now possible to delete a
2268 printer at run time by issuing the DeletePrinter() RPC call.
2269
2270 For a Samba host this means that the printer must be physically
2271 deleted from the underlying printing system. The deleteprinter
2272 command defines a script to be run which will perform the necessary
2273 operations for removing the printer from the print system and from
2274 smb.conf.
2275
2276 The deleteprinter command is automatically called with only one
2277 parameter: printer name.
2278
2279 Once the deleteprinter command has been executed, smbd will reparse
2280 the smb.conf to check that the associated printer no longer exists.
2281 If the sharename is still valid, then smbd will return an
2282 ACCESS_DENIED error to the client.
2283
2284 Default: deleteprinter command =
2285
2286 Example: deleteprinter command = /usr/bin/removeprinter
2287
2288 delete readonly (S)
2289
2290 This parameter allows readonly files to be deleted. This is not
2291 normal DOS semantics, but is allowed by UNIX.
2292
2293 This option may be useful for running applications such as rcs,
2294 where UNIX file ownership prevents changing file permissions, and
2295 DOS semantics prevent deletion of a read only file.
2296
2297 Default: delete readonly = no
2298
2299 delete share command (G)
2300
2301 Samba 2.2.0 introduced the ability to dynamically add and delete
2302 shares via the Windows NT 4.0 Server Manager. The delete share
2303 command is used to define an external program or script which will
2304 remove an existing service definition from smb.conf.
2305
2306 In order to successfully execute the delete share command, smbd
2307 requires that the administrator connects using a root account (i.e.
2308 uid == 0) or has the SeDiskOperatorPrivilege. Scripts defined in
2309 the delete share command parameter are executed as root.
2310
2311 When executed, smbd will automatically invoke the delete share
2312 command with two parameters.
2313
2314 · configFile - the location of the global smb.conf file.
2315
2316 · shareName - the name of the existing service.
2317
2318 This parameter is only used to remove file shares. To delete
2319 printer shares, see the deleteprinter command.
2320
2321 Default: delete share command =
2322
2323 Example: delete share command = /usr/local/bin/delshare
2324
2325 delete user from group script (G)
2326
2327 Full path to the script that will be called when a user is removed
2328 from a group using the Windows NT domain administration tools. It
2329 will be run by smbd(8) AS ROOT. Any %g will be replaced with the
2330 group name and any %u will be replaced with the user name.
2331
2332 Default: delete user from group script =
2333
2334 Example: delete user from group script = /usr/sbin/deluser %u %g
2335
2336 delete user script (G)
2337
2338 This is the full pathname to a script that will be run by smbd(8)
2339 when managing users with remote RPC (NT) tools.
2340
2341 This script is called when a remote client removes a user from the
2342 server, normally using 'User Manager for Domains' or rpcclient.
2343
2344 This script should delete the given UNIX username.
2345
2346 Default: delete user script =
2347
2348 Example: delete user script = /usr/local/samba/bin/del_user %u
2349
2350 delete veto files (S)
2351
2352 This option is used when Samba is attempting to delete a directory
2353 that contains one or more vetoed directories (see the veto files
2354 option). If this option is set to no (the default) then if a vetoed
2355 directory contains any non-vetoed files or directories then the
2356 directory delete will fail. This is usually what you want.
2357
2358 If this option is set to yes, then Samba will attempt to
2359 recursively delete any files and directories within the vetoed
2360 directory. This can be useful for integration with file serving
2361 systems such as NetAtalk which create meta-files within directories
2362 you might normally veto DOS/Windows users from seeing (e.g.
2363 .AppleDouble)
2364
2365 Setting delete veto files = yes allows these directories to be
2366 transparently deleted when the parent directory is deleted (so long
2367 as the user has permissions to do so).
2368
2369 Default: delete veto files = no
2370
2371 dfree cache time (S)
2372
2373 The dfree cache time should only be used on systems where a problem
2374 occurs with the internal disk space calculations. This has been
2375 known to happen with Ultrix, but may occur with other operating
2376 systems. The symptom that was seen was an error of "Abort Retry
2377 Ignore" at the end of each directory listing.
2378
2379 This is a new parameter introduced in Samba version 3.0.21. It
2380 specifies in seconds the time that smbd will cache the output of a
2381 disk free query. If set to zero (the default) no caching is done.
2382 This allows a heavily loaded server to prevent rapid spawning of
2383 dfree command scripts increasing the load.
2384
2385 By default this parameter is zero, meaning no caching will be done.
2386
2387 No default
2388
2389 Example: dfree cache time = 60
2390
2391 dfree command (S)
2392
2393 The dfree command setting should only be used on systems where a
2394 problem occurs with the internal disk space calculations. This has
2395 been known to happen with Ultrix, but may occur with other
2396 operating systems. The symptom that was seen was an error of "Abort
2397 Retry Ignore" at the end of each directory listing.
2398
2399 This setting allows the replacement of the internal routines to
2400 calculate the total disk space and amount available with an
2401 external routine. The example below gives a possible script that
2402 might fulfill this function.
2403
2404 In Samba version 3.0.21 this parameter has been changed to be a
2405 per-share parameter, and in addition the parameter dfree cache time
2406 was added to allow the output of this script to be cached for
2407 systems under heavy load.
2408
2409 The external program will be passed a single parameter indicating a
2410 directory in the filesystem being queried. This will typically
2411 consist of the string ./. The script should return two integers in
2412 ASCII. The first should be the total disk space in blocks, and the
2413 second should be the number of available blocks. An optional third
2414 return value can give the block size in bytes. The default
2415 blocksize is 1024 bytes.
2416
2417 Note: Your script should NOT be setuid or setgid and should be
2418 owned by (and writeable only by) root!
2419
2420 Where the script dfree (which must be made executable) could be:
2421
2422
2423 #!/bin/sh
2424 df "$1" | tail -1 | awk '{print $(NF-4),$(NF-2)}'
2425
2426 or perhaps (on Sys V based systems):
2427
2428
2429 #!/bin/sh
2430 /usr/bin/df -k "$1" | tail -1 | awk '{print $3" "$5}'
2431
2432 Note that you may have to replace the command names with full path
2433 names on some systems. Also note the arguments passed into the
2434 script should be quoted inside the script in case they contain
2435 special characters such as spaces or newlines.
2436
2437 By default internal routines for determining the disk capacity and
2438 remaining space will be used.
2439
2440 No default
2441
2442 Example: dfree command = /usr/local/samba/bin/dfree
2443
2444 dgram port (G)
2445
2446 Specifies which ports the server should listen on for NetBIOS
2447 datagram traffic.
2448
2449 Default: dgram port = 138
2450
2451 directory mode
2452
2453 This parameter is a synonym for directory mask.
2454
2455 directory mask (S)
2456
2457 This parameter is the octal modes which are used when converting
2458 DOS modes to UNIX modes when creating UNIX directories.
2459
2460 When a directory is created, the necessary permissions are
2461 calculated according to the mapping from DOS modes to UNIX
2462 permissions, and the resulting UNIX mode is then bit-wise 'AND'ed
2463 with this parameter. This parameter may be thought of as a bit-wise
2464 MASK for the UNIX modes of a directory. Any bit not set here will
2465 be removed from the modes set on a directory when it is created.
2466
2467 The default value of this parameter removes the 'group' and 'other'
2468 write bits from the UNIX mode, allowing only the user who owns the
2469 directory to modify it.
2470
2471 Following this Samba will bit-wise 'OR' the UNIX mode created from
2472 this parameter with the value of the force directory mode
2473 parameter. This parameter is set to 000 by default (i.e. no extra
2474 mode bits are added).
2475
2476 Default: directory mask = 0755
2477
2478 Example: directory mask = 0775
2479
2480 directory name cache size (S)
2481
2482 This parameter specifies the size of the directory name cache for
2483 SMB1 connections. It is not used for SMB2. It will be needed to
2484 turn this off for *BSD systems.
2485
2486 Default: directory name cache size = 100
2487
2488 directory security mask (S)
2489
2490 This parameter has been removed for Samba 4.0.0.
2491
2492 No default
2493
2494 disable netbios (G)
2495
2496 Enabling this parameter will disable netbios support in Samba.
2497 Netbios is the only available form of browsing in all windows
2498 versions except for 2000 and XP.
2499
2500 Note
2501 Clients that only support netbios won't be able to see your
2502 samba server when netbios support is disabled.
2503 Default: disable netbios = no
2504
2505 disable spoolss (G)
2506
2507 Enabling this parameter will disable Samba's support for the
2508 SPOOLSS set of MS-RPC's and will yield identical behavior as Samba
2509 2.0.x. Windows NT/2000 clients will downgrade to using Lanman style
2510 printing commands. Windows 9x/ME will be unaffected by the
2511 parameter. However, this will also disable the ability to upload
2512 printer drivers to a Samba server via the Windows NT Add Printer
2513 Wizard or by using the NT printer properties dialog window. It will
2514 also disable the capability of Windows NT/2000 clients to download
2515 print drivers from the Samba host upon demand. Be very careful
2516 about enabling this parameter.
2517
2518 Default: disable spoolss = no
2519
2520 dmapi support (S)
2521
2522 This parameter specifies whether Samba should use DMAPI to
2523 determine whether a file is offline or not. This would typically be
2524 used in conjunction with a hierarchical storage system that
2525 automatically migrates files to tape.
2526
2527 Note that Samba infers the status of a file by examining the events
2528 that a DMAPI application has registered interest in. This heuristic
2529 is satisfactory for a number of hierarchical storage systems, but
2530 there may be system for which it will fail. In this case, Samba may
2531 erroneously report files to be offline.
2532
2533 This parameter is only available if a supported DMAPI
2534 implementation was found at compilation time. It will only be used
2535 if DMAPI is found to enabled on the system at run time.
2536
2537 Default: dmapi support = no
2538
2539 dns forwarder (G)
2540
2541 This option specifies the list of DNS servers that DNS requests
2542 will be forwarded to if they can not be handled by Samba itself.
2543
2544 The DNS forwarder is only used if the internal DNS server in Samba
2545 is used.
2546
2547 Default: dns forwarder =
2548
2549 Example: dns forwarder = 192.168.0.1 192.168.0.2
2550
2551 dns proxy (G)
2552
2553 Specifies that nmbd(8) when acting as a WINS server and finding
2554 that a NetBIOS name has not been registered, should treat the
2555 NetBIOS name word-for-word as a DNS name and do a lookup with the
2556 DNS server for that name on behalf of the name-querying client.
2557
2558 Note that the maximum length for a NetBIOS name is 15 characters,
2559 so the DNS name (or DNS alias) can likewise only be 15 characters,
2560 maximum.
2561
2562 nmbd spawns a second copy of itself to do the DNS name lookup
2563 requests, as doing a name lookup is a blocking action.
2564
2565 Default: dns proxy = yes
2566
2567 dns update command (G)
2568
2569 This option sets the command that is called when there are DNS
2570 updates. It should update the local machines DNS names using
2571 TSIG-GSS.
2572
2573 Default: dns update command =
2574 /builddir/build/BUILD/samba-4.12.2/source4/scripting/bin/samba_dnsupdate
2575
2576 Example: dns update command = /usr/local/sbin/dnsupdate
2577
2578 dns zone scavenging (G)
2579
2580 When enabled (the default is disabled) unused dynamic dns records
2581 are periodically removed.
2582
2583 Warning
2584 This option should not be enabled for installations created
2585 with versions of samba before 4.9. Doing this will result in
2586 the loss of static DNS entries. This is due to a bug in
2587 previous versions of samba (BUG 12451) which marked dynamic DNS
2588 records as static and static records as dynamic.
2589
2590 Note
2591 If one record for a DNS name is static (non-aging) then no
2592 other record for that DNS name will be scavenged.
2593 Default: dns zone scavenging = no
2594
2595 domain logons (G)
2596
2597 If set to yes, the Samba server will provide the netlogon service
2598 for Windows 9X network logons for the workgroup it is in. This will
2599 also cause the Samba server to act as a domain controller for NT4
2600 style domain services. For more details on setting up this feature
2601 see the Domain Control chapter of the Samba HOWTO Collection.
2602
2603 Default: domain logons = no
2604
2605 domain master (G)
2606
2607 Tell smbd(8) to enable WAN-wide browse list collation. Setting this
2608 option causes nmbd to claim a special domain specific NetBIOS name
2609 that identifies it as a domain master browser for its given
2610 workgroup. Local master browsers in the same workgroup on
2611 broadcast-isolated subnets will give this nmbd their local browse
2612 lists, and then ask smbd(8) for a complete copy of the browse list
2613 for the whole wide area network. Browser clients will then contact
2614 their local master browser, and will receive the domain-wide browse
2615 list, instead of just the list for their broadcast-isolated subnet.
2616
2617 Note that Windows NT Primary Domain Controllers expect to be able
2618 to claim this workgroup specific special NetBIOS name that
2619 identifies them as domain master browsers for that workgroup by
2620 default (i.e. there is no way to prevent a Windows NT PDC from
2621 attempting to do this). This means that if this parameter is set
2622 and nmbd claims the special name for a workgroup before a Windows
2623 NT PDC is able to do so then cross subnet browsing will behave
2624 strangely and may fail.
2625
2626 If domain logons = yes, then the default behavior is to enable the
2627 domain master parameter. If domain logons is not enabled (the
2628 default setting), then neither will domain master be enabled by
2629 default.
2630
2631 When domain logons = Yes the default setting for this parameter is
2632 Yes, with the result that Samba will be a PDC. If domain master =
2633 No, Samba will function as a BDC. In general, this parameter should
2634 be set to 'No' only on a BDC.
2635
2636 Default: domain master = auto
2637
2638 dont descend (S)
2639
2640 There are certain directories on some systems (e.g., the /proc tree
2641 under Linux) that are either not of interest to clients or are
2642 infinitely deep (recursive). This parameter allows you to specify a
2643 comma-delimited list of directories that the server should always
2644 show as empty.
2645
2646 Note that Samba can be very fussy about the exact format of the
2647 "dont descend" entries. For example you may need ./proc instead of
2648 just /proc. Experimentation is the best policy :-)
2649
2650 Default: dont descend =
2651
2652 Example: dont descend = /proc,/dev
2653
2654 dos charset (G)
2655
2656 DOS SMB clients assume the server has the same charset as they do.
2657 This option specifies which charset Samba should talk to DOS
2658 clients.
2659
2660 The default depends on which charsets you have installed. Samba
2661 tries to use charset 850 but falls back to ASCII in case it is not
2662 available. Run testparm(1) to check the default on your system.
2663
2664 No default
2665
2666 dos filemode (S)
2667
2668 The default behavior in Samba is to provide UNIX-like behavior
2669 where only the owner of a file/directory is able to change the
2670 permissions on it. However, this behavior is often confusing to
2671 DOS/Windows users. Enabling this parameter allows a user who has
2672 write access to the file (by whatever means, including an ACL
2673 permission) to modify the permissions (including ACL) on it. Note
2674 that a user belonging to the group owning the file will not be
2675 allowed to change permissions if the group is only granted read
2676 access. Ownership of the file/directory may also be changed. Note
2677 that using the VFS modules acl_xattr or acl_tdb which store native
2678 Windows as meta-data will automatically turn this option on for any
2679 share for which they are loaded, as they require this option to
2680 emulate Windows ACLs correctly.
2681
2682 Default: dos filemode = no
2683
2684 dos filetime resolution (S)
2685
2686 Under the DOS and Windows FAT filesystem, the finest granularity on
2687 time resolution is two seconds. Setting this parameter for a share
2688 causes Samba to round the reported time down to the nearest two
2689 second boundary when a query call that requires one second
2690 resolution is made to smbd(8).
2691
2692 This option is mainly used as a compatibility option for Visual C++
2693 when used against Samba shares. If oplocks are enabled on a share,
2694 Visual C++ uses two different time reading calls to check if a file
2695 has changed since it was last read. One of these calls uses a
2696 one-second granularity, the other uses a two second granularity. As
2697 the two second call rounds any odd second down, then if the file
2698 has a timestamp of an odd number of seconds then the two timestamps
2699 will not match and Visual C++ will keep reporting the file has
2700 changed. Setting this option causes the two timestamps to match,
2701 and Visual C++ is happy.
2702
2703 Default: dos filetime resolution = no
2704
2705 dos filetimes (S)
2706
2707 Under DOS and Windows, if a user can write to a file they can
2708 change the timestamp on it. Under POSIX semantics, only the owner
2709 of the file or root may change the timestamp. By default, Samba
2710 emulates the DOS semantics and allows one to change the timestamp
2711 on a file if the user smbd is acting on behalf has write
2712 permissions. Due to changes in Microsoft Office 2000 and beyond,
2713 the default for this parameter has been changed from "no" to "yes"
2714 in Samba 3.0.14 and above. Microsoft Excel will display dialog box
2715 warnings about the file being changed by another user if this
2716 parameter is not set to "yes" and files are being shared between
2717 users.
2718
2719 Default: dos filetimes = yes
2720
2721 dsdb event notification (G)
2722
2723 When enabled, this option causes Samba (acting as an Active
2724 Directory Domain Controller) to stream Samba database events across
2725 the internal message bus. Scripts built using Samba's python
2726 bindings can listen to these events by registering as the service
2727 dsdb_event.
2728
2729 This should be considered a developer option (it assists in the
2730 Samba testsuite) rather than a facility for external auditing, as
2731 message delivery is not guaranteed (a feature that the testsuite
2732 works around).
2733
2734 The Samba database events are also logged via the normal logging
2735 methods when the log level is set appropriately.
2736
2737 Default: dsdb event notification = no
2738
2739 dsdb group change notification (G)
2740
2741 When enabled, this option causes Samba (acting as an Active
2742 Directory Domain Controller) to stream group membership change
2743 events across the internal message bus. Scripts built using Samba's
2744 python bindings can listen to these events by registering as the
2745 service dsdb_group_event.
2746
2747 This should be considered a developer option (it assists in the
2748 Samba testsuite) rather than a facility for external auditing, as
2749 message delivery is not guaranteed (a feature that the testsuite
2750 works around).
2751
2752 The group events are also logged via the normal logging methods
2753 when the log level is set appropriately.
2754
2755 Default: dsdb group change notification = no
2756
2757 dsdb password event notification (G)
2758
2759 When enabled, this option causes Samba (acting as an Active
2760 Directory Domain Controller) to stream password change and reset
2761 events across the internal message bus. Scripts built using Samba's
2762 python bindings can listen to these events by registering as the
2763 service password_event.
2764
2765 This should be considered a developer option (it assists in the
2766 Samba testsuite) rather than a facility for external auditing, as
2767 message delivery is not guaranteed (a feature that the testsuite
2768 works around).
2769
2770 The password events are also logged via the normal logging methods
2771 when the log level is set appropriately.
2772
2773 Default: dsdb password event notification = no
2774
2775 durable handles (S)
2776
2777 This boolean parameter controls whether Samba can grant SMB2
2778 durable file handles on a share.
2779
2780 Note that durable handles are only enabled if kernel oplocks = no,
2781 kernel share modes = no, and posix locking = no, i.e. if the share
2782 is configured for CIFS/SMB2 only access, not supporting
2783 interoperability features with local UNIX processes or NFS
2784 operations.
2785
2786 Also note that, for the time being, durability is not granted for a
2787 handle that has the delete on close flag set.
2788
2789 Default: durable handles = yes
2790
2791 ea support (S)
2792
2793 This boolean parameter controls whether smbd(8) will allow clients
2794 to attempt to access extended attributes on a share. In order to
2795 enable this parameter on a setup with default VFS modules:
2796
2797 · Samba must have been built with extended attributes
2798 support.
2799
2800 · The underlying filesystem exposed by the share must
2801 support extended attributes (e.g. the getfattr(1) /
2802 setfattr(1) utilities must work).
2803
2804 Note that the SMB protocol allows setting attributes whose value is
2805 64K bytes long, and that on NTFS, the maximum storage space for
2806 extended attributes per file is 64K. On most UNIX systems (Solaris
2807 and ZFS file system being the exception), the limits are much lower
2808 - typically 4K. Worse, the same 4K space is often used to store
2809 system metadata such as POSIX ACLs, or Samba's NT ACLs. Giving
2810 clients access to this tight space via extended attribute support
2811 could consume all of it by unsuspecting client applications, which
2812 would prevent changing system metadata due to lack of space. The
2813 default has changed to yes in Samba release 4.9.0 and above to
2814 allow better Windows fileserver compatibility in a default install.
2815
2816 Default: ea support = yes
2817
2818 elasticsearch:address (S)
2819
2820 Specifies the name of the Elasticsearch server to use for Spotlight
2821 queries when using the Elasticsearch backend.
2822
2823 Default: elasticsearch:address = localhost
2824
2825 Example: elasticsearch:address = needle.haystack.samba.org
2826
2827 elasticsearch:index (S)
2828
2829 Specifies the name of the Elasticsearch index to use for Spotlight
2830 queries when using the Elasticsearch backend. The default value of
2831 "_all" is a special Elasticsearch value that performs the search
2832 operation on all indices.
2833
2834 Default: elasticsearch:index = _all
2835
2836 Example: elasticsearch:index = spotlight
2837
2838 elasticsearch:mappings (G)
2839
2840 Path to a file specifying metadata attribute mappings in JSON
2841 format. Use by the Elasticsearch backend of the Spotlight RPC
2842 service.
2843
2844 Default: elasticsearch:mappings =
2845 /usr/share/samba/elasticsearch_mappings.json
2846
2847 Example: elasticsearch:mappings = /usr/share/foo/mymappings.json
2848
2849 elasticsearch:max results (S)
2850
2851 Path to a file specifying metadata attribute mappings in JSON
2852 format. Used by the Elasticsearch backend of the Spotlight RPC
2853 service. A value of 0 means no limit.
2854
2855 Default: elasticsearch:max results = 100
2856
2857 Example: elasticsearch:max results = 10
2858
2859 elasticsearch:port (S)
2860
2861 Specifies the TCP port of the Elasticsearch server to use for
2862 Spotlight queries when using the Elasticsearch backend.
2863
2864 Default: elasticsearch:port = 9200
2865
2866 Example: elasticsearch:port = 9201
2867
2868 elasticsearch:use tls (S)
2869
2870 Specifies whether to use HTTPS when talking to the Elasticsearch
2871 server used for Spotlight queries when using the Elasticsearch
2872 backend.
2873
2874 Default: elasticsearch:use tls = no
2875
2876 Example: elasticsearch:use tls = yes
2877
2878 enable asu support (G)
2879
2880 Hosts running the "Advanced Server for Unix (ASU)" product require
2881 some special accommodations such as creating a builtin [ADMIN$]
2882 share that only supports IPC connections. The has been the default
2883 behavior in smbd for many years. However, certain Microsoft
2884 applications such as the Print Migrator tool require that the
2885 remote server support an [ADMIN$] file share. Disabling this
2886 parameter allows for creating an [ADMIN$] file share in smb.conf.
2887
2888 Default: enable asu support = no
2889
2890 enable core files (G)
2891
2892 This parameter specifies whether core dumps should be written on
2893 internal exits. Normally set to yes. You should never need to
2894 change this.
2895
2896 Default: enable core files = yes
2897
2898 Example: enable core files = no
2899
2900 enable privileges (G)
2901
2902 This deprecated parameter controls whether or not smbd will honor
2903 privileges assigned to specific SIDs via either net rpc rights or
2904 one of the Windows user and group manager tools. This parameter is
2905 enabled by default. It can be disabled to prevent members of the
2906 Domain Admins group from being able to assign privileges to users
2907 or groups which can then result in certain smbd operations running
2908 as root that would normally run under the context of the connected
2909 user.
2910
2911 An example of how privileges can be used is to assign the right to
2912 join clients to a Samba controlled domain without providing root
2913 access to the server via smbd.
2914
2915 Please read the extended description provided in the Samba HOWTO
2916 documentation.
2917
2918 Default: enable privileges = yes
2919
2920 enable spoolss (G)
2921
2922 Inverted synonym for disable spoolss.
2923
2924 Default: enable spoolss = yes
2925
2926 encrypt passwords (G)
2927
2928 This parameter has been deprecated since Samba 4.11 and support for
2929 plaintext (as distinct from NTLM, NTLMv2 or Kerberos
2930 authentication) will be removed in a future Samba release.
2931
2932 That is, in the future, the current default of encrypt passwords =
2933 yes will be the enforced behaviour.
2934
2935 This boolean controls whether encrypted passwords will be
2936 negotiated with the client. Note that Windows NT 4.0 SP3 and above
2937 and also Windows 98 will by default expect encrypted passwords
2938 unless a registry entry is changed. To use encrypted passwords in
2939 Samba see the chapter "User Database" in the Samba HOWTO
2940 Collection.
2941
2942 MS Windows clients that expect Microsoft encrypted passwords and
2943 that do not have plain text password support enabled will be able
2944 to connect only to a Samba server that has encrypted password
2945 support enabled and for which the user accounts have a valid
2946 encrypted password. Refer to the smbpasswd command man page for
2947 information regarding the creation of encrypted passwords for user
2948 accounts.
2949
2950 The use of plain text passwords is NOT advised as support for this
2951 feature is no longer maintained in Microsoft Windows products. If
2952 you want to use plain text passwords you must set this parameter to
2953 no.
2954
2955 In order for encrypted passwords to work correctly smbd(8) must
2956 either have access to a local smbpasswd(5) file (see the
2957 smbpasswd(8) program for information on how to set up and maintain
2958 this file), or set the security = [domain|ads] parameter which
2959 causes smbd to authenticate against another server.
2960
2961 Default: encrypt passwords = yes
2962
2963 enhanced browsing (G)
2964
2965 This option enables a couple of enhancements to cross-subnet browse
2966 propagation that have been added in Samba but which are not
2967 standard in Microsoft implementations.
2968
2969 The first enhancement to browse propagation consists of a regular
2970 wildcard query to a Samba WINS server for all Domain Master
2971 Browsers, followed by a browse synchronization with each of the
2972 returned DMBs. The second enhancement consists of a regular
2973 randomised browse synchronization with all currently known DMBs.
2974
2975 You may wish to disable this option if you have a problem with
2976 empty workgroups not disappearing from browse lists. Due to the
2977 restrictions of the browse protocols, these enhancements can cause
2978 a empty workgroup to stay around forever which can be annoying.
2979
2980 In general you should leave this option enabled as it makes
2981 cross-subnet browse propagation much more reliable.
2982
2983 Default: enhanced browsing = yes
2984
2985 enumports command (G)
2986
2987 The concept of a "port" is fairly foreign to UNIX hosts. Under
2988 Windows NT/2000 print servers, a port is associated with a port
2989 monitor and generally takes the form of a local port (i.e. LPT1:,
2990 COM1:, FILE:) or a remote port (i.e. LPD Port Monitor, etc...). By
2991 default, Samba has only one port defined--"Samba Printer Port".
2992 Under Windows NT/2000, all printers must have a valid port name. If
2993 you wish to have a list of ports displayed (smbd does not use a
2994 port name for anything) other than the default "Samba Printer
2995 Port", you can define enumports command to point to a program which
2996 should generate a list of ports, one per line, to standard output.
2997 This listing will then be used in response to the level 1 and 2
2998 EnumPorts() RPC.
2999
3000 Default: enumports command =
3001
3002 Example: enumports command = /usr/bin/listports
3003
3004 eventlog list (G)
3005
3006 This option defines a list of log names that Samba will report to
3007 the Microsoft EventViewer utility. The listed eventlogs will be
3008 associated with tdb file on disk in the $(statedir)/eventlog.
3009
3010 The administrator must use an external process to parse the normal
3011 Unix logs such as /var/log/messages and write then entries to the
3012 eventlog tdb files. Refer to the eventlogadm(8) utility for how to
3013 write eventlog entries.
3014
3015 Default: eventlog list =
3016
3017 Example: eventlog list = Security Application Syslog Apache
3018
3019 fake directory create times (S)
3020
3021 NTFS and Windows VFAT file systems keep a create time for all files
3022 and directories. This is not the same as the ctime - status change
3023 time - that Unix keeps, so Samba by default reports the earliest of
3024 the various times Unix does keep. Setting this parameter for a
3025 share causes Samba to always report midnight 1-1-1980 as the create
3026 time for directories.
3027
3028 This option is mainly used as a compatibility option for Visual C++
3029 when used against Samba shares. Visual C++ generated makefiles have
3030 the object directory as a dependency for each object file, and a
3031 make rule to create the directory. Also, when NMAKE compares
3032 timestamps it uses the creation time when examining a directory.
3033 Thus the object directory will be created if it does not exist, but
3034 once it does exist it will always have an earlier timestamp than
3035 the object files it contains.
3036
3037 However, Unix time semantics mean that the create time reported by
3038 Samba will be updated whenever a file is created or deleted in the
3039 directory. NMAKE finds all object files in the object directory.
3040 The timestamp of the last one built is then compared to the
3041 timestamp of the object directory. If the directory's timestamp if
3042 newer, then all object files will be rebuilt. Enabling this option
3043 ensures directories always predate their contents and an NMAKE
3044 build will proceed as expected.
3045
3046 Default: fake directory create times = no
3047
3048 fake oplocks (S)
3049
3050 Oplocks are the way that SMB clients get permission from a server
3051 to locally cache file operations. If a server grants an oplock
3052 (opportunistic lock) then the client is free to assume that it is
3053 the only one accessing the file and it will aggressively cache file
3054 data. With some oplock types the client may even cache file
3055 open/close operations. This can give enormous performance benefits.
3056
3057 When you set fake oplocks = yes, smbd(8) will always grant oplock
3058 requests no matter how many clients are using the file.
3059
3060 It is generally much better to use the real oplocks support rather
3061 than this parameter.
3062
3063 If you enable this option on all read-only shares or shares that
3064 you know will only be accessed from one client at a time such as
3065 physically read-only media like CDROMs, you will see a big
3066 performance improvement on many operations. If you enable this
3067 option on shares where multiple clients may be accessing the files
3068 read-write at the same time you can get data corruption. Use this
3069 option carefully!
3070
3071 Default: fake oplocks = no
3072
3073 follow symlinks (S)
3074
3075 This parameter allows the Samba administrator to stop smbd(8) from
3076 following symbolic links in a particular share. Setting this
3077 parameter to no prevents any file or directory that is a symbolic
3078 link from being followed (the user will get an error). This option
3079 is very useful to stop users from adding a symbolic link to
3080 /etc/passwd in their home directory for instance. However it will
3081 slow filename lookups down slightly.
3082
3083 This option is enabled (i.e. smbd will follow symbolic links) by
3084 default.
3085
3086 Default: follow symlinks = yes
3087
3088 force create mode (S)
3089
3090 This parameter specifies a set of UNIX mode bit permissions that
3091 will always be set on a file created by Samba. This is done by
3092 bitwise 'OR'ing these bits onto the mode bits of a file that is
3093 being created. The default for this parameter is (in octal) 000.
3094 The modes in this parameter are bitwise 'OR'ed onto the file mode
3095 after the mask set in the create mask parameter is applied.
3096
3097 The example below would force all newly created files to have read
3098 and execute permissions set for 'group' and 'other' as well as the
3099 read/write/execute bits set for the 'user'.
3100
3101 Default: force create mode = 0000
3102
3103 Example: force create mode = 0755
3104
3105 force directory mode (S)
3106
3107 This parameter specifies a set of UNIX mode bit permissions that
3108 will always be set on a directory created by Samba. This is done by
3109 bitwise 'OR'ing these bits onto the mode bits of a directory that
3110 is being created. The default for this parameter is (in octal) 0000
3111 which will not add any extra permission bits to a created
3112 directory. This operation is done after the mode mask in the
3113 parameter directory mask is applied.
3114
3115 The example below would force all created directories to have read
3116 and execute permissions set for 'group' and 'other' as well as the
3117 read/write/execute bits set for the 'user'.
3118
3119 Default: force directory mode = 0000
3120
3121 Example: force directory mode = 0755
3122
3123 force directory security mode (S)
3124
3125 This parameter has been removed for Samba 4.0.0.
3126
3127 No default
3128
3129 group
3130
3131 This parameter is a synonym for force group.
3132
3133 force group (S)
3134
3135 This specifies a UNIX group name that will be assigned as the
3136 default primary group for all users connecting to this service.
3137 This is useful for sharing files by ensuring that all access to
3138 files on service will use the named group for their permissions
3139 checking. Thus, by assigning permissions for this group to the
3140 files and directories within this service the Samba administrator
3141 can restrict or allow sharing of these files.
3142
3143 In Samba 2.0.5 and above this parameter has extended functionality
3144 in the following way. If the group name listed here has a '+'
3145 character prepended to it then the current user accessing the share
3146 only has the primary group default assigned to this group if they
3147 are already assigned as a member of that group. This allows an
3148 administrator to decide that only users who are already in a
3149 particular group will create files with group ownership set to that
3150 group. This gives a finer granularity of ownership assignment. For
3151 example, the setting force group = +sys means that only users who
3152 are already in group sys will have their default primary group
3153 assigned to sys when accessing this Samba share. All other users
3154 will retain their ordinary primary group.
3155
3156 If the force user parameter is also set the group specified in
3157 force group will override the primary group set in force user.
3158
3159 Default: force group =
3160
3161 Example: force group = agroup
3162
3163 force printername (S)
3164
3165 When printing from Windows NT (or later), each printer in smb.conf
3166 has two associated names which can be used by the client. The first
3167 is the sharename (or shortname) defined in smb.conf. This is the
3168 only printername available for use by Windows 9x clients. The
3169 second name associated with a printer can be seen when browsing to
3170 the "Printers" (or "Printers and Faxes") folder on the Samba
3171 server. This is referred to simply as the printername (not to be
3172 confused with the printer name option).
3173
3174 When assigning a new driver to a printer on a remote Windows
3175 compatible print server such as Samba, the Windows client will
3176 rename the printer to match the driver name just uploaded. This can
3177 result in confusion for users when multiple printers are bound to
3178 the same driver. To prevent Samba from allowing the printer's
3179 printername to differ from the sharename defined in smb.conf, set
3180 force printername = yes.
3181
3182 Be aware that enabling this parameter may affect migrating printers
3183 from a Windows server to Samba since Windows has no way to force
3184 the sharename and printername to match.
3185
3186 It is recommended that this parameter's value not be changed once
3187 the printer is in use by clients as this could cause a user not be
3188 able to delete printer connections from their local Printers
3189 folder.
3190
3191 Default: force printername = no
3192
3193 force security mode (S)
3194
3195 This parameter has been removed for Samba 4.0.0.
3196
3197 No default
3198
3199 force unknown acl user (S)
3200
3201 If this parameter is set, a Windows NT ACL that contains an unknown
3202 SID (security descriptor, or representation of a user or group id)
3203 as the owner or group owner of the file will be silently mapped
3204 into the current UNIX uid or gid of the currently connected user.
3205
3206 This is designed to allow Windows NT clients to copy files and
3207 folders containing ACLs that were created locally on the client
3208 machine and contain users local to that machine only (no domain
3209 users) to be copied to a Samba server (usually with XCOPY /O) and
3210 have the unknown userid and groupid of the file owner map to the
3211 current connected user. This can only be fixed correctly when
3212 winbindd allows arbitrary mapping from any Windows NT SID to a UNIX
3213 uid or gid.
3214
3215 Try using this parameter when XCOPY /O gives an ACCESS_DENIED
3216 error.
3217
3218 Default: force unknown acl user = no
3219
3220 force user (S)
3221
3222 This specifies a UNIX user name that will be assigned as the
3223 default user for all users connecting to this service. This is
3224 useful for sharing files. You should also use it carefully as using
3225 it incorrectly can cause security problems.
3226
3227 This user name only gets used once a connection is established.
3228 Thus clients still need to connect as a valid user and supply a
3229 valid password. Once connected, all file operations will be
3230 performed as the "forced user", no matter what username the client
3231 connected as. This can be very useful.
3232
3233 In Samba 2.0.5 and above this parameter also causes the primary
3234 group of the forced user to be used as the primary group for all
3235 file activity. Prior to 2.0.5 the primary group was left as the
3236 primary group of the connecting user (this was a bug).
3237
3238 Default: force user =
3239
3240 Example: force user = auser
3241
3242 fss: prune stale (G)
3243
3244 When enabled, Samba's File Server Remote VSS Protocol (FSRVP)
3245 server checks all FSRVP initiated snapshots on startup, and removes
3246 any corresponding state (including share definitions) for
3247 nonexistent snapshot paths.
3248
3249 Default: fss: prune stale = no
3250
3251 Example: fss: prune stale = yes
3252
3253 fss: sequence timeout (G)
3254
3255 The File Server Remote VSS Protocol (FSRVP) server includes a
3256 message sequence timer to ensure cleanup on unexpected client
3257 disconnect. This parameter overrides the default timeout between
3258 FSRVP operations. FSRVP timeouts can be completely disabled via a
3259 value of 0.
3260
3261 Default: fss: sequence timeout = 180 or 1800, depending on
3262 operation
3263
3264 Example: fss: sequence timeout = 0
3265
3266 fstype (S)
3267
3268 This parameter allows the administrator to configure the string
3269 that specifies the type of filesystem a share is using that is
3270 reported by smbd(8) when a client queries the filesystem type for a
3271 share. The default type is NTFS for compatibility with Windows NT
3272 but this can be changed to other strings such as Samba or FAT if
3273 required.
3274
3275 Default: fstype = NTFS
3276
3277 Example: fstype = Samba
3278
3279 get quota command (G)
3280
3281 The get quota command should only be used whenever there is no
3282 operating system API available from the OS that samba can use.
3283
3284 This option is only available Samba was compiled with quotas
3285 support.
3286
3287 This parameter should specify the path to a script that queries the
3288 quota information for the specified user/group for the partition
3289 that the specified directory is on.
3290
3291 Such a script is being given 3 arguments:
3292
3293 · directory
3294
3295 · type of query
3296
3297 · uid of user or gid of group
3298
3299 The directory is actually mostly just "." - It needs to be treated
3300 relatively to the current working directory that the script can
3301 also query.
3302
3303 The type of query can be one of:
3304
3305 · 1 - user quotas
3306
3307 · 2 - user default quotas (uid = -1)
3308
3309 · 3 - group quotas
3310
3311 · 4 - group default quotas (gid = -1)
3312
3313 This script should print one line as output with spaces between the
3314 columns. The printed columns should be:
3315
3316 · 1 - quota flags (0 = no quotas, 1 = quotas enabled, 2 =
3317 quotas enabled and enforced)
3318
3319 · 2 - number of currently used blocks
3320
3321 · 3 - the softlimit number of blocks
3322
3323 · 4 - the hardlimit number of blocks
3324
3325 · 5 - currently used number of inodes
3326
3327 · 6 - the softlimit number of inodes
3328
3329 · 7 - the hardlimit number of inodes
3330
3331 · 8 (optional) - the number of bytes in a block(default is
3332 1024)
3333
3334 Default: get quota command =
3335
3336 Example: get quota command = /usr/local/sbin/query_quota
3337
3338 getwd cache (G)
3339
3340 This is a tuning option. When this is enabled a caching algorithm
3341 will be used to reduce the time taken for getwd() calls. This can
3342 have a significant impact on performance, especially when the wide
3343 links parameter is set to no.
3344
3345 Default: getwd cache = yes
3346
3347 gpo update command (G)
3348
3349 This option sets the command that is called to apply GPO policies.
3350 The samba-gpupdate script applies System Access and Kerberos
3351 Policies to the KDC. System Access policies set minPwdAge,
3352 maxPwdAge, minPwdLength, and pwdProperties in the samdb. Kerberos
3353 Policies set kdc:service ticket lifetime, kdc:user ticket lifetime,
3354 and kdc:renewal lifetime in smb.conf.
3355
3356 Default: gpo update command =
3357 /builddir/build/BUILD/samba-4.12.2/source4/scripting/bin/samba-gpupdate
3358
3359 Example: gpo update command = /usr/local/sbin/gpoupdate
3360
3361 guest account (G)
3362
3363 This is a username which will be used for access to services which
3364 are specified as guest ok (see below). Whatever privileges this
3365 user has will be available to any client connecting to the guest
3366 service. This user must exist in the password file, but does not
3367 require a valid login. The user account "ftp" is often a good
3368 choice for this parameter.
3369
3370 On some systems the default guest account "nobody" may not be able
3371 to print. Use another account in this case. You should test this by
3372 trying to log in as your guest user (perhaps by using the su -
3373 command) and trying to print using the system print command such as
3374 lpr(1) or lp(1).
3375
3376 This parameter does not accept % macros, because many parts of the
3377 system require this value to be constant for correct operation.
3378
3379 Default: guest account = nobody # default can be changed at
3380 compile-time
3381
3382 Example: guest account = ftp
3383
3384 public
3385
3386 This parameter is a synonym for guest ok.
3387
3388 guest ok (S)
3389
3390 If this parameter is yes for a service, then no password is
3391 required to connect to the service. Privileges will be those of the
3392 guest account.
3393
3394 This parameter nullifies the benefits of setting restrict anonymous
3395 = 2
3396
3397 See the section below on security for more information about this
3398 option.
3399
3400 Default: guest ok = no
3401
3402 only guest
3403
3404 This parameter is a synonym for guest only.
3405
3406 guest only (S)
3407
3408 If this parameter is yes for a service, then only guest connections
3409 to the service are permitted. This parameter will have no effect if
3410 guest ok is not set for the service.
3411
3412 See the section below on security for more information about this
3413 option.
3414
3415 Default: guest only = no
3416
3417 hide dot files (S)
3418
3419 This is a boolean parameter that controls whether files starting
3420 with a dot appear as hidden files.
3421
3422 Default: hide dot files = yes
3423
3424 hide files (S)
3425
3426 This is a list of files or directories that are not visible but are
3427 accessible. The DOS 'hidden' attribute is applied to any files or
3428 directories that match.
3429
3430 Each entry in the list must be separated by a '/', which allows
3431 spaces to be included in the entry. '*' and '?' can be used to
3432 specify multiple files or directories as in DOS wildcards.
3433
3434 Each entry must be a Unix path, not a DOS path and must not include
3435 the Unix directory separator '/'.
3436
3437 Note that the case sensitivity option is applicable in hiding
3438 files.
3439
3440 Setting this parameter will affect the performance of Samba, as it
3441 will be forced to check all files and directories for a match as
3442 they are scanned.
3443
3444 The example shown above is based on files that the Macintosh SMB
3445 client (DAVE) available from Thursby creates for internal use, and
3446 also still hides all files beginning with a dot.
3447
3448 An example of us of this parameter is:
3449
3450 hide files = /.*/DesktopFolderDB/TrashFor%m/resource.frk/
3451
3452 Default: hide files = # no file are hidden
3453
3454 hide new files timeout (S)
3455
3456 Setting this parameter to something but 0 hides files that have
3457 been modified less than N seconds ago.
3458
3459 It can be used for ingest/process queue style workloads. A
3460 processing application should only see files that are definitely
3461 finished. As many applications do not have proper external workflow
3462 control, this can be a way to make sure processing does not
3463 interfere with file ingest.
3464
3465 Default: hide new files timeout = 0
3466
3467 hide special files (S)
3468
3469 This parameter prevents clients from seeing special files such as
3470 sockets, devices and fifo's in directory listings.
3471
3472 Default: hide special files = no
3473
3474 hide unreadable (S)
3475
3476 This parameter prevents clients from seeing the existence of files
3477 that cannot be read. Defaults to off.
3478
3479 Please note that enabling this can slow down listing large
3480 directories significantly. Samba has to evaluate the ACLs of all
3481 directory members, which can be a lot of effort.
3482
3483 Default: hide unreadable = no
3484
3485 hide unwriteable files (S)
3486
3487 This parameter prevents clients from seeing the existence of files
3488 that cannot be written to. Defaults to off. Note that unwriteable
3489 directories are shown as usual.
3490
3491 Please note that enabling this can slow down listing large
3492 directories significantly. Samba has to evaluate the ACLs of all
3493 directory members, which can be a lot of effort.
3494
3495 Default: hide unwriteable files = no
3496
3497 homedir map (G)
3498
3499 If nis homedir is yes, and smbd(8) is also acting as a Win95/98
3500 logon server then this parameter specifies the NIS (or YP) map from
3501 which the server for the user's home directory should be extracted.
3502 At present, only the Sun auto.home map format is understood. The
3503 form of the map is:
3504
3505 username server:/some/file/system
3506
3507 and the program will extract the servername from before the first
3508 ':'. There should probably be a better parsing system that copes
3509 with different map formats and also Amd (another automounter) maps.
3510
3511 Note
3512 A working NIS client is required on the system for this option
3513 to work.
3514 Default: homedir map =
3515
3516 Example: homedir map = amd.homedir
3517
3518 host msdfs (G)
3519
3520 If set to yes, Samba will act as a Dfs server, and allow Dfs-aware
3521 clients to browse Dfs trees hosted on the server.
3522
3523 See also the msdfs root share level parameter. For more information
3524 on setting up a Dfs tree on Samba, refer to the MSFDS chapter in
3525 the book Samba3-HOWTO.
3526
3527 Default: host msdfs = yes
3528
3529 hostname lookups (G)
3530
3531 Specifies whether samba should use (expensive) hostname lookups or
3532 use the ip addresses instead. An example place where hostname
3533 lookups are currently used is when checking the hosts deny and
3534 hosts allow.
3535
3536 Default: hostname lookups = no
3537
3538 Example: hostname lookups = yes
3539
3540 allow hosts
3541
3542 This parameter is a synonym for hosts allow.
3543
3544 hosts allow (S)
3545
3546 A synonym for this parameter is allow hosts.
3547
3548 This parameter is a comma, space, or tab delimited set of hosts
3549 which are permitted to access a service.
3550
3551 If specified in the [global] section then it will apply to all
3552 services, regardless of whether the individual service has a
3553 different setting.
3554
3555 You can specify the hosts by name or IP number. For example, you
3556 could restrict access to only the hosts on a Class C subnet with
3557 something like allow hosts = 150.203.5.. The full syntax of the
3558 list is described in the man page hosts_access(5). Note that this
3559 man page may not be present on your system, so a brief description
3560 will be given here also.
3561
3562 Note that the localhost address 127.0.0.1 will always be allowed
3563 access unless specifically denied by a hosts deny option.
3564
3565 You can also specify hosts by network/netmask pairs and by netgroup
3566 names if your system supports netgroups. The EXCEPT keyword can
3567 also be used to limit a wildcard list. The following examples may
3568 provide some help:
3569
3570 Example 1: allow all IPs in 150.203.*.*; except one
3571
3572 hosts allow = 150.203. EXCEPT 150.203.6.66
3573
3574 Example 2: allow hosts that match the given network/netmask
3575
3576 hosts allow = 150.203.15.0/255.255.255.0
3577
3578 Example 3: allow a couple of hosts
3579
3580 hosts allow = lapland, arvidsjaur
3581
3582 Example 4: allow only hosts in NIS netgroup "foonet", but deny
3583 access from one particular host
3584
3585 hosts allow = @foonet
3586
3587 hosts deny = pirate
3588
3589 Note
3590 Note that access still requires suitable user-level passwords.
3591 See testparm(1) for a way of testing your host access to see if it
3592 does what you expect.
3593
3594 Default: hosts allow = # none (i.e., all hosts permitted access)
3595
3596 Example: hosts allow = 150.203.5. myhost.mynet.edu.au
3597
3598 deny hosts
3599
3600 This parameter is a synonym for hosts deny.
3601
3602 hosts deny (S)
3603
3604 The opposite of hosts allow - hosts listed here are NOT permitted
3605 access to services unless the specific services have their own
3606 lists to override this one. Where the lists conflict, the allow
3607 list takes precedence.
3608
3609 In the event that it is necessary to deny all by default, use the
3610 keyword ALL (or the netmask 0.0.0.0/0) and then explicitly specify
3611 to the hosts allow = hosts allow parameter those hosts that should
3612 be permitted access.
3613
3614 Default: hosts deny = # none (i.e., no hosts specifically
3615 excluded)
3616
3617 Example: hosts deny = 150.203.4. badhost.mynet.edu.au
3618
3619 idmap backend (G)
3620
3621 The idmap backend provides a plugin interface for Winbind to use
3622 varying backends to store SID/uid/gid mapping tables.
3623
3624 This option specifies the default backend that is used when no
3625 special configuration set, but it is now deprecated in favour of
3626 the new spelling idmap config * : backend.
3627
3628 Default: idmap backend = tdb
3629
3630 idmap cache time (G)
3631
3632 This parameter specifies the number of seconds that Winbind's idmap
3633 interface will cache positive SID/uid/gid query results. By
3634 default, Samba will cache these results for one week.
3635
3636 Default: idmap cache time = 604800
3637
3638 idmap config DOMAIN : OPTION (G)
3639
3640 ID mapping in Samba is the mapping between Windows SIDs and Unix
3641 user and group IDs. This is performed by Winbindd with a
3642 configurable plugin interface. Samba's ID mapping is configured by
3643 options starting with the idmap config prefix. An idmap option
3644 consists of the idmap config prefix, followed by a domain name or
3645 the asterisk character (*), a colon, and the name of an idmap
3646 setting for the chosen domain.
3647
3648 The idmap configuration is hence divided into groups, one group for
3649 each domain to be configured, and one group with the asterisk
3650 instead of a proper domain name, which specifies the default
3651 configuration that is used to catch all domains that do not have an
3652 explicit idmap configuration of their own.
3653
3654 There are three general options available:
3655
3656 backend = backend_name
3657 This specifies the name of the idmap plugin to use as the
3658 SID/uid/gid backend for this domain. The standard backends are
3659 tdb (idmap_tdb(8)), tdb2 (idmap_tdb2(8)), ldap (idmap_ldap(8)),
3660 rid (idmap_rid(8)), hash (idmap_hash(8)), autorid
3661 (idmap_autorid(8)), ad (idmap_ad(8)) and nss (idmap_nss(8)).
3662 The corresponding manual pages contain the details, but here is
3663 a summary.
3664
3665 The first three of these create mappings of their own using
3666 internal unixid counters and store the mappings in a database.
3667 These are suitable for use in the default idmap configuration.
3668 The rid and hash backends use a pure algorithmic calculation to
3669 determine the unixid for a SID. The autorid module is a mixture
3670 of the tdb and rid backend. It creates ranges for each domain
3671 encountered and then uses the rid algorithm for each of these
3672 automatically configured domains individually. The ad backend
3673 uses unix ids stored in Active Directory via the standard
3674 schema extensions. The nss backend reverses the standard
3675 winbindd setup and gets the unix ids via names from nsswitch
3676 which can be useful in an ldap setup.
3677
3678 range = low - high
3679 Defines the available matching uid and gid range for which the
3680 backend is authoritative. For allocating backends, this also
3681 defines the start and the end of the range for allocating new
3682 unique IDs.
3683
3684 winbind uses this parameter to find the backend that is
3685 authoritative for a unix ID to SID mapping, so it must be set
3686 for each individually configured domain and for the default
3687 configuration. The configured ranges must be mutually disjoint.
3688
3689 read only = yes|no
3690 This option can be used to turn the writing backends tdb, tdb2,
3691 and ldap into read only mode. This can be useful e.g. in cases
3692 where a pre-filled database exists that should not be extended
3693 automatically.
3694
3695 The following example illustrates how to configure the idmap_ad(8)
3696 backend for the CORP domain and the idmap_tdb(8) backend for all
3697 other domains. This configuration assumes that the admin of CORP
3698 assigns unix ids below 1000000 via the SFU extensions, and winbind
3699 is supposed to use the next million entries for its own mappings
3700 from trusted domains and for local groups for example.
3701
3702 idmap config * : backend = tdb
3703 idmap config * : range = 1000000-1999999
3704
3705 idmap config CORP : backend = ad
3706 idmap config CORP : range = 1000-999999
3707
3708
3709 No default
3710
3711 winbind gid
3712
3713 This parameter is a synonym for idmap gid.
3714
3715 idmap gid (G)
3716
3717 The idmap gid parameter specifies the range of group ids for the
3718 default idmap configuration. It is now deprecated in favour of
3719 idmap config * : range.
3720
3721 See the idmap config option.
3722
3723 Default: idmap gid =
3724
3725 Example: idmap gid = 10000-20000
3726
3727 idmap negative cache time (G)
3728
3729 This parameter specifies the number of seconds that Winbind's idmap
3730 interface will cache negative SID/uid/gid query results.
3731
3732 Default: idmap negative cache time = 120
3733
3734 winbind uid
3735
3736 This parameter is a synonym for idmap uid.
3737
3738 idmap uid (G)
3739
3740 The idmap uid parameter specifies the range of user ids for the
3741 default idmap configuration. It is now deprecated in favour of
3742 idmap config * : range.
3743
3744 See the idmap config option.
3745
3746 Default: idmap uid =
3747
3748 Example: idmap uid = 10000-20000
3749
3750 include (S)
3751
3752 This allows you to include one config file inside another. The file
3753 is included literally, as though typed in place.
3754
3755 It takes the standard substitutions, except %u, %P and %S.
3756
3757 The parameter include = registry has a special meaning: It does not
3758 include a file named registry from the current working directory,
3759 but instead reads the global configuration options from the
3760 registry. See the section on registry-based configuration for
3761 details. Note that this option automatically activates registry
3762 shares.
3763
3764 Default: include =
3765
3766 Example: include = /usr/local/samba/lib/admin_smb.conf
3767
3768 include system krb5 conf (G)
3769
3770 Setting this parameter to no will prevent winbind to include the
3771 system /etc/krb5.conf file into the krb5.conf file it creates. See
3772 also create krb5 conf. This option only applies to Samba built with
3773 MIT Kerberos.
3774
3775 Default: include system krb5 conf = yes
3776
3777 inherit acls (S)
3778
3779 This parameter can be used to ensure that if default acls exist on
3780 parent directories, they are always honored when creating a new
3781 file or subdirectory in these parent directories. The default
3782 behavior is to use the unix mode specified when creating the
3783 directory. Enabling this option sets the unix mode to 0777, thus
3784 guaranteeing that default directory acls are propagated. Note that
3785 using the VFS modules acl_xattr or acl_tdb which store native
3786 Windows as meta-data will automatically turn this option on for any
3787 share for which they are loaded, as they require this option to
3788 emulate Windows ACLs correctly.
3789
3790 Default: inherit acls = no
3791
3792 inherit owner (S)
3793
3794 The ownership of new files and directories is normally governed by
3795 effective uid of the connected user. This option allows the Samba
3796 administrator to specify that the ownership for new files and
3797 directories should be controlled by the ownership of the parent
3798 directory.
3799
3800 Valid options are:
3801
3802 · no - Both the Windows (SID) owner and the UNIX (uid)
3803 owner of the file are governed by the identity of the
3804 user that created the file.
3805
3806 · windows and unix - The Windows (SID) owner and the UNIX
3807 (uid) owner of new files and directories are set to the
3808 respective owner of the parent directory.
3809
3810 · yes - a synonym for windows and unix.
3811
3812 · unix only - Only the UNIX owner is set to the UNIX owner
3813 of the parent directory.
3814
3815 Common scenarios where this behavior is useful is in implementing
3816 drop-boxes, where users can create and edit files but not delete
3817 them and ensuring that newly created files in a user's roaming
3818 profile directory are actually owned by the user.
3819
3820 The unix only option effectively breaks the tie between the Windows
3821 owner of a file and the UNIX owner. As a logical consequence, in
3822 this mode, setting the the Windows owner of a file does not modify
3823 the UNIX owner. Using this mode should typically be combined with a
3824 backing store that can emulate the full NT ACL model without
3825 affecting the POSIX permissions, such as the acl_xattr VFS module,
3826 coupled with acl_xattr:ignore system acls = yes. This can be used
3827 to emulate folder quotas, when files are exposed only via SMB
3828 (without UNIX extensions). The UNIX owner of a directory is locally
3829 set and inherited by all subdirectories and files, and they all
3830 consume the same quota.
3831
3832 Default: inherit owner = no
3833
3834 inherit permissions (S)
3835
3836 The permissions on new files and directories are normally governed
3837 by create mask, directory mask, force create mode and force
3838 directory mode but the boolean inherit permissions parameter
3839 overrides this.
3840
3841 New directories inherit the mode of the parent directory, including
3842 bits such as setgid.
3843
3844 New files inherit their read/write bits from the parent directory.
3845 Their execute bits continue to be determined by map archive, map
3846 hidden and map system as usual.
3847
3848 Note that the setuid bit is never set via inheritance (the code
3849 explicitly prohibits this).
3850
3851 This can be particularly useful on large systems with many users,
3852 perhaps several thousand, to allow a single [homes] share to be
3853 used flexibly by each user.
3854
3855 Default: inherit permissions = no
3856
3857 init logon delay (G)
3858
3859 This parameter specifies a delay in milliseconds for the hosts
3860 configured for delayed initial samlogon with init logon delayed
3861 hosts.
3862
3863 Default: init logon delay = 100
3864
3865 init logon delayed hosts (G)
3866
3867 This parameter takes a list of host names, addresses or networks
3868 for which the initial samlogon reply should be delayed (so other
3869 DCs get preferred by XP workstations if there are any).
3870
3871 The length of the delay can be specified with the init logon delay
3872 parameter.
3873
3874 Default: init logon delayed hosts =
3875
3876 Example: init logon delayed hosts = 150.203.5. myhost.mynet.de
3877
3878 interfaces (G)
3879
3880 This option allows you to override the default network interfaces
3881 list that Samba will use for browsing, name registration and other
3882 NetBIOS over TCP/IP (NBT) traffic. By default Samba will query the
3883 kernel for the list of all active interfaces and use any interfaces
3884 except 127.0.0.1 that are broadcast capable.
3885
3886 The option takes a list of interface strings. Each string can be in
3887 any of the following forms:
3888
3889 · a network interface name (such as eth0). This may
3890 include shell-like wildcards so eth* will match any
3891 interface starting with the substring "eth"
3892
3893 · an IP address. In this case the netmask is determined
3894 from the list of interfaces obtained from the kernel
3895
3896 · an IP/mask pair.
3897
3898 · a broadcast/mask pair.
3899
3900 The "mask" parameters can either be a bit length (such as 24 for a
3901 C class network) or a full netmask in dotted decimal form.
3902
3903 The "IP" parameters above can either be a full dotted decimal IP
3904 address or a hostname which will be looked up via the OS's normal
3905 hostname resolution mechanisms.
3906
3907 By default Samba enables all active interfaces that are broadcast
3908 capable except the loopback adaptor (IP address 127.0.0.1).
3909
3910 In order to support SMB3 multi-channel configurations, smbd
3911 understands some extra data that can be appended after the actual
3912 interface with this extended syntax:
3913
3914 interface[;key1=value1[,key2=value2[...]]]
3915
3916 Known keys are speed, capability, and if_index. Speed is specified
3917 in bits per second. Known capabilities are RSS and RDMA. The
3918 if_index should be used with care: the values must not coincide
3919 with indexes used by the kernel. Note that these options are mainly
3920 intended for testing and development rather than for production
3921 use. At least on Linux systems, these values should be
3922 auto-detected, but the settings can serve as last a resort when
3923 autodetection is not working or is not available.
3924
3925 The example below configures three network interfaces corresponding
3926 to the eth0 device and IP addresses 192.168.2.10 and 192.168.3.10.
3927 The netmasks of the latter two interfaces would be set to
3928 255.255.255.0.
3929
3930 Default: interfaces =
3931
3932 Example: interfaces = eth0 192.168.2.10/24
3933 192.168.3.10/255.255.255.0
3934
3935 invalid users (S)
3936
3937 This is a list of users that should not be allowed to login to this
3938 service. This is really a paranoid check to absolutely ensure an
3939 improper setting does not breach your security.
3940
3941 A name starting with a '@' is interpreted as an NIS netgroup first
3942 (if your system supports NIS), and then as a UNIX group if the name
3943 was not found in the NIS netgroup database.
3944
3945 A name starting with '+' is interpreted only by looking in the UNIX
3946 group database via the NSS getgrnam() interface. A name starting
3947 with '&' is interpreted only by looking in the NIS netgroup
3948 database (this requires NIS to be working on your system). The
3949 characters '+' and '&' may be used at the start of the name in
3950 either order so the value +&group means check the UNIX group
3951 database, followed by the NIS netgroup database, and the value
3952 &+group means check the NIS netgroup database, followed by the UNIX
3953 group database (the same as the '@' prefix).
3954
3955 The current servicename is substituted for %S. This is useful in
3956 the [homes] section.
3957
3958 Default: invalid users = # no invalid users
3959
3960 Example: invalid users = root fred admin @wheel
3961
3962 iprint server (G)
3963
3964 This parameter is only applicable if printing is set to iprint.
3965
3966 If set, this option overrides the ServerName option in the CUPS
3967 client.conf. This is necessary if you have virtual samba servers
3968 that connect to different CUPS daemons.
3969
3970 Default: iprint server = ""
3971
3972 Example: iprint server = MYCUPSSERVER
3973
3974 keepalive (G)
3975
3976 The value of the parameter (an integer) represents the number of
3977 seconds between keepalive packets. If this parameter is zero, no
3978 keepalive packets will be sent. Keepalive packets, if sent, allow
3979 the server to tell whether a client is still present and
3980 responding.
3981
3982 Keepalives should, in general, not be needed if the socket has the
3983 SO_KEEPALIVE attribute set on it by default. (see socket options).
3984 Basically you should only use this option if you strike
3985 difficulties.
3986
3987 Please note this option only applies to SMB1 client connections,
3988 and has no effect on SMB2 clients.
3989
3990 Default: keepalive = 300
3991
3992 Example: keepalive = 600
3993
3994 kerberos encryption types (G)
3995
3996 This parameter determines the encryption types to use when
3997 operating as a Kerberos client. Possible values are all, strong,
3998 and legacy.
3999
4000 Samba uses a Kerberos library (MIT or Heimdal) to obtain Kerberos
4001 tickets. This library is normally configured outside of Samba,
4002 using the krb5.conf file. This file may also include directives to
4003 configure the encryption types to be used. However, Samba
4004 implements Active Directory protocols and algorithms to locate a
4005 domain controller. In order to force the Kerberos library into
4006 using the correct domain controller, some Samba processes, such as
4007 winbindd(8) and net(8), build a private krb5.conf file for use by
4008 the Kerberos library while being invoked from Samba. This private
4009 file controls all aspects of the Kerberos library operation, and
4010 this parameter controls how the encryption types are configured
4011 within this generated file, and therefore also controls the
4012 encryption types negotiable by Samba.
4013
4014 When set to all, all active directory encryption types are allowed.
4015
4016 When set to strong, only AES-based encryption types are offered.
4017 This can be used in hardened environments to prevent downgrade
4018 attacks.
4019
4020 When set to legacy, only RC4-HMAC-MD5 is allowed. Avoiding AES this
4021 way has one a very specific use. Normally, the encryption type is
4022 negotiated between the peers. However, there is one scenario in
4023 which a Windows read-only domain controller (RODC) advertises AES
4024 encryption, but then proxies the request to a writeable DC which
4025 may not support AES encryption, leading to failure of the
4026 handshake. Setting this parameter to legacy would cause samba not
4027 to negotiate AES encryption. It is assumed of course that the
4028 weaker legacy encryption types are acceptable for the setup.
4029
4030 Default: kerberos encryption types = all
4031
4032 kerberos method (G)
4033
4034 Controls how kerberos tickets are verified.
4035
4036 Valid options are:
4037
4038 · secrets only - use only the secrets.tdb for ticket
4039 verification (default)
4040
4041 · system keytab - use only the system keytab for ticket
4042 verification
4043
4044 · dedicated keytab - use a dedicated keytab for ticket
4045 verification
4046
4047 · secrets and keytab - use the secrets.tdb first, then the
4048 system keytab
4049
4050 The major difference between "system keytab" and "dedicated keytab"
4051 is that the latter method relies on kerberos to find the correct
4052 keytab entry instead of filtering based on expected principals.
4053
4054 When the kerberos method is in "dedicated keytab" mode, dedicated
4055 keytab file must be set to specify the location of the keytab file.
4056
4057 Default: kerberos method = default
4058
4059 kernel change notify (G)
4060
4061 This parameter specifies whether Samba should ask the kernel for
4062 change notifications in directories so that SMB clients can refresh
4063 whenever the data on the server changes.
4064
4065 This parameter is only used when your kernel supports change
4066 notification to user programs using the inotify interface.
4067
4068 Default: kernel change notify = yes
4069
4070 kernel oplocks (S)
4071
4072 For UNIXes that support kernel based oplocks (currently only
4073 Linux), this parameter allows the use of them to be turned on or
4074 off. However, this disables Level II oplocks for clients as the
4075 Linux kernel does not support them properly.
4076
4077 Kernel oplocks support allows Samba oplocks to be broken whenever a
4078 local UNIX process or NFS operation accesses a file that smbd(8)
4079 has oplocked. This allows complete data consistency between
4080 SMB/CIFS, NFS and local file access (and is a very cool feature
4081 :-).
4082
4083 If you do not need this interaction, you should disable the
4084 parameter on Linux to get Level II oplocks and the associated
4085 performance benefit.
4086
4087 This parameter defaults to no and is translated to a no-op on
4088 systems that do not have the necessary kernel support.
4089
4090 Default: kernel oplocks = no
4091
4092 kernel share modes (S)
4093
4094 This parameter controls whether SMB share modes are translated into
4095 UNIX flocks.
4096
4097 Kernel share modes provide a minimal level of interoperability with
4098 local UNIX processes and NFS operations by preventing access with
4099 flocks corresponding to the SMB share modes. Generally, it is very
4100 desirable to leave this enabled.
4101
4102 Note that in order to use SMB2 durable file handles on a share, you
4103 have to turn kernel share modes off.
4104
4105 This parameter defaults to yes and is translated to a no-op on
4106 systems that do not have the necessary kernel flock support.
4107
4108 Default: kernel share modes = yes
4109
4110 kpasswd port (G)
4111
4112 Specifies which ports the Kerberos server should listen on for
4113 password changes.
4114
4115 Default: kpasswd port = 464
4116
4117 krb5 port (G)
4118
4119 Specifies which port the KDC should listen on for Kerberos traffic.
4120
4121 Default: krb5 port = 88
4122
4123 lanman auth (G)
4124
4125 This parameter has been deprecated since Samba 4.11 and support for
4126 LanMan (as distinct from NTLM, NTLMv2 or Kerberos authentication)
4127 will be removed in a future Samba release.
4128
4129 That is, in the future, the current default of lanman auth = no
4130 will be the enforced behaviour.
4131
4132 This parameter determines whether or not smbd(8) will attempt to
4133 authenticate users or permit password changes using the LANMAN
4134 password hash. If disabled, only clients which support NT password
4135 hashes (e.g. Windows NT/2000 clients, smbclient, but not Windows
4136 95/98 or the MS DOS network client) will be able to connect to the
4137 Samba host.
4138
4139 The LANMAN encrypted response is easily broken, due to its
4140 case-insensitive nature, and the choice of algorithm. Servers
4141 without Windows 95/98/ME or MS DOS clients are advised to disable
4142 this option.
4143
4144 When this parameter is set to no this will also result in
4145 sambaLMPassword in Samba's passdb being blanked after the next
4146 password change. As a result of that lanman clients won't be able
4147 to authenticate, even if lanman auth is re-enabled later on.
4148
4149 Unlike the encrypt passwords option, this parameter cannot alter
4150 client behaviour, and the LANMAN response will still be sent over
4151 the network. See the client lanman auth to disable this for Samba's
4152 clients (such as smbclient)
4153
4154 This parameter is overridden by ntlm auth, so unless that it is
4155 also set to ntlmv1-permitted or yes, then only NTLMv2 logins will
4156 be permitted and no LM hash will be stored. All modern clients
4157 support NTLMv2, and but some older clients require special
4158 configuration to use it.
4159
4160 Default: lanman auth = no
4161
4162 large readwrite (G)
4163
4164 This parameter determines whether or not smbd(8) supports the new
4165 64k streaming read and write variant SMB requests introduced with
4166 Windows 2000. Note that due to Windows 2000 client redirector bugs
4167 this requires Samba to be running on a 64-bit capable operating
4168 system such as IRIX, Solaris or a Linux 2.4 kernel. Can improve
4169 performance by 10% with Windows 2000 clients. Defaults to on. Not
4170 as tested as some other Samba code paths.
4171
4172 Default: large readwrite = yes
4173
4174 ldap admin dn (G)
4175
4176 The ldap admin dn defines the Distinguished Name (DN) name used by
4177 Samba to contact the ldap server when retrieving user account
4178 information. The ldap admin dn is used in conjunction with the
4179 admin dn password stored in the private/secrets.tdb file. See the
4180 smbpasswd(8) man page for more information on how to accomplish
4181 this.
4182
4183 The ldap admin dn requires a fully specified DN. The ldap suffix is
4184 not appended to the ldap admin dn.
4185
4186 No default
4187
4188 ldap connection timeout (G)
4189
4190 This parameter tells the LDAP library calls which timeout in
4191 seconds they should honor during initial connection establishments
4192 to LDAP servers. It is very useful in failover scenarios in
4193 particular. If one or more LDAP servers are not reachable at all,
4194 we do not have to wait until TCP timeouts are over. This feature
4195 must be supported by your LDAP library.
4196
4197 This parameter is different from ldap timeout which affects
4198 operations on LDAP servers using an existing connection and not
4199 establishing an initial connection.
4200
4201 Default: ldap connection timeout = 2
4202
4203 ldap debug level (G)
4204
4205 This parameter controls the debug level of the LDAP library calls.
4206 In the case of OpenLDAP, it is the same bit-field as understood by
4207 the server and documented in the slapd.conf(5) manpage. A typical
4208 useful value will be 1 for tracing function calls.
4209
4210 The debug output from the LDAP libraries appears with the prefix
4211 [LDAP] in Samba's logging output. The level at which LDAP logging
4212 is printed is controlled by the parameter ldap debug threshold.
4213
4214 Default: ldap debug level = 0
4215
4216 Example: ldap debug level = 1
4217
4218 ldap debug threshold (G)
4219
4220 This parameter controls the Samba debug level at which the ldap
4221 library debug output is printed in the Samba logs. See the
4222 description of ldap debug level for details.
4223
4224 Default: ldap debug threshold = 10
4225
4226 Example: ldap debug threshold = 5
4227
4228 ldap delete dn (G)
4229
4230 This parameter specifies whether a delete operation in the ldapsam
4231 deletes the complete entry or only the attributes specific to
4232 Samba.
4233
4234 Default: ldap delete dn = no
4235
4236 ldap deref (G)
4237
4238 This option controls whether Samba should tell the LDAP library to
4239 use a certain alias dereferencing method. The default is auto,
4240 which means that the default setting of the ldap client library
4241 will be kept. Other possible values are never, finding, searching
4242 and always. Grab your LDAP manual for more information.
4243
4244 Default: ldap deref = auto
4245
4246 Example: ldap deref = searching
4247
4248 ldap follow referral (G)
4249
4250 This option controls whether to follow LDAP referrals or not when
4251 searching for entries in the LDAP database. Possible values are on
4252 to enable following referrals, off to disable this, and auto, to
4253 use the libldap default settings. libldap's choice of following
4254 referrals or not is set in /etc/openldap/ldap.conf with the
4255 REFERRALS parameter as documented in ldap.conf(5).
4256
4257 Default: ldap follow referral = auto
4258
4259 Example: ldap follow referral = off
4260
4261 ldap group suffix (G)
4262
4263 This parameter specifies the suffix that is used for groups when
4264 these are added to the LDAP directory. If this parameter is unset,
4265 the value of ldap suffix will be used instead. The suffix string is
4266 pre-pended to the ldap suffix string so use a partial DN.
4267
4268 Default: ldap group suffix =
4269
4270 Example: ldap group suffix = ou=Groups
4271
4272 ldap idmap suffix (G)
4273
4274 This parameters specifies the suffix that is used when storing
4275 idmap mappings. If this parameter is unset, the value of ldap
4276 suffix will be used instead. The suffix string is pre-pended to the
4277 ldap suffix string so use a partial DN.
4278
4279 Default: ldap idmap suffix =
4280
4281 Example: ldap idmap suffix = ou=Idmap
4282
4283 ldap machine suffix (G)
4284
4285 It specifies where machines should be added to the ldap tree. If
4286 this parameter is unset, the value of ldap suffix will be used
4287 instead. The suffix string is pre-pended to the ldap suffix string
4288 so use a partial DN.
4289
4290 Default: ldap machine suffix =
4291
4292 Example: ldap machine suffix = ou=Computers
4293
4294 ldap max anonymous request size (G)
4295
4296 This parameter specifies the maximum permitted size (in bytes) for
4297 an LDAP request received on an anonymous connection.
4298
4299 If the request size exceeds this limit the request will be
4300 rejected.
4301
4302 Default: ldap max anonymous request size = 256000
4303
4304 Example: ldap max anonymous request size = 500000
4305
4306 ldap max authenticated request size (G)
4307
4308 This parameter specifies the maximum permitted size (in bytes) for
4309 an LDAP request received on an authenticated connection.
4310
4311 If the request size exceeds this limit the request will be
4312 rejected.
4313
4314 Default: ldap max authenticated request size = 16777216
4315
4316 Example: ldap max authenticated request size = 4194304
4317
4318 ldap max search request size (G)
4319
4320 This parameter specifies the maximum permitted size (in bytes) for
4321 an LDAP search request.
4322
4323 If the request size exceeds this limit the request will be
4324 rejected.
4325
4326 Default: ldap max search request size = 256000
4327
4328 Example: ldap max search request size = 4194304
4329
4330 ldap page size (G)
4331
4332 This parameter specifies the number of entries per page.
4333
4334 If the LDAP server supports paged results, clients can request
4335 subsets of search results (pages) instead of the entire list. This
4336 parameter specifies the size of these pages.
4337
4338 Default: ldap page size = 1000
4339
4340 Example: ldap page size = 512
4341
4342 ldap password sync
4343
4344 This parameter is a synonym for ldap passwd sync.
4345
4346 ldap passwd sync (G)
4347
4348 This option is used to define whether or not Samba should sync the
4349 LDAP password with the NT and LM hashes for normal accounts (NOT
4350 for workstation, server or domain trusts) on a password change via
4351 SAMBA.
4352
4353 The ldap passwd sync can be set to one of three values:
4354
4355 · Yes = Try to update the LDAP, NT and LM passwords and
4356 update the pwdLastSet time.
4357
4358 · No = Update NT and LM passwords and update the
4359 pwdLastSet time.
4360
4361 · Only = Only update the LDAP password and let the LDAP
4362 server do the rest.
4363
4364 Default: ldap passwd sync = no
4365
4366 ldap replication sleep (G)
4367
4368 When Samba is asked to write to a read-only LDAP replica, we are
4369 redirected to talk to the read-write master server. This server
4370 then replicates our changes back to the 'local' server, however the
4371 replication might take some seconds, especially over slow links.
4372 Certain client activities, particularly domain joins, can become
4373 confused by the 'success' that does not immediately change the LDAP
4374 back-end's data.
4375
4376 This option simply causes Samba to wait a short time, to allow the
4377 LDAP server to catch up. If you have a particularly high-latency
4378 network, you may wish to time the LDAP replication with a network
4379 sniffer, and increase this value accordingly. Be aware that no
4380 checking is performed that the data has actually replicated.
4381
4382 The value is specified in milliseconds, the maximum value is 5000
4383 (5 seconds).
4384
4385 Default: ldap replication sleep = 1000
4386
4387 ldapsam:editposix (G)
4388
4389 Editposix is an option that leverages ldapsam:trusted to make it
4390 simpler to manage a domain controller eliminating the need to set
4391 up custom scripts to add and manage the posix users and groups.
4392 This option will instead directly manipulate the ldap tree to
4393 create, remove and modify user and group entries. This option also
4394 requires a running winbindd as it is used to allocate new uids/gids
4395 on user/group creation. The allocation range must be therefore
4396 configured.
4397
4398 To use this option, a basic ldap tree must be provided and the ldap
4399 suffix parameters must be properly configured. On virgin servers
4400 the default users and groups (Administrator, Guest, Domain Users,
4401 Domain Admins, Domain Guests) can be precreated with the command
4402 net sam provision. To run this command the ldap server must be
4403 running, Winbindd must be running and the smb.conf ldap options
4404 must be properly configured. The typical ldap setup used with the
4405 ldapsam:trusted = yes option is usually sufficient to use
4406 ldapsam:editposix = yes as well.
4407
4408 An example configuration can be the following:
4409
4410 encrypt passwords = true
4411 passdb backend = ldapsam
4412
4413 ldapsam:trusted=yes
4414 ldapsam:editposix=yes
4415
4416 ldap admin dn = cn=admin,dc=samba,dc=org
4417 ldap delete dn = yes
4418 ldap group suffix = ou=groups
4419 ldap idmap suffix = ou=idmap
4420 ldap machine suffix = ou=computers
4421 ldap user suffix = ou=users
4422 ldap suffix = dc=samba,dc=org
4423
4424 idmap backend = ldap:"ldap://localhost"
4425
4426 idmap uid = 5000-50000
4427 idmap gid = 5000-50000
4428
4429
4430 This configuration assumes a directory layout like described in the
4431 following ldif:
4432
4433 dn: dc=samba,dc=org
4434 objectClass: top
4435 objectClass: dcObject
4436 objectClass: organization
4437 o: samba.org
4438 dc: samba
4439
4440 dn: cn=admin,dc=samba,dc=org
4441 objectClass: simpleSecurityObject
4442 objectClass: organizationalRole
4443 cn: admin
4444 description: LDAP administrator
4445 userPassword: secret
4446
4447 dn: ou=users,dc=samba,dc=org
4448 objectClass: top
4449 objectClass: organizationalUnit
4450 ou: users
4451
4452 dn: ou=groups,dc=samba,dc=org
4453 objectClass: top
4454 objectClass: organizationalUnit
4455 ou: groups
4456
4457 dn: ou=idmap,dc=samba,dc=org
4458 objectClass: top
4459 objectClass: organizationalUnit
4460 ou: idmap
4461
4462 dn: ou=computers,dc=samba,dc=org
4463 objectClass: top
4464 objectClass: organizationalUnit
4465 ou: computers
4466
4467
4468 Default: ldapsam:editposix = no
4469
4470 ldapsam:trusted (G)
4471
4472 By default, Samba as a Domain Controller with an LDAP backend needs
4473 to use the Unix-style NSS subsystem to access user and group
4474 information. Due to the way Unix stores user information in
4475 /etc/passwd and /etc/group this inevitably leads to inefficiencies.
4476 One important question a user needs to know is the list of groups
4477 he is member of. The plain UNIX model involves a complete
4478 enumeration of the file /etc/group and its NSS counterparts in
4479 LDAP. UNIX has optimized functions to enumerate group membership.
4480 Sadly, other functions that are used to deal with user and group
4481 attributes lack such optimization.
4482
4483 To make Samba scale well in large environments, the ldapsam:trusted
4484 = yes option assumes that the complete user and group database that
4485 is relevant to Samba is stored in LDAP with the standard
4486 posixAccount/posixGroup attributes. It further assumes that the
4487 Samba auxiliary object classes are stored together with the POSIX
4488 data in the same LDAP object. If these assumptions are met,
4489 ldapsam:trusted = yes can be activated and Samba can bypass the NSS
4490 system to query user group memberships. Optimized LDAP queries can
4491 greatly speed up domain logon and administration tasks. Depending
4492 on the size of the LDAP database a factor of 100 or more for common
4493 queries is easily achieved.
4494
4495 Default: ldapsam:trusted = no
4496
4497 ldap server require strong auth (G)
4498
4499 The ldap server require strong auth defines whether the ldap server
4500 requires ldap traffic to be signed or signed and encrypted
4501 (sealed). Possible values are no, allow_sasl_over_tls and yes.
4502
4503 A value of no allows simple and sasl binds over all transports.
4504
4505 A value of allow_sasl_over_tls allows simple and sasl binds
4506 (without sign or seal) over TLS encrypted connections. Unencrypted
4507 connections only allow sasl binds with sign or seal.
4508
4509 A value of yes allows only simple binds over TLS encrypted
4510 connections. Unencrypted connections only allow sasl binds with
4511 sign or seal.
4512
4513 Default: ldap server require strong auth = yes
4514
4515 ldap ssl (G)
4516
4517 This option is used to define whether or not Samba should use SSL
4518 when connecting to the ldap server This is NOT related to Samba's
4519 previous SSL support which was enabled by specifying the --with-ssl
4520 option to the configure script.
4521
4522 LDAP connections should be secured where possible. This may be done
4523 setting either this parameter to start tls or by specifying
4524 ldaps:// in the URL argument of passdb backend.
4525
4526 The ldap ssl can be set to one of two values:
4527
4528 · Off = Never use SSL when querying the directory.
4529
4530 · start tls = Use the LDAPv3 StartTLS extended operation
4531 (RFC2830) for communicating with the directory server.
4532
4533 Please note that this parameter does only affect rpc methods. To
4534 enable the LDAPv3 StartTLS extended operation (RFC2830) for ads,
4535 set ldap ssl = start tls and ldap ssl ads = yes. See smb.conf(5)
4536 for more information on ldap ssl ads.
4537
4538 Default: ldap ssl = start tls
4539
4540 ldap ssl ads (G)
4541
4542 This option is used to define whether or not Samba should use SSL
4543 when connecting to the ldap server using ads methods. Rpc methods
4544 are not affected by this parameter. Please note, that this
4545 parameter won't have any effect if ldap ssl is set to no.
4546
4547 See smb.conf(5) for more information on ldap ssl.
4548
4549 Default: ldap ssl ads = no
4550
4551 ldap suffix (G)
4552
4553 Specifies the base for all ldap suffixes and for storing the
4554 sambaDomain object.
4555
4556 The ldap suffix will be appended to the values specified for the
4557 ldap user suffix, ldap group suffix, ldap machine suffix, and the
4558 ldap idmap suffix. Each of these should be given only a DN relative
4559 to the ldap suffix.
4560
4561 Default: ldap suffix =
4562
4563 Example: ldap suffix = dc=samba,dc=org
4564
4565 ldap timeout (G)
4566
4567 This parameter defines the number of seconds that Samba should use
4568 as timeout for LDAP operations.
4569
4570 Default: ldap timeout = 15
4571
4572 ldap user suffix (G)
4573
4574 This parameter specifies where users are added to the tree. If this
4575 parameter is unset, the value of ldap suffix will be used instead.
4576 The suffix string is pre-pended to the ldap suffix string so use a
4577 partial DN.
4578
4579 Default: ldap user suffix =
4580
4581 Example: ldap user suffix = ou=people
4582
4583 level2 oplocks (S)
4584
4585 This parameter controls whether Samba supports level2 (read-only)
4586 oplocks on a share.
4587
4588 Level2, or read-only oplocks allow Windows NT clients that have an
4589 oplock on a file to downgrade from a read-write oplock to a
4590 read-only oplock once a second client opens the file (instead of
4591 releasing all oplocks on a second open, as in traditional,
4592 exclusive oplocks). This allows all openers of the file that
4593 support level2 oplocks to cache the file for read-ahead only (ie.
4594 they may not cache writes or lock requests) and increases
4595 performance for many accesses of files that are not commonly
4596 written (such as application .EXE files).
4597
4598 Once one of the clients which have a read-only oplock writes to the
4599 file all clients are notified (no reply is needed or waited for)
4600 and told to break their oplocks to "none" and delete any read-ahead
4601 caches.
4602
4603 It is recommended that this parameter be turned on to speed access
4604 to shared executables.
4605
4606 For more discussions on level2 oplocks see the CIFS spec.
4607
4608 Currently, if kernel oplocks are supported then level2 oplocks are
4609 not granted (even if this parameter is set to yes). Note also, the
4610 oplocks parameter must be set to yes on this share in order for
4611 this parameter to have any effect.
4612
4613 Default: level2 oplocks = yes
4614
4615 lm announce (G)
4616
4617 This parameter determines if nmbd(8) will produce Lanman announce
4618 broadcasts that are needed by OS/2 clients in order for them to see
4619 the Samba server in their browse list. This parameter can have
4620 three values, yes, no, or auto. The default is auto. If set to no
4621 Samba will never produce these broadcasts. If set to yes Samba will
4622 produce Lanman announce broadcasts at a frequency set by the
4623 parameter lm interval. If set to auto Samba will not send Lanman
4624 announce broadcasts by default but will listen for them. If it
4625 hears such a broadcast on the wire it will then start sending them
4626 at a frequency set by the parameter lm interval.
4627
4628 Default: lm announce = auto
4629
4630 Example: lm announce = yes
4631
4632 lm interval (G)
4633
4634 If Samba is set to produce Lanman announce broadcasts needed by
4635 OS/2 clients (see the lm announce parameter) then this parameter
4636 defines the frequency in seconds with which they will be made. If
4637 this is set to zero then no Lanman announcements will be made
4638 despite the setting of the lm announce parameter.
4639
4640 Default: lm interval = 60
4641
4642 Example: lm interval = 120
4643
4644 load printers (G)
4645
4646 A boolean variable that controls whether all printers in the
4647 printcap will be loaded for browsing by default. See the printers
4648 section for more details.
4649
4650 Default: load printers = yes
4651
4652 local master (G)
4653
4654 This option allows nmbd(8) to try and become a local master browser
4655 on a subnet. If set to no then nmbd will not attempt to become a
4656 local master browser on a subnet and will also lose in all browsing
4657 elections. By default this value is set to yes. Setting this value
4658 to yes doesn't mean that Samba will become the local master browser
4659 on a subnet, just that nmbd will participate in elections for local
4660 master browser.
4661
4662 Setting this value to no will cause nmbd never to become a local
4663 master browser.
4664
4665 Default: local master = yes
4666
4667 lock dir
4668
4669 This parameter is a synonym for lock directory.
4670
4671 lock directory (G)
4672
4673 This option specifies the directory where lock files will be
4674 placed. The lock files are used to implement the max connections
4675 option.
4676
4677 Note: This option can not be set inside registry configurations.
4678
4679 The files placed in this directory are not required across service
4680 restarts and can be safely placed on volatile storage (e.g. tmpfs
4681 in Linux)
4682
4683 Default: lock directory = /var/lib/samba/lock
4684
4685 Example: lock directory = /var/run/samba/locks
4686
4687 locking (S)
4688
4689 This controls whether or not locking will be performed by the
4690 server in response to lock requests from the client.
4691
4692 If locking = no, all lock and unlock requests will appear to
4693 succeed and all lock queries will report that the file in question
4694 is available for locking.
4695
4696 If locking = yes, real locking will be performed by the server.
4697
4698 This option may be useful for read-only filesystems which may not
4699 need locking (such as CDROM drives), although setting this
4700 parameter of no is not really recommended even in this case.
4701
4702 Be careful about disabling locking either globally or in a specific
4703 service, as lack of locking may result in data corruption. You
4704 should never need to set this parameter.
4705
4706 Default: locking = yes
4707
4708 lock spin time (G)
4709
4710 The time in milliseconds that smbd should keep waiting to see if a
4711 failed lock request can be granted. This parameter has changed in
4712 default value from Samba 3.0.23 from 10 to 200. The associated lock
4713 spin count parameter is no longer used in Samba 3.0.24. You should
4714 not need to change the value of this parameter.
4715
4716 Default: lock spin time = 200
4717
4718 log file (G)
4719
4720 This option allows you to override the name of the Samba log file
4721 (also known as the debug file).
4722
4723 This option takes the standard substitutions, allowing you to have
4724 separate log files for each user or machine.
4725
4726 No default
4727
4728 Example: log file = /usr/local/samba/var/log.%m
4729
4730 logging (G)
4731
4732 This parameter configures logging backends. Multiple backends can
4733 be specified at the same time, with different log levels for each
4734 backend. The parameter is a list of backends, where each backend is
4735 specified as backend[:option][@loglevel].
4736
4737 The 'option' parameter can be used to pass backend-specific
4738 options.
4739
4740 The log level for a backend is optional, if it is not set for a
4741 backend, all messages are sent to this backend. The parameter log
4742 level determines overall log levels, while the log levels specified
4743 here define what is sent to the individual backends.
4744
4745 When logging is set, it overrides the syslog and syslog only
4746 parameters.
4747
4748 Some backends are only available when Samba has been compiled with
4749 the additional libraries. The overall list of logging backends:
4750
4751 · syslog
4752
4753 · file
4754
4755 · systemd
4756
4757 · lttng
4758
4759 · gpfs
4760
4761 · ringbuf
4762
4763 The ringbuf backend supports an optional size argument to change
4764 the buffer size used, the default is 1 MB: ringbuf:size=NBYTES
4765
4766 Default: logging =
4767
4768 Example: logging = syslog@1 file
4769
4770 debuglevel
4771
4772 This parameter is a synonym for log level.
4773
4774 log level (G)
4775
4776 The value of the parameter (a string) allows the debug level
4777 (logging level) to be specified in the smb.conf file.
4778
4779 This parameter has been extended since the 2.2.x series, now it
4780 allows one to specify the debug level for multiple debug classes
4781 and distinct logfiles for debug classes. This is to give greater
4782 flexibility in the configuration of the system. The following debug
4783 classes are currently implemented:
4784
4785 · all
4786
4787 · tdb
4788
4789 · printdrivers
4790
4791 · lanman
4792
4793 · smb
4794
4795 · smb2
4796
4797 · smb2_credits
4798
4799 · rpc_parse
4800
4801 · rpc_srv
4802
4803 · rpc_cli
4804
4805 · passdb
4806
4807 · sam
4808
4809 · auth
4810
4811 · winbind
4812
4813 · vfs
4814
4815 · idmap
4816
4817 · quota
4818
4819 · acls
4820
4821 · locking
4822
4823 · msdfs
4824
4825 · dmapi
4826
4827 · registry
4828
4829 · scavenger
4830
4831 · dns
4832
4833 · ldb
4834
4835 · tevent
4836
4837 · auth_audit
4838
4839 · auth_json_audit
4840
4841 · kerberos
4842
4843 · dsdb_audit
4844
4845 · dsdb_json_audit
4846
4847 · dsdb_password_audit
4848
4849 · dsdb_password_json_audit
4850
4851 · dsdb_transaction_audit
4852
4853 · dsdb_transaction_json_audit
4854
4855 To configure the logging for specific classes to go into a
4856 different file then log file, you can append @PATH to the class, eg
4857 log level = 1 full_audit:1@/var/log/audit.log.
4858
4859 Authentication and authorization audit information is logged under
4860 the auth_audit, and if Samba was not compiled with --without-json,
4861 a JSON representation is logged under auth_json_audit.
4862
4863 Support is comprehensive for all authentication and authorisation
4864 of user accounts in the Samba Active Directory Domain Controller,
4865 as well as the implicit authentication in password changes. In the
4866 file server, NTLM authentication, SMB and RPC authorization is
4867 covered.
4868
4869 Log levels for auth_audit and auth_audit_json are:
4870
4871 · 2: Authentication Failure
4872
4873 · 3: Authentication Success
4874
4875 · 4: Authorization Success
4876
4877 · 5: Anonymous Authentication and Authorization Success
4878
4879 Changes to the sam.ldb database are logged under the dsdb_audit and
4880 a JSON representation is logged under dsdb_json_audit.
4881
4882 Password changes and Password resets are logged under
4883 dsdb_password_audit and a JSON representation is logged under the
4884 dsdb_password_json_audit.
4885
4886 Transaction rollbacks and prepare commit failures are logged under
4887 the dsdb_transaction_audit and a JSON representation is logged
4888 under the password_json_audit. Logging the transaction details
4889 allows the identification of password and sam.ldb operations that
4890 have been rolled back.
4891
4892 Default: log level = 0
4893
4894 Example: log level = 3 passdb:5 auth:10 winbind:2
4895
4896 Example: log level = 1 full_audit:1@/var/log/audit.log winbind:2
4897
4898 log nt token command (G)
4899
4900 This option can be set to a command that will be called when new nt
4901 tokens are created.
4902
4903 This is only useful for development purposes.
4904
4905 Default: log nt token command =
4906
4907 logon drive (G)
4908
4909 This parameter specifies the local path to which the home directory
4910 will be connected (see logon home) and is only used by NT
4911 Workstations.
4912
4913 Note that this option is only useful if Samba is set up as a logon
4914 server.
4915
4916 Default: logon drive =
4917
4918 Example: logon drive = h:
4919
4920 logon home (G)
4921
4922 This parameter specifies the home directory location when a
4923 Win95/98 or NT Workstation logs into a Samba PDC. It allows you to
4924 do
4925
4926 C:\>NET USE H: /HOME
4927
4928 from a command prompt, for example.
4929
4930 This option takes the standard substitutions, allowing you to have
4931 separate logon scripts for each user or machine.
4932
4933 This parameter can be used with Win9X workstations to ensure that
4934 roaming profiles are stored in a subdirectory of the user's home
4935 directory. This is done in the following way:
4936
4937 logon home = \\%N\%U\profile
4938
4939 This tells Samba to return the above string, with substitutions
4940 made when a client requests the info, generally in a NetUserGetInfo
4941 request. Win9X clients truncate the info to \\server\share when a
4942 user does net use /home but use the whole string when dealing with
4943 profiles.
4944
4945 Note that in prior versions of Samba, the logon path was returned
4946 rather than logon home. This broke net use /home but allowed
4947 profiles outside the home directory. The current implementation is
4948 correct, and can be used for profiles if you use the above trick.
4949
4950 Disable this feature by setting logon home = "" - using the empty
4951 string.
4952
4953 This option is only useful if Samba is set up as a logon server.
4954
4955 Default: logon home = \\%N\%U
4956
4957 Example: logon home = \\remote_smb_server\%U
4958
4959 logon path (G)
4960
4961 This parameter specifies the directory where roaming profiles
4962 (Desktop, NTuser.dat, etc) are stored. Contrary to previous
4963 versions of these manual pages, it has nothing to do with Win 9X
4964 roaming profiles. To find out how to handle roaming profiles for
4965 Win 9X system, see the logon home parameter.
4966
4967 This option takes the standard substitutions, allowing you to have
4968 separate logon scripts for each user or machine. It also specifies
4969 the directory from which the "Application Data", desktop, start
4970 menu, network neighborhood, programs and other folders, and their
4971 contents, are loaded and displayed on your Windows NT client.
4972
4973 The share and the path must be readable by the user for the
4974 preferences and directories to be loaded onto the Windows NT
4975 client. The share must be writeable when the user logs in for the
4976 first time, in order that the Windows NT client can create the
4977 NTuser.dat and other directories. Thereafter, the directories and
4978 any of the contents can, if required, be made read-only. It is not
4979 advisable that the NTuser.dat file be made read-only - rename it to
4980 NTuser.man to achieve the desired effect (a MANdatory profile).
4981
4982 Windows clients can sometimes maintain a connection to the [homes]
4983 share, even though there is no user logged in. Therefore, it is
4984 vital that the logon path does not include a reference to the homes
4985 share (i.e. setting this parameter to \\%N\homes\profile_path will
4986 cause problems).
4987
4988 This option takes the standard substitutions, allowing you to have
4989 separate logon scripts for each user or machine.
4990
4991 Warning
4992 Do not quote the value. Setting this as “\\%N\profile\%U” will
4993 break profile handling. Where the tdbsam or ldapsam passdb
4994 backend is used, at the time the user account is created the
4995 value configured for this parameter is written to the passdb
4996 backend and that value will over-ride the parameter value
4997 present in the smb.conf file. Any error present in the passdb
4998 backend account record must be editted using the appropriate
4999 tool (pdbedit on the command-line, or any other locally
5000 provided system tool).
5001 Note that this option is only useful if Samba is set up as a domain
5002 controller.
5003
5004 Disable the use of roaming profiles by setting the value of this
5005 parameter to the empty string. For example, logon path = "". Take
5006 note that even if the default setting in the smb.conf file is the
5007 empty string, any value specified in the user account settings in
5008 the passdb backend will over-ride the effect of setting this
5009 parameter to null. Disabling of all roaming profile use requires
5010 that the user account settings must also be blank.
5011
5012 An example of use is:
5013
5014 logon path = \\PROFILESERVER\PROFILE\%U
5015
5016 Default: logon path = \\%N\%U\profile
5017
5018 logon script (G)
5019
5020 This parameter specifies the batch file (.bat) or NT command file
5021 (.cmd) to be downloaded and run on a machine when a user
5022 successfully logs in. The file must contain the DOS style CR/LF
5023 line endings. Using a DOS-style editor to create the file is
5024 recommended.
5025
5026 The script must be a relative path to the [netlogon] service. If
5027 the [netlogon] service specifies a path of
5028 /usr/local/samba/netlogon, and logon script = STARTUP.BAT, then the
5029 file that will be downloaded is:
5030
5031 /usr/local/samba/netlogon/STARTUP.BAT
5032
5033 The contents of the batch file are entirely your choice. A
5034 suggested command would be to add NET TIME \\SERVER /SET /YES, to
5035 force every machine to synchronize clocks with the same time
5036 server. Another use would be to add NET USE U: \\SERVER\UTILS for
5037 commonly used utilities, or
5038
5039 NET USE Q: \\SERVER\ISO9001_QA
5040
5041 for example.
5042
5043 Note that it is particularly important not to allow write access to
5044 the [netlogon] share, or to grant users write permission on the
5045 batch files in a secure environment, as this would allow the batch
5046 files to be arbitrarily modified and security to be breached.
5047
5048 This option takes the standard substitutions, allowing you to have
5049 separate logon scripts for each user or machine.
5050
5051 This option is only useful if Samba is set up as a logon server in
5052 a classic domain controller role. If Samba is set up as an Active
5053 Directory domain controller, LDAP attribute scriptPath is used
5054 instead. For configurations where passdb backend = ldapsam is in
5055 use, this option only defines a default value in case LDAP
5056 attribute sambaLogonScript is missing.
5057
5058 Default: logon script =
5059
5060 Example: logon script = scripts\%U.bat
5061
5062 log writeable files on exit (G)
5063
5064 When the network connection between a CIFS client and Samba dies,
5065 Samba has no option but to simply shut down the server side of the
5066 network connection. If this happens, there is a risk of data
5067 corruption because the Windows client did not complete all write
5068 operations that the Windows application requested. Setting this
5069 option to "yes" makes smbd log with a level 0 message a list of all
5070 files that have been opened for writing when the network connection
5071 died. Those are the files that are potentially corrupted. It is
5072 meant as an aid for the administrator to give him a list of files
5073 to do consistency checks on.
5074
5075 Default: log writeable files on exit = no
5076
5077 lppause command (S)
5078
5079 This parameter specifies the command to be executed on the server
5080 host in order to stop printing or spooling a specific print job.
5081
5082 This command should be a program or script which takes a printer
5083 name and job number to pause the print job. One way of implementing
5084 this is by using job priorities, where jobs having a too low
5085 priority won't be sent to the printer.
5086
5087 If a %p is given then the printer name is put in its place. A %j is
5088 replaced with the job number (an integer). On HPUX (see
5089 printing=hpux ), if the -p%p option is added to the lpq command,
5090 the job will show up with the correct status, i.e. if the job
5091 priority is lower than the set fence priority it will have the
5092 PAUSED status, whereas if the priority is equal or higher it will
5093 have the SPOOLED or PRINTING status.
5094
5095 Note that it is good practice to include the absolute path in the
5096 lppause command as the PATH may not be available to the server.
5097
5098 Currently no default value is given to this string, unless the
5099 value of the printing parameter is SYSV, in which case the default
5100 is : lp -i %p-%j -H hold or if the value of the printing parameter
5101 is SOFTQ, then the default is: qstat -s -j%j -h.
5102
5103 Default: lppause command = # determined by printing parameter
5104
5105 Example: lppause command = /usr/bin/lpalt %p-%j -p0
5106
5107 lpq cache time (G)
5108
5109 This controls how long lpq info will be cached for to prevent the
5110 lpq command being called too often. A separate cache is kept for
5111 each variation of the lpq command used by the system, so if you use
5112 different lpq commands for different users then they won't share
5113 cache information.
5114
5115 The cache files are stored in /tmp/lpq.xxxx where xxxx is a hash of
5116 the lpq command in use.
5117
5118 The default is 30 seconds, meaning that the cached results of a
5119 previous identical lpq command will be used if the cached data is
5120 less than 30 seconds old. A large value may be advisable if your
5121 lpq command is very slow.
5122
5123 A value of 0 will disable caching completely.
5124
5125 Default: lpq cache time = 30
5126
5127 Example: lpq cache time = 10
5128
5129 lpq command (S)
5130
5131 This parameter specifies the command to be executed on the server
5132 host in order to obtain lpq-style printer status information.
5133
5134 This command should be a program or script which takes a printer
5135 name as its only parameter and outputs printer status information.
5136
5137 Currently nine styles of printer status information are supported;
5138 BSD, AIX, LPRNG, PLP, SYSV, HPUX, QNX, CUPS, and SOFTQ. This covers
5139 most UNIX systems. You control which type is expected using the
5140 printing = option.
5141
5142 Some clients (notably Windows for Workgroups) may not correctly
5143 send the connection number for the printer they are requesting
5144 status information about. To get around this, the server reports on
5145 the first printer service connected to by the client. This only
5146 happens if the connection number sent is invalid.
5147
5148 If a %p is given then the printer name is put in its place.
5149 Otherwise it is placed at the end of the command.
5150
5151 Note that it is good practice to include the absolute path in the
5152 lpq command as the $PATH may not be available to the server. When
5153 compiled with the CUPS libraries, no lpq command is needed because
5154 smbd will make a library call to obtain the print queue listing.
5155
5156 Default: lpq command = # determined by printing parameter
5157
5158 Example: lpq command = /usr/bin/lpq -P%p
5159
5160 lpresume command (S)
5161
5162 This parameter specifies the command to be executed on the server
5163 host in order to restart or continue printing or spooling a
5164 specific print job.
5165
5166 This command should be a program or script which takes a printer
5167 name and job number to resume the print job. See also the lppause
5168 command parameter.
5169
5170 If a %p is given then the printer name is put in its place. A %j is
5171 replaced with the job number (an integer).
5172
5173 Note that it is good practice to include the absolute path in the
5174 lpresume command as the PATH may not be available to the server.
5175
5176 See also the printing parameter.
5177
5178 Default: Currently no default value is given to this string, unless
5179 the value of the printing parameter is SYSV, in which case the
5180 default is:
5181
5182 lp -i %p-%j -H resume
5183
5184 or if the value of the printing parameter is SOFTQ, then the
5185 default is:
5186
5187 qstat -s -j%j -r
5188
5189 Default: lpresume command = # determined by printing parameter
5190
5191 Example: lpresume command = /usr/bin/lpalt %p-%j -p2
5192
5193 lprm command (S)
5194
5195 This parameter specifies the command to be executed on the server
5196 host in order to delete a print job.
5197
5198 This command should be a program or script which takes a printer
5199 name and job number, and deletes the print job.
5200
5201 If a %p is given then the printer name is put in its place. A %j is
5202 replaced with the job number (an integer).
5203
5204 Note that it is good practice to include the absolute path in the
5205 lprm command as the PATH may not be available to the server.
5206
5207 Examples of use are:
5208
5209 lprm command = /usr/bin/lprm -P%p %j
5210
5211 or
5212
5213 lprm command = /usr/bin/cancel %p-%j
5214
5215 Default: lprm command = # determined by printing parameter
5216
5217 lsa over netlogon (G)
5218
5219 Setting this deprecated option will allow the RPC server in the AD
5220 DC to answer the LSARPC interface on the \pipe\netlogon IPC pipe.
5221
5222 When enabled, this matches the behaviour of Microsoft's Windows,
5223 due to their internal implementation choices.
5224
5225 If it is disabled (the default), the AD DC can offer improved
5226 performance, as the netlogon server is decoupled and can run as
5227 multiple processes.
5228
5229 Default: lsa over netlogon = no
5230
5231 machine password timeout (G)
5232
5233 If a Samba server is a member of a Windows NT or Active Directory
5234 Domain (see the security = domain and security = ads parameters),
5235 then periodically a running winbindd process will try and change
5236 the MACHINE ACCOUNT PASSWORD stored in the TDB called secrets.tdb.
5237 This parameter specifies how often this password will be changed,
5238 in seconds. The default is one week (expressed in seconds), the
5239 same as a Windows NT Domain member server.
5240
5241 See also smbpasswd(8), and the security = domain and security = ads
5242 parameters.
5243
5244 Default: machine password timeout = 604800
5245
5246 magic output (S)
5247
5248 This parameter specifies the name of a file which will contain
5249 output created by a magic script (see the magic script parameter
5250 below).
5251
5252 Warning
5253 If two clients use the same magic script in the same directory
5254 the output file content is undefined.
5255 Default: magic output = # <magic script name>.out
5256
5257 Example: magic output = myfile.txt
5258
5259 magic script (S)
5260
5261 This parameter specifies the name of a file which, if opened, will
5262 be executed by the server when the file is closed. This allows a
5263 UNIX script to be sent to the Samba host and executed on behalf of
5264 the connected user.
5265
5266 Scripts executed in this way will be deleted upon completion
5267 assuming that the user has the appropriate level of privilege and
5268 the file permissions allow the deletion.
5269
5270 If the script generates output, output will be sent to the file
5271 specified by the magic output parameter (see above).
5272
5273 Note that some shells are unable to interpret scripts containing
5274 CR/LF instead of CR as the end-of-line marker. Magic scripts must
5275 be executable as is on the host, which for some hosts and some
5276 shells will require filtering at the DOS end.
5277
5278 Magic scripts are EXPERIMENTAL and should NOT be relied upon.
5279
5280 Default: magic script =
5281
5282 Example: magic script = user.csh
5283
5284 mangled names (S)
5285
5286 This controls whether non-DOS names under UNIX should be mapped to
5287 DOS-compatible names ("mangled") and made visible, or whether
5288 non-DOS names should simply be ignored.
5289
5290 See the section on name mangling for details on how to control the
5291 mangling process.
5292
5293 Possible option settings are
5294
5295 · yes - enables name mangling for all not DOS 8.3
5296 conforming names.
5297
5298 · no - disables any name mangling.
5299
5300 · illegal (default) - does mangling for names with illegal
5301 NTFS characters. This is the most sensible setting for
5302 modern clients that don't use the shortname anymore.
5303
5304 If mangling is used then the mangling method is as follows:
5305
5306 · The first (up to) five alphanumeric characters before
5307 the rightmost dot of the filename are preserved, forced
5308 to upper case, and appear as the first (up to) five
5309 characters of the mangled name.
5310
5311 · A tilde "~" is appended to the first part of the mangled
5312 name, followed by a two-character unique sequence, based
5313 on the original root name (i.e., the original filename
5314 minus its final extension). The final extension is
5315 included in the hash calculation only if it contains any
5316 upper case characters or is longer than three
5317 characters.
5318
5319 Note that the character to use may be specified using
5320 the mangling char option, if you don't like '~'.
5321
5322 · Files whose UNIX name begins with a dot will be
5323 presented as DOS hidden files. The mangled name will be
5324 created as for other filenames, but with the leading dot
5325 removed and "___" as its extension regardless of actual
5326 original extension (that's three underscores).
5327
5328 The two-digit hash value consists of upper case alphanumeric
5329 characters.
5330
5331 This algorithm can cause name collisions only if files in a
5332 directory share the same first five alphanumeric characters. The
5333 probability of such a clash is 1/1300.
5334
5335 The name mangling (if enabled) allows a file to be copied between
5336 UNIX directories from Windows/DOS while retaining the long UNIX
5337 filename. UNIX files can be renamed to a new extension from
5338 Windows/DOS and will retain the same basename. Mangled names do not
5339 change between sessions.
5340
5341 Default: mangled names = illegal
5342
5343 Example: mangled names = no
5344
5345 mangle prefix (G)
5346
5347 controls the number of prefix characters from the original name
5348 used when generating the mangled names. A larger value will give a
5349 weaker hash and therefore more name collisions. The minimum value
5350 is 1 and the maximum value is 6.
5351
5352 mangle prefix is effective only when mangling method is hash2.
5353
5354 Default: mangle prefix = 1
5355
5356 Example: mangle prefix = 4
5357
5358 mangling char (S)
5359
5360 This controls what character is used as the magic character in name
5361 mangling. The default is a '~' but this may interfere with some
5362 software. Use this option to set it to whatever you prefer. This is
5363 effective only when mangling method is hash.
5364
5365 Default: mangling char = ~
5366
5367 Example: mangling char = ^
5368
5369 mangling method (G)
5370
5371 controls the algorithm used for the generating the mangled names.
5372 Can take two different values, "hash" and "hash2". "hash" is the
5373 algorithm that was used in Samba for many years and was the default
5374 in Samba 2.2.x "hash2" is now the default and is newer and
5375 considered a better algorithm (generates less collisions) in the
5376 names. Many Win32 applications store the mangled names and so
5377 changing to algorithms must not be done lightly as these
5378 applications may break unless reinstalled.
5379
5380 Default: mangling method = hash2
5381
5382 Example: mangling method = hash
5383
5384 map acl inherit (S)
5385
5386 This boolean parameter controls whether smbd(8) will attempt to map
5387 the 'inherit' and 'protected' access control entry flags stored in
5388 Windows ACLs into an extended attribute called user.SAMBA_PAI. This
5389 parameter only takes effect if Samba is being run on a platform
5390 that supports extended attributes (Linux and IRIX so far) and
5391 allows the Windows 2000 ACL editor to correctly use inheritance
5392 with the Samba POSIX ACL mapping code.
5393
5394 Default: map acl inherit = no
5395
5396 map archive (S)
5397
5398 This controls whether the DOS archive attribute should be mapped to
5399 the UNIX owner execute bit. The DOS archive bit is set when a file
5400 has been modified since its last backup. One motivation for this
5401 option is to keep Samba/your PC from making any file it touches
5402 from becoming executable under UNIX. This can be quite annoying for
5403 shared source code, documents, etc...
5404
5405 Note that this parameter will be ignored if the store dos
5406 attributes parameter is set, as the DOS archive attribute will then
5407 be stored inside a UNIX extended attribute.
5408
5409 Note that this requires the create mask parameter to be set such
5410 that owner execute bit is not masked out (i.e. it must include
5411 100). See the parameter create mask for details.
5412
5413 Default: map archive = yes
5414
5415 map hidden (S)
5416
5417 This controls whether DOS style hidden files should be mapped to
5418 the UNIX world execute bit.
5419
5420 Note that this parameter will be ignored if the store dos
5421 attributes parameter is set, as the DOS hidden attribute will then
5422 be stored inside a UNIX extended attribute.
5423
5424 Note that this requires the create mask to be set such that the
5425 world execute bit is not masked out (i.e. it must include 001). See
5426 the parameter create mask for details.
5427
5428 Default: map hidden = no
5429
5430 map readonly (S)
5431
5432 This controls how the DOS read only attribute should be mapped from
5433 a UNIX filesystem.
5434
5435 This parameter can take three different values, which tell smbd(8)
5436 how to display the read only attribute on files, where either store
5437 dos attributes is set to No, or no extended attribute is present.
5438 If store dos attributes is set to yes then this parameter is
5439 ignored. This is a new parameter introduced in Samba version
5440 3.0.21.
5441
5442 The three settings are :
5443
5444 · Yes - The read only DOS attribute is mapped to the
5445 inverse of the user or owner write bit in the unix
5446 permission mode set. If the owner write bit is not set,
5447 the read only attribute is reported as being set on the
5448 file. If the read only DOS attribute is set, Samba sets
5449 the owner, group and others write bits to zero. Write
5450 bits set in an ACL are ignored by Samba. If the read
5451 only DOS attribute is unset, Samba simply sets the write
5452 bit of the owner to one.
5453
5454 · Permissions - The read only DOS attribute is mapped to
5455 the effective permissions of the connecting user, as
5456 evaluated by smbd(8) by reading the unix permissions and
5457 POSIX ACL (if present). If the connecting user does not
5458 have permission to modify the file, the read only
5459 attribute is reported as being set on the file.
5460
5461 · No - The read only DOS attribute is unaffected by
5462 permissions, and can only be set by the store dos
5463 attributes method. This may be useful for exporting
5464 mounted CDs.
5465
5466 Note that this parameter will be ignored if the store dos
5467 attributes parameter is set, as the DOS 'read-only' attribute will
5468 then be stored inside a UNIX extended attribute.
5469
5470 The default has changed to no in Samba release 4.9.0 and above to
5471 allow better Windows fileserver compatibility in a default install.
5472 In addition the default setting of store dos attributes has been
5473 changed to Yes in Samba release 4.9.0 and above.
5474
5475 Default: map readonly = no
5476
5477 map system (S)
5478
5479 This controls whether DOS style system files should be mapped to
5480 the UNIX group execute bit.
5481
5482 Note that this parameter will be ignored if the store dos
5483 attributes parameter is set, as the DOS system attribute will then
5484 be stored inside a UNIX extended attribute.
5485
5486 Note that this requires the create mask to be set such that the
5487 group execute bit is not masked out (i.e. it must include 010). See
5488 the parameter create mask for details.
5489
5490 Default: map system = no
5491
5492 map to guest (G)
5493
5494 This parameter can take four different values, which tell smbd(8)
5495 what to do with user login requests that don't match a valid UNIX
5496 user in some way.
5497
5498 The four settings are :
5499
5500 · Never - Means user login requests with an invalid
5501 password are rejected. This is the default.
5502
5503 · Bad User - Means user logins with an invalid password
5504 are rejected, unless the username does not exist, in
5505 which case it is treated as a guest login and mapped
5506 into the guest account.
5507
5508 · Bad Password - Means user logins with an invalid
5509 password are treated as a guest login and mapped into
5510 the guest account. Note that this can cause problems as
5511 it means that any user incorrectly typing their password
5512 will be silently logged on as "guest" - and will not
5513 know the reason they cannot access files they think they
5514 should - there will have been no message given to them
5515 that they got their password wrong. Helpdesk services
5516 will hate you if you set the map to guest parameter this
5517 way :-).
5518
5519 · Bad Uid - Is only applicable when Samba is configured in
5520 some type of domain mode security (security =
5521 {domain|ads}) and means that user logins which are
5522 successfully authenticated but which have no valid Unix
5523 user account (and smbd is unable to create one) should
5524 be mapped to the defined guest account. This was the
5525 default behavior of Samba 2.x releases. Note that if a
5526 member server is running winbindd, this option should
5527 never be required because the nss_winbind library will
5528 export the Windows domain users and groups to the
5529 underlying OS via the Name Service Switch interface.
5530
5531 Note that this parameter is needed to set up "Guest" share
5532 services. This is because in these modes the name of the resource
5533 being requested is not sent to the server until after the server
5534 has successfully authenticated the client so the server cannot make
5535 authentication decisions at the correct time (connection to the
5536 share) for "Guest" shares.
5537
5538 Default: map to guest = Never
5539
5540 Example: map to guest = Bad User
5541
5542 max connections (S)
5543
5544 This option allows the number of simultaneous connections to a
5545 service to be limited. If max connections is greater than 0 then
5546 connections will be refused if this number of connections to the
5547 service are already open. A value of zero mean an unlimited number
5548 of connections may be made.
5549
5550 Record lock files are used to implement this feature. The lock
5551 files will be stored in the directory specified by the lock
5552 directory option.
5553
5554 Default: max connections = 0
5555
5556 Example: max connections = 10
5557
5558 max disk size (G)
5559
5560 This option allows you to put an upper limit on the apparent size
5561 of disks. If you set this option to 100 then all shares will appear
5562 to be not larger than 100 MB in size.
5563
5564 Note that this option does not limit the amount of data you can put
5565 on the disk. In the above case you could still store much more than
5566 100 MB on the disk, but if a client ever asks for the amount of
5567 free disk space or the total disk size then the result will be
5568 bounded by the amount specified in max disk size.
5569
5570 This option is primarily useful to work around bugs in some pieces
5571 of software that can't handle very large disks, particularly disks
5572 over 1GB in size.
5573
5574 A max disk size of 0 means no limit.
5575
5576 Default: max disk size = 0
5577
5578 Example: max disk size = 1000
5579
5580 max log size (G)
5581
5582 This option (an integer in kilobytes) specifies the max size the
5583 log file should grow to. Samba periodically checks the size and if
5584 it is exceeded it will rename the file, adding a .old extension.
5585
5586 A size of 0 means no limit.
5587
5588 Default: max log size = 5000
5589
5590 Example: max log size = 1000
5591
5592 max mux (G)
5593
5594 This option controls the maximum number of outstanding simultaneous
5595 SMB operations that Samba tells the client it will allow. You
5596 should never need to set this parameter.
5597
5598 Default: max mux = 50
5599
5600 max open files (G)
5601
5602 This parameter limits the maximum number of open files that one
5603 smbd(8) file serving process may have open for a client at any one
5604 time. This parameter can be set very high (16384) as Samba uses
5605 only one bit per unopened file. Setting this parameter lower than
5606 16384 will cause Samba to complain and set this value back to the
5607 minimum of 16384, as Windows 7 depends on this number of open file
5608 handles being available.
5609
5610 The limit of the number of open files is usually set by the UNIX
5611 per-process file descriptor limit rather than this parameter so you
5612 should never need to touch this parameter.
5613
5614 Default: max open files = 16384
5615
5616 max print jobs (S)
5617
5618 This parameter limits the maximum number of jobs allowable in a
5619 Samba printer queue at any given moment. If this number is
5620 exceeded, smbd(8) will remote "Out of Space" to the client.
5621
5622 Default: max print jobs = 1000
5623
5624 Example: max print jobs = 5000
5625
5626 max reported print jobs (S)
5627
5628 This parameter limits the maximum number of jobs displayed in a
5629 port monitor for Samba printer queue at any given moment. If this
5630 number is exceeded, the excess jobs will not be shown. A value of
5631 zero means there is no limit on the number of print jobs reported.
5632
5633 Default: max reported print jobs = 0
5634
5635 Example: max reported print jobs = 1000
5636
5637 max smbd processes (G)
5638
5639 This parameter limits the maximum number of smbd(8) processes
5640 concurrently running on a system and is intended as a stopgap to
5641 prevent degrading service to clients in the event that the server
5642 has insufficient resources to handle more than this number of
5643 connections. Remember that under normal operating conditions, each
5644 user will have an smbd(8) associated with him or her to handle
5645 connections to all shares from a given host.
5646
5647 For a Samba ADDC running the standard process model this option
5648 limits the number of processes forked to handle requests. Currently
5649 new processes are only forked for ldap and netlogon requests.
5650
5651 Default: max smbd processes = 0
5652
5653 Example: max smbd processes = 1000
5654
5655 max stat cache size (G)
5656
5657 This parameter limits the size in memory of any stat cache being
5658 used to speed up case insensitive name mappings. It represents the
5659 number of kilobyte (1024) units the stat cache can use. A value of
5660 zero, meaning unlimited, is not advisable due to increased memory
5661 usage. You should not need to change this parameter.
5662
5663 Default: max stat cache size = 512
5664
5665 Example: max stat cache size = 100
5666
5667 max ttl (G)
5668
5669 This option tells nmbd(8) what the default 'time to live' of
5670 NetBIOS names should be (in seconds) when nmbd is requesting a name
5671 using either a broadcast packet or from a WINS server. You should
5672 never need to change this parameter. The default is 3 days.
5673
5674 Default: max ttl = 259200
5675
5676 max wins ttl (G)
5677
5678 This option tells smbd(8) when acting as a WINS server (wins
5679 support = yes) what the maximum 'time to live' of NetBIOS names
5680 that nmbd will grant will be (in seconds). You should never need to
5681 change this parameter. The default is 6 days (518400 seconds).
5682
5683 Default: max wins ttl = 518400
5684
5685 max xmit (G)
5686
5687 This option controls the maximum packet size that will be
5688 negotiated by Samba's smbd(8) for the SMB1 protocol. The default is
5689 16644, which matches the behavior of Windows 2000. A value below
5690 2048 is likely to cause problems. You should never need to change
5691 this parameter from its default value.
5692
5693 Default: max xmit = 16644
5694
5695 Example: max xmit = 8192
5696
5697 mdns name (G)
5698
5699 This parameter controls the name that multicast DNS support
5700 advertises as its' hostname.
5701
5702 The default is to use the NETBIOS name which is typically the
5703 hostname in all capital letters.
5704
5705 A setting of mdns will defer the hostname configuration to the MDNS
5706 library that is used.
5707
5708 Default: mdns name = netbios
5709
5710 message command (G)
5711
5712 This specifies what command to run when the server receives a
5713 WinPopup style message.
5714
5715 This would normally be a command that would deliver the message
5716 somehow. How this is to be done is up to your imagination.
5717
5718 An example is:
5719
5720 message command = csh -c 'xedit %s;rm %s' &
5721
5722 This delivers the message using xedit, then removes it afterwards.
5723 NOTE THAT IT IS VERY IMPORTANT THAT THIS COMMAND RETURN
5724 IMMEDIATELY. That's why I have the '&' on the end. If it doesn't
5725 return immediately then your PCs may freeze when sending messages
5726 (they should recover after 30 seconds, hopefully).
5727
5728 All messages are delivered as the global guest user. The command
5729 takes the standard substitutions, although
5730 %u won't work (%U may be better in this case).
5731
5732 Apart from the standard substitutions, some additional ones apply.
5733 In particular:
5734
5735 · %s = the filename containing the message.
5736
5737 · %t = the destination that the message was sent to
5738 (probably the server name).
5739
5740 · %f = who the message is from.
5741
5742 You could make this command send mail, or whatever else takes your
5743 fancy. Please let us know of any really interesting ideas you have.
5744
5745 Here's a way of sending the messages as mail to root:
5746
5747 message command = /bin/mail -s 'message from %f on %m' root < %s; rm %s
5748
5749 If you don't have a message command then the message won't be
5750 delivered and Samba will tell the sender there was an error.
5751 Unfortunately WfWg totally ignores the error code and carries on
5752 regardless, saying that the message was delivered.
5753
5754 If you want to silently delete it then try:
5755
5756 message command = rm %s
5757
5758 Default: message command =
5759
5760 Example: message command = csh -c 'xedit %s; rm %s' &
5761
5762 min print space (S)
5763
5764 This sets the minimum amount of free disk space that must be
5765 available before a user will be able to spool a print job. It is
5766 specified in kilobytes. The default is 0, which means a user can
5767 always spool a print job.
5768
5769 Default: min print space = 0
5770
5771 Example: min print space = 2000
5772
5773 min receivefile size (G)
5774
5775 This option changes the behavior of smbd(8) when processing
5776 SMBwriteX calls. Any incoming SMBwriteX call on a non-signed
5777 SMB/CIFS connection greater than this value will not be processed
5778 in the normal way but will be passed to any underlying kernel
5779 recvfile or splice system call (if there is no such call Samba will
5780 emulate in user space). This allows zero-copy writes directly from
5781 network socket buffers into the filesystem buffer cache, if
5782 available. It may improve performance but user testing is
5783 recommended. If set to zero Samba processes SMBwriteX calls in the
5784 normal way. To enable POSIX large write support (SMB/CIFS writes up
5785 to 16Mb) this option must be nonzero. The maximum value is 128k.
5786 Values greater than 128k will be silently set to 128k.
5787
5788 Note this option will have NO EFFECT if set on a SMB signed
5789 connection.
5790
5791 The default is zero, which disables this option.
5792
5793 Default: min receivefile size = 0
5794
5795 min wins ttl (G)
5796
5797 This option tells nmbd(8) when acting as a WINS server (wins
5798 support = yes) what the minimum 'time to live' of NetBIOS names
5799 that nmbd will grant will be (in seconds). You should never need to
5800 change this parameter. The default is 6 hours (21600 seconds).
5801
5802 Default: min wins ttl = 21600
5803
5804 mit kdc command (G)
5805
5806 This option specifies the path to the MIT kdc binary.
5807
5808 If the KDC is not installed in the default location and wasn't
5809 correctly detected during build then you should modify this
5810 variable and point it to the correct binary.
5811
5812 Default: mit kdc command = /usr/sbin/krb5kdc
5813
5814 Example: mit kdc command = /opt/mit/sbin/krb5kdc
5815
5816 msdfs proxy (S)
5817
5818 This parameter indicates that the share is a stand-in for another
5819 CIFS share whose location is specified by the value of the
5820 parameter. When clients attempt to connect to this share, they are
5821 redirected to one or multiple, comma separated proxied shares using
5822 the SMB-Dfs protocol.
5823
5824 Only Dfs roots can act as proxy shares. Take a look at the msdfs
5825 root and host msdfs options to find out how to set up a Dfs root
5826 share.
5827
5828 No default
5829
5830 Example: msdfs proxy =
5831 \otherserver\someshare,\otherserver2\someshare
5832
5833 msdfs root (S)
5834
5835 If set to yes, Samba treats the share as a Dfs root and allows
5836 clients to browse the distributed file system tree rooted at the
5837 share directory. Dfs links are specified in the share directory by
5838 symbolic links of the form msdfs:serverA\\shareA,serverB\\shareB
5839 and so on. For more information on setting up a Dfs tree on Samba,
5840 refer to the MSDFS chapter in the Samba3-HOWTO book.
5841
5842 Default: msdfs root = no
5843
5844 msdfs shuffle referrals (S)
5845
5846 If set to yes, Samba will shuffle Dfs referrals for a given Dfs
5847 link if multiple are available, allowing for load balancing across
5848 clients. For more information on setting up a Dfs tree on Samba,
5849 refer to the MSDFS chapter in the Samba3-HOWTO book.
5850
5851 Default: msdfs shuffle referrals = no
5852
5853 multicast dns register (G)
5854
5855 If compiled with proper support for it, Samba will announce itself
5856 with multicast DNS services like for example provided by the Avahi
5857 daemon.
5858
5859 This parameter allows disabling Samba to register itself.
5860
5861 Default: multicast dns register = yes
5862
5863 name cache timeout (G)
5864
5865 Specifies the number of seconds it takes before entries in samba's
5866 hostname resolve cache time out. If the timeout is set to 0. the
5867 caching is disabled.
5868
5869 Default: name cache timeout = 660
5870
5871 Example: name cache timeout = 0
5872
5873 name resolve order (G)
5874
5875 This option is used by the programs in the Samba suite to determine
5876 what naming services to use and in what order to resolve host names
5877 to IP addresses. Its main purpose to is to control how netbios name
5878 resolution is performed. The option takes a space separated string
5879 of name resolution options.
5880
5881 The options are: "lmhosts", "host", "wins" and "bcast". They cause
5882 names to be resolved as follows:
5883
5884 · lmhosts : Lookup an IP address in the Samba lmhosts
5885 file. If the line in lmhosts has no name type attached
5886 to the NetBIOS name (see the manpage for lmhosts for
5887 details) then any name type matches for lookup.
5888
5889 · host : Do a standard host name to IP address resolution,
5890 using the system /etc/hosts, NIS, or DNS lookups. This
5891 method of name resolution is operating system depended
5892 for instance on IRIX or Solaris this may be controlled
5893 by the /etc/nsswitch.conf file. Note that this method is
5894 used only if the NetBIOS name type being queried is the
5895 0x20 (server) name type or 0x1c (domain controllers).
5896 The latter case is only useful for active directory
5897 domains and results in a DNS query for the SRV RR entry
5898 matching _ldap._tcp.domain.
5899
5900 · wins : Query a name with the IP address listed in the
5901 WINSSERVER parameter. If no WINS server has been
5902 specified this method will be ignored.
5903
5904 · bcast : Do a broadcast on each of the known local
5905 interfaces listed in the interfaces parameter. This is
5906 the least reliable of the name resolution methods as it
5907 depends on the target host being on a locally connected
5908 subnet.
5909
5910 The example below will cause the local lmhosts file to be examined
5911 first, followed by a broadcast attempt, followed by a normal system
5912 hostname lookup.
5913
5914 When Samba is functioning in ADS security mode (security = ads) it
5915 is advised to use following settings for name resolve order:
5916
5917 name resolve order = wins bcast
5918
5919 DC lookups will still be done via DNS, but fallbacks to netbios
5920 names will not inundate your DNS servers with needless queries for
5921 DOMAIN<0x1c> lookups.
5922
5923 Default: name resolve order = lmhosts wins host bcast
5924
5925 Example: name resolve order = lmhosts bcast host
5926
5927 socket address
5928
5929 This parameter is a synonym for nbt client socket address.
5930
5931 nbt client socket address (G)
5932
5933 This option allows you to control what address Samba will send NBT
5934 client packets from, and process replies using, including in nmbd.
5935
5936 Setting this option should never be necessary on usual Samba
5937 servers running only one nmbd.
5938
5939 By default Samba will send UDP packets from the OS default address
5940 for the destination, and accept replies on 0.0.0.0.
5941
5942 This parameter is deprecated. See bind interfaces only = Yes and
5943 interfaces for the previous behaviour of controlling the normal
5944 listening sockets.
5945
5946 Default: nbt client socket address = 0.0.0.0
5947
5948 Example: nbt client socket address = 192.168.2.20
5949
5950 nbtd:wins_prepend1Bto1Cqueries (G)
5951
5952 Normally queries for 0x1C names (all logon servers for a domain)
5953 will return the first address of the 0x1B names (domain master
5954 browser and PDC) as first address in the result list. As many
5955 client only use the first address in the list by default, all
5956 clients will use the same server (the PDC). Windows servers have an
5957 option to disable this behavior (since Windows 2000 Service Pack
5958 2).
5959
5960 Default: nbtd:wins_prepend1Bto1Cqueries = yes
5961
5962 nbtd:wins_wins_randomize1Clist (G)
5963
5964 Normally queries for 0x1C names will return the addresses in the
5965 same order as they're stored in the database, that means first all
5966 addresses which have been directly registered at the local wins
5967 server and then all addresses registered at other servers. Windows
5968 servers have an option to change this behavior and randomize the
5969 returned addresses. Set this parameter to "yes" and Samba will sort
5970 the address list depending on the client address and the matching
5971 bits of the addresses, the first address is randomized based on
5972 depending on the "nbtd:wins_randomize1Clist_mask" parameter.
5973
5974 Default: nbtd:wins_wins_randomize1Clist = no
5975
5976 nbtd:wins_randomize1Clist_mask (G)
5977
5978 If the "nbtd:wins_randomize1Clist" parameter is set to "yes", then
5979 randomizing of the first returned address is based on the specified
5980 netmask. If there are addresses which are in the same subnet as the
5981 client address, the first returned address is randomly chosen out
5982 them. Otherwise the first returned address is randomly chosen out
5983 of all addresses.
5984
5985 Default: nbtd:wins_randomize1Clist_mask = 255.255.255.0
5986
5987 nbt port (G)
5988
5989 Specifies which port the server should use for NetBIOS over IP name
5990 services traffic.
5991
5992 Default: nbt port = 137
5993
5994 ncalrpc dir (G)
5995
5996 This directory will hold a series of named pipes to allow RPC over
5997 inter-process communication.
5998
5999 This will allow Samba and other unix processes to interact over
6000 DCE/RPC without using TCP/IP. Additionally a sub-directory 'np' has
6001 restricted permissions, and allows a trusted communication channel
6002 between Samba processes
6003
6004 Default: ncalrpc dir = /run/samba/ncalrpc
6005
6006 Example: ncalrpc dir = /var/run/samba/ncalrpc
6007
6008 netbios aliases (G)
6009
6010 This is a list of NetBIOS names that nmbd will advertise as
6011 additional names by which the Samba server is known. This allows
6012 one machine to appear in browse lists under multiple names. If a
6013 machine is acting as a browse server or logon server none of these
6014 names will be advertised as either browse server or logon servers,
6015 only the primary name of the machine will be advertised with these
6016 capabilities.
6017
6018 Default: netbios aliases = # empty string (no additional names)
6019
6020 Example: netbios aliases = TEST TEST1 TEST2
6021
6022 netbios name (G)
6023
6024 This sets the NetBIOS name by which a Samba server is known. By
6025 default it is the same as the first component of the host's DNS
6026 name. If a machine is a browse server or logon server this name (or
6027 the first component of the hosts DNS name) will be the name that
6028 these services are advertised under.
6029
6030 Note that the maximum length for a NetBIOS name is 15 characters.
6031
6032 There is a bug in Samba that breaks operation of browsing and
6033 access to shares if the netbios name is set to the literal name
6034 PIPE. To avoid this problem, do not name your Samba server PIPE.
6035
6036 Default: netbios name = # machine DNS name
6037
6038 Example: netbios name = MYNAME
6039
6040 netbios scope (G)
6041
6042 This sets the NetBIOS scope that Samba will operate under. This
6043 should not be set unless every machine on your LAN also sets this
6044 value.
6045
6046 Default: netbios scope =
6047
6048 neutralize nt4 emulation (G)
6049
6050 This option controls whether winbindd sends the
6051 NETLOGON_NEG_NEUTRALIZE_NT4_EMULATION flag in order to bypass the
6052 NT4 emulation of a domain controller.
6053
6054 Typically you should not need set this. It can be useful for
6055 upgrades from NT4 to AD domains.
6056
6057 The behavior can be controlled per netbios domain by using
6058 'neutralize nt4 emulation:NETBIOSDOMAIN = yes' as option.
6059
6060 Default: neutralize nt4 emulation = no
6061
6062 NIS homedir (G)
6063
6064 Get the home share server from a NIS map. For UNIX systems that use
6065 an automounter, the user's home directory will often be mounted on
6066 a workstation on demand from a remote server.
6067
6068 When the Samba logon server is not the actual home directory
6069 server, but is mounting the home directories via NFS then two
6070 network hops would be required to access the users home directory
6071 if the logon server told the client to use itself as the SMB server
6072 for home directories (one over SMB and one over NFS). This can be
6073 very slow.
6074
6075 This option allows Samba to return the home share as being on a
6076 different server to the logon server and as long as a Samba daemon
6077 is running on the home directory server, it will be mounted on the
6078 Samba client directly from the directory server. When Samba is
6079 returning the home share to the client, it will consult the NIS map
6080 specified in homedir map and return the server listed there.
6081
6082 Note that for this option to work there must be a working NIS
6083 system and the Samba server with this option must also be a logon
6084 server.
6085
6086 Default: NIS homedir = no
6087
6088 nmbd bind explicit broadcast (G)
6089
6090 This option causes nmbd(8) to explicitly bind to the broadcast
6091 address of the local subnets. This is needed to make nmbd work
6092 correctly in combination with the socket address option. You should
6093 not need to unset this option.
6094
6095 Default: nmbd bind explicit broadcast = yes
6096
6097 nsupdate command (G)
6098
6099 This option sets the path to the nsupdate command which is used for
6100 GSS-TSIG dynamic DNS updates.
6101
6102 Default: nsupdate command = /usr/bin/nsupdate -g
6103
6104 nt acl support (S)
6105
6106 This boolean parameter controls whether smbd(8) will attempt to map
6107 UNIX permissions into Windows NT access control lists. The UNIX
6108 permissions considered are the traditional UNIX owner and group
6109 permissions, as well as POSIX ACLs set on any files or directories.
6110 This parameter was formally a global parameter in releases prior to
6111 2.2.2.
6112
6113 Default: nt acl support = yes
6114
6115 ntlm auth (G)
6116
6117 This parameter determines whether or not smbd(8) will attempt to
6118 authenticate users using the NTLM encrypted password response for
6119 this local passdb (SAM or account database).
6120
6121 If disabled, both NTLM and LanMan authencication against the local
6122 passdb is disabled.
6123
6124 Note that these settings apply only to local users, authentication
6125 will still be forwarded to and NTLM authentication accepted against
6126 any domain we are joined to, and any trusted domain, even if
6127 disabled or if NTLMv2-only is enforced here. To control NTLM
6128 authentiation for domain users, this must option must be configured
6129 on each DC.
6130
6131 By default with ntlm auth set to ntlmv2-only only NTLMv2 logins
6132 will be permitted. All modern clients support NTLMv2 by default,
6133 but some older clients will require special configuration to use
6134 it.
6135
6136 The primary user of NTLMv1 is MSCHAPv2 for VPNs and 802.1x.
6137
6138 The available settings are:
6139
6140 · ntlmv1-permitted (alias yes) - Allow NTLMv1 and above
6141 for all clients.
6142
6143 This is the required setting for to enable the lanman
6144 auth parameter.
6145
6146 · ntlmv2-only (alias no) - Do not allow NTLMv1 to be used,
6147 but permit NTLMv2.
6148
6149 · mschapv2-and-ntlmv2-only - Only allow NTLMv1 when the
6150 client promises that it is providing MSCHAPv2
6151 authentication (such as the ntlm_auth tool).
6152
6153 · disabled - Do not accept NTLM (or LanMan) authentication
6154 of any level, nor permit NTLM password changes.
6155
6156 The default changed from yes to no with Samba 4.5. The default
6157 changed again to ntlmv2-only with Samba 4.7, however the behaviour
6158 is unchanged.
6159
6160 Default: ntlm auth = ntlmv2-only
6161
6162 nt pipe support (G)
6163
6164 This boolean parameter controls whether smbd(8) will allow Windows
6165 NT clients to connect to the NT SMB specific IPC$ pipes. This is a
6166 developer debugging option and can be left alone.
6167
6168 Default: nt pipe support = yes
6169
6170 ntp signd socket directory (G)
6171
6172 This setting controls the location of the socket that the NTP
6173 daemon uses to communicate with Samba for signing packets.
6174
6175 If a non-default path is specified here, then it is also necessary
6176 to make NTP aware of the new path using the ntpsigndsocket
6177 directive in ntp.conf.
6178
6179 Default: ntp signd socket directory = /var/lib/samba/ntp_signd
6180
6181 nt status support (G)
6182
6183 This boolean parameter controls whether smbd(8) will negotiate NT
6184 specific status support with Windows NT/2k/XP clients. This is a
6185 developer debugging option and should be left alone. If this option
6186 is set to no then Samba offers exactly the same DOS error codes
6187 that versions prior to Samba 2.2.3 reported.
6188
6189 You should not need to ever disable this parameter.
6190
6191 Default: nt status support = yes
6192
6193 ntvfs handler (S)
6194
6195 This specifies the NTVFS handlers for this share.
6196
6197 · unixuid: Sets up user credentials based on POSIX
6198 gid/uid.
6199
6200 · cifs: Proxies a remote CIFS FS. Mainly useful for
6201 testing.
6202
6203 · nbench: Filter module that saves data useful to the
6204 nbench benchmark suite.
6205
6206 · ipc: Allows using SMB for inter process communication.
6207 Only used for the IPC$ share.
6208
6209 · posix: Maps POSIX FS semantics to NT semantics
6210
6211 · print: Allows printing over SMB. This is LANMAN-style
6212 printing, not the be confused with the spoolss DCE/RPC
6213 interface used by later versions of Windows.
6214
6215 Note that this option is only used when the NTVFS file server is in
6216 use. It is not used with the (default) s3fs file server.
6217
6218 Default: ntvfs handler = unixuid, default
6219
6220 null passwords (G)
6221
6222 Allow or disallow client access to accounts that have null
6223 passwords.
6224
6225 See also smbpasswd(5).
6226
6227 Default: null passwords = no
6228
6229 obey pam restrictions (G)
6230
6231 When Samba 3.0 is configured to enable PAM support (i.e.
6232 --with-pam), this parameter will control whether or not Samba
6233 should obey PAM's account and session management directives. The
6234 default behavior is to use PAM for clear text authentication only
6235 and to ignore any account or session management. Note that Samba
6236 always ignores PAM for authentication in the case of encrypt
6237 passwords = yes. The reason is that PAM modules cannot support the
6238 challenge/response authentication mechanism needed in the presence
6239 of SMB password encryption.
6240
6241 Default: obey pam restrictions = no
6242
6243 old password allowed period (G)
6244
6245 Number of minutes to permit an NTLM login after a password change
6246 or reset using the old password. This allows the user to re-cache
6247 the new password on multiple clients without disrupting a network
6248 reconnection in the meantime.
6249
6250 This parameter only applies when server role is set to Active
6251 Directory Domain Controller
6252
6253 Default: old password allowed period = 60
6254
6255 oplock break wait time (G)
6256
6257 This is a tuning parameter added due to bugs in both Windows 9x and
6258 WinNT. If Samba responds to a client too quickly when that client
6259 issues an SMB that can cause an oplock break request, then the
6260 network client can fail and not respond to the break request. This
6261 tuning parameter (which is set in milliseconds) is the amount of
6262 time Samba will wait before sending an oplock break request to such
6263 (broken) clients.
6264
6265 Warning
6266 DO NOT CHANGE THIS PARAMETER UNLESS YOU HAVE READ AND
6267 UNDERSTOOD THE SAMBA OPLOCK CODE.
6268 Default: oplock break wait time = 0
6269
6270 oplocks (S)
6271
6272 This boolean option tells smbd whether to issue oplocks
6273 (opportunistic locks) to file open requests on this share. The
6274 oplock code can dramatically (approx. 30% or more) improve the
6275 speed of access to files on Samba servers. It allows the clients to
6276 aggressively cache files locally and you may want to disable this
6277 option for unreliable network environments (it is turned on by
6278 default in Windows NT Servers).
6279
6280 Oplocks may be selectively turned off on certain files with a
6281 share. See the veto oplock files parameter. On some systems oplocks
6282 are recognized by the underlying operating system. This allows data
6283 synchronization between all access to oplocked files, whether it be
6284 via Samba or NFS or a local UNIX process. See the kernel oplocks
6285 parameter for details.
6286
6287 Default: oplocks = yes
6288
6289 os2 driver map (G)
6290
6291 The parameter is used to define the absolute path to a file
6292 containing a mapping of Windows NT printer driver names to OS/2
6293 printer driver names. The format is:
6294
6295 <nt driver name> = <os2 driver name>.<device name>
6296
6297 For example, a valid entry using the HP LaserJet 5 printer driver
6298 would appear as HP LaserJet 5L = LASERJET.HP LaserJet 5L.
6299
6300 The need for the file is due to the printer driver namespace
6301 problem described in the chapter on Classical Printing in the
6302 Samba3-HOWTO book. For more details on OS/2 clients, please refer
6303 to chapter on other clients in the Samba3-HOWTO book.
6304
6305 Default: os2 driver map =
6306
6307 os level (G)
6308
6309 This integer value controls what level Samba advertises itself as
6310 for browse elections. The value of this parameter determines
6311 whether nmbd(8) has a chance of becoming a local master browser for
6312 the workgroup in the local broadcast area.
6313
6314 Note: By default, Samba will win a local master browsing election
6315 over all Microsoft operating systems except a Windows NT 4.0/2000
6316 Domain Controller. This means that a misconfigured Samba host can
6317 effectively isolate a subnet for browsing purposes. This parameter
6318 is largely auto-configured in the Samba-3 release series and it is
6319 seldom necessary to manually override the default setting. Please
6320 refer to the chapter on Network Browsing in the Samba-3 HOWTO
6321 document for further information regarding the use of this
6322 parameter. Note: The maximum value for this parameter is 255. If
6323 you use higher values, counting will start at 0!
6324
6325 Default: os level = 20
6326
6327 Example: os level = 65
6328
6329 pam password change (G)
6330
6331 With the addition of better PAM support in Samba 2.2, this
6332 parameter, it is possible to use PAM's password change control flag
6333 for Samba. If enabled, then PAM will be used for password changes
6334 when requested by an SMB client instead of the program listed in
6335 passwd program. It should be possible to enable this without
6336 changing your passwd chat parameter for most setups.
6337
6338 Default: pam password change = no
6339
6340 panic action (G)
6341
6342 This is a Samba developer option that allows a system command to be
6343 called when either smbd(8) or nmbd(8) crashes. This is usually used
6344 to draw attention to the fact that a problem occurred.
6345
6346 Default: panic action =
6347
6348 Example: panic action = /bin/sleep 90000
6349
6350 passdb backend (G)
6351
6352 This option allows the administrator to chose which backend will be
6353 used for storing user and possibly group information. This allows
6354 you to swap between different storage mechanisms without recompile.
6355
6356 The parameter value is divided into two parts, the backend's name,
6357 and a 'location' string that has meaning only to that particular
6358 backed. These are separated by a : character.
6359
6360 Available backends can include:
6361
6362 · smbpasswd - The old plaintext passdb backend. Some Samba
6363 features will not work if this passdb backend is used.
6364 Takes a path to the smbpasswd file as an optional
6365 argument.
6366
6367 · tdbsam - The TDB based password storage backend. Takes a
6368 path to the TDB as an optional argument (defaults to
6369 passdb.tdb in the private dir directory.
6370
6371 · ldapsam - The LDAP based passdb backend. Takes an LDAP
6372 URL as an optional argument (defaults to
6373 ldap://localhost)
6374
6375 LDAP connections should be secured where possible. This
6376 may be done using either Start-TLS (see ldap ssl) or by
6377 specifying ldaps:// in the URL argument.
6378
6379 Multiple servers may also be specified in double-quotes.
6380 Whether multiple servers are supported or not and the
6381 exact syntax depends on the LDAP library you use.
6382
6383
6384 Examples of use are:
6385
6386 passdb backend = tdbsam:/etc/samba/private/passdb.tdb
6387
6388 or multi server LDAP URL with OpenLDAP library:
6389
6390 passdb backend = ldapsam:"ldap://ldap-1.example.com ldap://ldap-2.example.com"
6391
6392 or multi server LDAP URL with Netscape based LDAP library:
6393
6394 passdb backend = ldapsam:"ldap://ldap-1.example.com ldap-2.example.com"
6395
6396 Default: passdb backend = tdbsam
6397
6398 passdb expand explicit (G)
6399
6400 This parameter controls whether Samba substitutes %-macros in the
6401 passdb fields if they are explicitly set. We used to expand macros
6402 here, but this turned out to be a bug because the Windows client
6403 can expand a variable %G_osver% in which %G would have been
6404 substituted by the user's primary group.
6405
6406 Default: passdb expand explicit = no
6407
6408 passwd chat (G)
6409
6410 This string controls the "chat" conversation that takes places
6411 between smbd(8) and the local password changing program to change
6412 the user's password. The string describes a sequence of
6413 response-receive pairs that smbd(8) uses to determine what to send
6414 to the passwd program and what to expect back. If the expected
6415 output is not received then the password is not changed.
6416
6417 This chat sequence is often quite site specific, depending on what
6418 local methods are used for password control (such as NIS etc).
6419
6420 Note that this parameter only is used if the unix password sync
6421 parameter is set to yes. This sequence is then called AS ROOT when
6422 the SMB password in the smbpasswd file is being changed, without
6423 access to the old password cleartext. This means that root must be
6424 able to reset the user's password without knowing the text of the
6425 previous password. In the presence of NIS/YP, this means that the
6426 passwd program must be executed on the NIS master.
6427
6428 The string can contain the macro %n which is substituted for the
6429 new password. The old password (%o) is only available when encrypt
6430 passwords has been disabled. The chat sequence can also contain the
6431 standard macros \n, \r, \t and \s to give line-feed,
6432 carriage-return, tab and space. The chat sequence string can also
6433 contain a '*' which matches any sequence of characters. Double
6434 quotes can be used to collect strings with spaces in them into a
6435 single string.
6436
6437 If the send string in any part of the chat sequence is a full stop
6438 ".", then no string is sent. Similarly, if the expect string is a
6439 full stop then no string is expected.
6440
6441 If the pam password change parameter is set to yes, the chat pairs
6442 may be matched in any order, and success is determined by the PAM
6443 result, not any particular output. The \n macro is ignored for PAM
6444 conversions.
6445
6446 Default: passwd chat = *new*password* %n\n *new*password* %n\n
6447 *changed*
6448
6449 Example: passwd chat = "*Enter NEW password*" %n\n "*Reenter NEW
6450 password*" %n\n "*Password changed*"
6451
6452 passwd chat debug (G)
6453
6454 This boolean specifies if the passwd chat script parameter is run
6455 in debug mode. In this mode the strings passed to and received from
6456 the passwd chat are printed in the smbd(8) log with a debug level
6457 of 100. This is a dangerous option as it will allow plaintext
6458 passwords to be seen in the smbd log. It is available to help Samba
6459 admins debug their passwd chat scripts when calling the passwd
6460 program and should be turned off after this has been done. This
6461 option has no effect if the pam password change parameter is set.
6462 This parameter is off by default.
6463
6464 Default: passwd chat debug = no
6465
6466 passwd chat timeout (G)
6467
6468 This integer specifies the number of seconds smbd will wait for an
6469 initial answer from a passwd chat script being run. Once the
6470 initial answer is received the subsequent answers must be received
6471 in one tenth of this time. The default it two seconds.
6472
6473 Default: passwd chat timeout = 2
6474
6475 passwd program (G)
6476
6477 The name of a program that can be used to set UNIX user passwords.
6478 Any occurrences of %u will be replaced with the user name. The user
6479 name is checked for existence before calling the password changing
6480 program.
6481
6482 Also note that many passwd programs insist in reasonable passwords,
6483 such as a minimum length, or the inclusion of mixed case chars and
6484 digits. This can pose a problem as some clients (such as Windows
6485 for Workgroups) uppercase the password before sending it.
6486
6487 Note that if the unix password sync parameter is set to yes then
6488 this program is called AS ROOT before the SMB password in the
6489 smbpasswd file is changed. If this UNIX password change fails, then
6490 smbd will fail to change the SMB password also (this is by design).
6491
6492 If the unix password sync parameter is set this parameter MUST USE
6493 ABSOLUTE PATHS for ALL programs called, and must be examined for
6494 security implications. Note that by default unix password sync is
6495 set to no.
6496
6497 Default: passwd program =
6498
6499 Example: passwd program = /bin/passwd %u
6500
6501 password hash gpg key ids (G)
6502
6503 If samba is running as an active directory domain controller, it is
6504 possible to store the cleartext password of accounts in a
6505 PGP/OpenGPG encrypted form.
6506
6507 You can specify one or more recipients by key id or user id. Note
6508 that 32bit key ids are not allowed, specify at least 64bit.
6509
6510 The value is stored as 'Primary:SambaGPG' in the
6511 supplementalCredentials attribute.
6512
6513 As password changes can occur on any domain controller, you should
6514 configure this on each of them. Note that this feature is currently
6515 available only on Samba domain controllers.
6516
6517 This option is only available if samba was compiled with gpgme
6518 support.
6519
6520 You may need to export the GNUPGHOME environment variable before
6521 starting samba. It is strongly recommended to only store the
6522 public key in this location. The private key is not used for
6523 encryption and should be only stored where decryption is required.
6524
6525 Being able to restore the cleartext password helps, when they need
6526 to be imported into other authentication systems later (see
6527 samba-tool user getpassword) or you want to keep the passwords in
6528 sync with another system, e.g. an OpenLDAP server (see samba-tool
6529 user syncpasswords).
6530
6531 While this option needs to be configured on all domain controllers,
6532 the samba-tool user syncpasswords command should run on a single
6533 domain controller only (typically the PDC-emulator).
6534
6535 Default: password hash gpg key ids =
6536
6537 Example: password hash gpg key ids = 4952E40301FAB41A
6538
6539 Example: password hash gpg key ids = selftest@samba.example.com
6540
6541 Example: password hash gpg key ids = selftest@samba.example.com,
6542 4952E40301FAB41A
6543
6544 password hash userPassword schemes (G)
6545
6546 This parameter determines whether or not samba(8) acting as an
6547 Active Directory Domain Controller will attempt to store additional
6548 passwords hash types for the user
6549
6550 The values are stored as 'Primary:userPassword' in the
6551 supplementalCredentials attribute. The value of this option is a
6552 hash type.
6553
6554 The currently supported hash types are:
6555
6556 · CryptSHA256
6557
6558 · CryptSHA512
6559
6560 Multiple instances of a hash type may be computed and stored. The
6561 password hashes are calculated using the crypt(3) call. The number
6562 of rounds used to compute the hash can be specified by adding
6563 ':rounds=xxxx' to the hash type, i.e. CryptSHA512:rounds=4500 would
6564 calculate an SHA512 hash using 4500 rounds. If not specified the
6565 Operating System defaults for crypt(3) are used.
6566
6567 As password changes can occur on any domain controller, you should
6568 configure this on each of them. Note that this feature is currently
6569 available only on Samba domain controllers.
6570
6571 Currently the NT Hash of the password is recorded when these hashes
6572 are calculated and stored. When retrieving the hashes the current
6573 value of the NT Hash is checked against the stored NT Hash. This
6574 detects password changes that have not updated the password hashes.
6575 In this case samba-tool user will ignore the stored hash values.
6576
6577 Being able to obtain the hashed password helps, when they need to
6578 be imported into other authentication systems later (see samba-tool
6579 user getpassword) or you want to keep the passwords in sync with
6580 another system, e.g. an OpenLDAP server (see samba-tool user
6581 syncpasswords).
6582
6583 Related command: unix password sync
6584
6585 Default: password hash userPassword schemes =
6586
6587 Example: password hash userPassword schemes = CryptSHA256
6588
6589 Example: password hash userPassword schemes = CryptSHA256
6590 CryptSHA512
6591
6592 Example: password hash userPassword schemes =
6593 CryptSHA256:rounds=5000 CryptSHA512:rounds=7000
6594
6595 password server (G)
6596
6597 By specifying the name of a domain controller with this option, and
6598 using security = [ads|domain] it is possible to get Samba to do all
6599 its username/password validation using a specific remote server.
6600
6601 Ideally, this option should not be used, as the default '*'
6602 indicates to Samba to determine the best DC to contact dynamically,
6603 just as all other hosts in an AD domain do. This allows the domain
6604 to be maintained (addition and removal of domain controllers)
6605 without modification to the smb.conf file. The cryptographic
6606 protection on the authenticated RPC calls used to verify passwords
6607 ensures that this default is safe.
6608
6609 It is strongly recommended that you use the default of '*', however
6610 if in your particular environment you have reason to specify a
6611 particular DC list, then the list of machines in this option must
6612 be a list of names or IP addresses of Domain controllers for the
6613 Domain. If you use the default of '*', or list several hosts in the
6614 password server option then smbd will try each in turn till it
6615 finds one that responds. This is useful in case your primary server
6616 goes down.
6617
6618 If the list of servers contains both names/IP's and the '*'
6619 character, the list is treated as a list of preferred domain
6620 controllers, but an auto lookup of all remaining DC's will be added
6621 to the list as well. Samba will not attempt to optimize this list
6622 by locating the closest DC.
6623
6624 If parameter is a name, it is looked up using the parameter name
6625 resolve order and so may resolved by any method and order described
6626 in that parameter.
6627
6628 Default: password server = *
6629
6630 Example: password server = NT-PDC, NT-BDC1, NT-BDC2, *
6631
6632 Example: password server = windc.mydomain.com:389 192.168.1.101 *
6633
6634 directory
6635
6636 This parameter is a synonym for path.
6637
6638 path (S)
6639
6640 This parameter specifies a directory to which the user of the
6641 service is to be given access. In the case of printable services,
6642 this is where print data will spool prior to being submitted to the
6643 host for printing.
6644
6645 For a printable service offering guest access, the service should
6646 be readonly and the path should be world-writeable and have the
6647 sticky bit set. This is not mandatory of course, but you probably
6648 won't get the results you expect if you do otherwise.
6649
6650 Any occurrences of %u in the path will be replaced with the UNIX
6651 username that the client is using on this connection. Any
6652 occurrences of %m will be replaced by the NetBIOS name of the
6653 machine they are connecting from. These replacements are very
6654 useful for setting up pseudo home directories for users.
6655
6656 Note that this path will be based on root dir if one was specified.
6657
6658 Default: path =
6659
6660 Example: path = /home/fred
6661
6662 perfcount module (G)
6663
6664 This parameter specifies the perfcount backend to be used when
6665 monitoring SMB operations. Only one perfcount module may be used,
6666 and it must implement all of the apis contained in the
6667 smb_perfcount_handler structure defined in smb.h.
6668
6669 No default
6670
6671 pid directory (G)
6672
6673 This option specifies the directory where pid files will be placed.
6674
6675 Default: pid directory = /run
6676
6677 Example: pid directory = /var/run/
6678
6679 posix locking (S)
6680
6681 The smbd(8) daemon maintains an database of file locks obtained by
6682 SMB clients. The default behavior is to map this internal database
6683 to POSIX locks. This means that file locks obtained by SMB clients
6684 are consistent with those seen by POSIX compliant applications
6685 accessing the files via a non-SMB method (e.g. NFS or local file
6686 access). It is very unlikely that you need to set this parameter to
6687 "no", unless you are sharing from an NFS mount, which is not a good
6688 idea in the first place.
6689
6690 Default: posix locking = yes
6691
6692 postexec (S)
6693
6694 This option specifies a command to be run whenever the service is
6695 disconnected. It takes the usual substitutions. The command may be
6696 run as the root on some systems.
6697
6698 An interesting example may be to unmount server resources:
6699
6700 postexec = /etc/umount /cdrom
6701
6702 Default: postexec =
6703
6704 Example: postexec = echo \"%u disconnected from %S from %m (%I)\"
6705 >> /tmp/log
6706
6707 exec
6708
6709 This parameter is a synonym for preexec.
6710
6711 preexec (S)
6712
6713 This option specifies a command to be run whenever the service is
6714 connected to. It takes the usual substitutions.
6715
6716 An interesting example is to send the users a welcome message every
6717 time they log in. Maybe a message of the day? Here is an example:
6718
6719 preexec = csh -c 'echo \"Welcome to %S!\" |
6720 /usr/local/samba/bin/smbclient -M %m -I %I' &
6721
6722 Of course, this could get annoying after a while :-)
6723
6724 See also preexec close and postexec.
6725
6726 Default: preexec =
6727
6728 Example: preexec = echo \"%u connected to %S from %m (%I)\" >>
6729 /tmp/log
6730
6731 preexec close (S)
6732
6733 This boolean option controls whether a non-zero return code from
6734 preexec should close the service being connected to.
6735
6736 Default: preexec close = no
6737
6738 prefered master
6739
6740 This parameter is a synonym for preferred master.
6741
6742 preferred master (G)
6743
6744 This boolean parameter controls if nmbd(8) is a preferred master
6745 browser for its workgroup.
6746
6747 If this is set to yes, on startup, nmbd will force an election, and
6748 it will have a slight advantage in winning the election. It is
6749 recommended that this parameter is used in conjunction with domain
6750 master = yes, so that nmbd can guarantee becoming a domain master.
6751
6752 Use this option with caution, because if there are several hosts
6753 (whether Samba servers, Windows 95 or NT) that are preferred master
6754 browsers on the same subnet, they will each periodically and
6755 continuously attempt to become the local master browser. This will
6756 result in unnecessary broadcast traffic and reduced browsing
6757 capabilities.
6758
6759 Default: preferred master = auto
6760
6761 prefork backoff increment (G)
6762
6763 This option specifies the number of seconds added to the delay
6764 before a prefork master or worker process is restarted. The restart
6765 is initially zero, the prefork backoff increment is added to the
6766 delay on each restart up to the value specified by "prefork maximum
6767 backoff".
6768
6769 Additionally the the backoff for an individual service by using
6770 "prefork backoff increment: service name" i.e. "prefork backoff
6771 increment:ldap = 2" to set the backoff increment to 2.
6772
6773 If the backoff increment is 2 and the maximum backoff is 5. There
6774 will be a zero second delay for the first restart. A two second
6775 delay for the second restart. A four second delay for the third and
6776 any subsequent restarts
6777
6778 Default: prefork backoff increment = 10
6779
6780 prefork children (G)
6781
6782 This option controls the number of worker processes that are
6783 started for each service when prefork process model is enabled (see
6784 samba(8) -M) The prefork children are only started for those
6785 services that support prefork (currently ldap, kdc and netlogon).
6786 For processes that don't support preforking all requests are
6787 handled by a single process for that service.
6788
6789 This should be set to a small multiple of the number of CPU's
6790 available on the server
6791
6792 Additionally the number of prefork children can be specified for an
6793 individual service by using "prefork children: service name" i.e.
6794 "prefork children:ldap = 8" to set the number of ldap worker
6795 processes.
6796
6797 Default: prefork children = 4
6798
6799 prefork maximum backoff (G)
6800
6801 This option controls the maximum delay before a failed pre-fork
6802 process is restarted.
6803
6804 Default: prefork maximum backoff = 120
6805
6806 preload modules (G)
6807
6808 This is a list of paths to modules that should be loaded into smbd
6809 before a client connects. This improves the speed of smbd when
6810 reacting to new connections somewhat.
6811
6812 Default: preload modules =
6813
6814 Example: preload modules = /usr/lib/samba/passdb/mysql.so
6815
6816 preserve case (S)
6817
6818 This controls if new filenames are created with the case that the
6819 client passes, or if they are forced to be the default case.
6820
6821 See the section on NAME MANGLING for a fuller discussion.
6822
6823 Default: preserve case = yes
6824
6825 print ok
6826
6827 This parameter is a synonym for printable.
6828
6829 printable (S)
6830
6831 If this parameter is yes, then clients may open, write to and
6832 submit spool files on the directory specified for the service.
6833
6834 Note that a printable service will ALWAYS allow writing to the
6835 service path (user privileges permitting) via the spooling of print
6836 data. The read only parameter controls only non-printing access to
6837 the resource.
6838
6839 Default: printable = no
6840
6841 printcap cache time (G)
6842
6843 This option specifies the number of seconds before the printing
6844 subsystem is again asked for the known printers.
6845
6846 Setting this parameter to 0 disables any rescanning for new or
6847 removed printers after the initial startup.
6848
6849 Default: printcap cache time = 750
6850
6851 Example: printcap cache time = 600
6852
6853 printcap
6854
6855 This parameter is a synonym for printcap name.
6856
6857 printcap name (G)
6858
6859 This parameter may be used to override the compiled-in default
6860 printcap name used by the server (usually /etc/printcap). See the
6861 discussion of the [printers] section above for reasons why you
6862 might want to do this.
6863
6864 To use the CUPS printing interface set printcap name = cups. This
6865 should be supplemented by an additional setting printing = cups in
6866 the [global] section. printcap name = cups will use the "dummy"
6867 printcap created by CUPS, as specified in your CUPS configuration
6868 file.
6869
6870 On System V systems that use lpstat to list available printers you
6871 can use printcap name = lpstat to automatically obtain lists of
6872 available printers. This is the default for systems that define
6873 SYSV at configure time in Samba (this includes most System V based
6874 systems). If
6875 printcap name is set to lpstat on these systems then Samba will
6876 launch lpstat -v and attempt to parse the output to obtain a
6877 printer list.
6878
6879 A minimal printcap file would look something like this:
6880
6881 print1|My Printer 1
6882 print2|My Printer 2
6883 print3|My Printer 3
6884 print4|My Printer 4
6885 print5|My Printer 5
6886
6887 where the '|' separates aliases of a printer. The fact that the
6888 second alias has a space in it gives a hint to Samba that it's a
6889 comment.
6890
6891 Note
6892 Under AIX the default printcap name is /etc/qconfig. Samba will
6893 assume the file is in AIX qconfig format if the string qconfig
6894 appears in the printcap filename.
6895 Default: printcap name = /etc/printcap
6896
6897 Example: printcap name = /etc/myprintcap
6898
6899 print command (S)
6900
6901 After a print job has finished spooling to a service, this command
6902 will be used via a system() call to process the spool file.
6903 Typically the command specified will submit the spool file to the
6904 host's printing subsystem, but there is no requirement that this be
6905 the case. The server will not remove the spool file, so whatever
6906 command you specify should remove the spool file when it has been
6907 processed, otherwise you will need to manually remove old spool
6908 files.
6909
6910 The print command is simply a text string. It will be used verbatim
6911 after macro substitutions have been made:
6912
6913 %s, %f - the path to the spool file name
6914
6915 %p - the appropriate printer name
6916
6917 %J - the job name as transmitted by the client.
6918
6919 %c - The number of printed pages of the spooled job (if known).
6920
6921 %z - the size of the spooled print job (in bytes)
6922
6923 The print command MUST contain at least one occurrence of %s or %f
6924 - the %p is optional. At the time a job is submitted, if no printer
6925 name is supplied the %p will be silently removed from the printer
6926 command.
6927
6928 If specified in the [global] section, the print command given will
6929 be used for any printable service that does not have its own print
6930 command specified.
6931
6932 If there is neither a specified print command for a printable
6933 service nor a global print command, spool files will be created but
6934 not processed and (most importantly) not removed.
6935
6936 Note that printing may fail on some UNIXes from the nobody account.
6937 If this happens then create an alternative guest account that can
6938 print and set the guest account in the [global] section.
6939
6940 You can form quite complex print commands by realizing that they
6941 are just passed to a shell. For example the following will log a
6942 print job, print the file, then remove it. Note that ';' is the
6943 usual separator for command in shell scripts.
6944
6945 print command = echo Printing %s >> /tmp/print.log; lpr -P %p %s;
6946 rm %s
6947
6948 You may have to vary this command considerably depending on how you
6949 normally print files on your system. The default for the parameter
6950 varies depending on the setting of the printing parameter.
6951
6952 Default: For printing = BSD, AIX, QNX, LPRNG or PLP :
6953
6954 print command = lpr -r -P%p %s
6955
6956 For printing = SYSV or HPUX :
6957
6958 print command = lp -c -d%p %s; rm %s
6959
6960 For printing = SOFTQ :
6961
6962 print command = lp -d%p -s %s; rm %s
6963
6964 For printing = CUPS : If SAMBA is compiled against libcups, then
6965 printcap = cups uses the CUPS API to submit jobs, etc. Otherwise it
6966 maps to the System V commands with the -oraw option for printing,
6967 i.e. it uses lp -c -d%p -oraw; rm %s. With printing = cups, and if
6968 SAMBA is compiled against libcups, any manually set print command
6969 will be ignored.
6970
6971 No default
6972
6973 Example: print command = /usr/local/samba/bin/myprintscript %p %s
6974
6975 printer
6976
6977 This parameter is a synonym for printer name.
6978
6979 printer name (S)
6980
6981 This parameter specifies the name of the printer to which print
6982 jobs spooled through a printable service will be sent.
6983
6984 If specified in the [global] section, the printer name given will
6985 be used for any printable service that does not have its own
6986 printer name specified.
6987
6988 The default value of the printer name may be lp on many systems.
6989
6990 Default: printer name =
6991
6992 Example: printer name = laserwriter
6993
6994 printing (S)
6995
6996 This parameters controls how printer status information is
6997 interpreted on your system. It also affects the default values for
6998 the print command, lpq command, lppause command , lpresume command,
6999 and lprm command if specified in the [global] section.
7000
7001 Currently nine printing styles are supported. They are BSD, AIX,
7002 LPRNG, PLP, SYSV, HPUX, QNX, SOFTQ, CUPS and IPRINT.
7003
7004 Be aware that CUPS and IPRINT are only available if the CUPS
7005 development library was available at the time Samba was compiled or
7006 packaged.
7007
7008 To see what the defaults are for the other print commands when
7009 using the various options use the testparm(1) program.
7010
7011 This option can be set on a per printer basis. Please be aware
7012 however, that you must place any of the various printing commands
7013 (e.g. print command, lpq command, etc...) after defining the value
7014 for the printing option since it will reset the printing commands
7015 to default values.
7016
7017 See also the discussion in the [printers] section.
7018
7019 See testparm -v. for the default value on your system
7020
7021 Default: printing = # Depends on the operating system
7022
7023 printjob username (S)
7024
7025 This parameter specifies which user information will be passed to
7026 the printing system. Usually, the username is sent, but in some
7027 cases, e.g. the domain prefix is useful, too.
7028
7029 Default: printjob username = %U
7030
7031 Example: printjob username = %D\%U
7032
7033 print notify backchannel (S)
7034
7035 Windows print clients can update print queue status by expecting
7036 the server to open a backchannel SMB connection to them. Due to
7037 client firewall settings this can cause considerable timeouts and
7038 will often fail, as there is no guarantee the client is even
7039 running an SMB server. By default, the Samba print server will not
7040 try to connect back to clients, and will treat corresponding
7041 requests as if the connection back to the client failed.
7042
7043 Default: print notify backchannel = no
7044
7045 private directory
7046
7047 This parameter is a synonym for private dir.
7048
7049 private dir (G)
7050
7051 This parameters defines the directory smbd will use for storing
7052 such files as smbpasswd and secrets.tdb.
7053
7054 Default: private dir = /var/lib/samba/private
7055
7056 queuepause command (S)
7057
7058 This parameter specifies the command to be executed on the server
7059 host in order to pause the printer queue.
7060
7061 This command should be a program or script which takes a printer
7062 name as its only parameter and stops the printer queue, such that
7063 no longer jobs are submitted to the printer.
7064
7065 This command is not supported by Windows for Workgroups, but can be
7066 issued from the Printers window under Windows 95 and NT.
7067
7068 If a %p is given then the printer name is put in its place.
7069 Otherwise it is placed at the end of the command.
7070
7071 Note that it is good practice to include the absolute path in the
7072 command as the PATH may not be available to the server.
7073
7074 Default: queuepause command = # determined by printing parameter
7075
7076 Example: queuepause command = disable %p
7077
7078 queueresume command (S)
7079
7080 This parameter specifies the command to be executed on the server
7081 host in order to resume the printer queue. It is the command to
7082 undo the behavior that is caused by the previous parameter
7083 (queuepause command).
7084
7085 This command should be a program or script which takes a printer
7086 name as its only parameter and resumes the printer queue, such that
7087 queued jobs are resubmitted to the printer.
7088
7089 This command is not supported by Windows for Workgroups, but can be
7090 issued from the Printers window under Windows 95 and NT.
7091
7092 If a %p is given then the printer name is put in its place.
7093 Otherwise it is placed at the end of the command.
7094
7095 Note that it is good practice to include the absolute path in the
7096 command as the PATH may not be available to the server.
7097
7098 Default: queueresume command = # determined by printing parameter
7099
7100 Example: queueresume command = enable %p
7101
7102 raw NTLMv2 auth (G)
7103
7104 This parameter determines whether or not smbd(8) will allow SMB1
7105 clients without extended security (without SPNEGO) to use NTLMv2
7106 authentication.
7107
7108 If this option, lanman auth and ntlm auth are all disabled, then
7109 only clients with SPNEGO support will be permitted. That means
7110 NTLMv2 is only supported within NTLMSSP.
7111
7112 Default: raw NTLMv2 auth = no
7113
7114 read list (S)
7115
7116 This is a list of users that are given read-only access to a
7117 service. If the connecting user is in this list then they will not
7118 be given write access, no matter what the read only option is set
7119 to. The list can include group names using the syntax described in
7120 the invalid users parameter.
7121
7122 Default: read list =
7123
7124 Example: read list = mary, @students
7125
7126 read only (S)
7127
7128 An inverted synonym is writeable.
7129
7130 If this parameter is yes, then users of a service may not create or
7131 modify files in the service's directory.
7132
7133 Note that a printable service (printable = yes) will ALWAYS allow
7134 writing to the directory (user privileges permitting), but only via
7135 spooling operations.
7136
7137 Default: read only = yes
7138
7139 read raw (G)
7140
7141 This is ignored if async smb echo handler is set, because this
7142 feature is incompatible with raw read SMB requests
7143
7144 If enabled, raw reads allow reads of 65535 bytes in one packet.
7145 This typically provides a major performance benefit for some very,
7146 very old clients.
7147
7148 However, some clients either negotiate the allowable block size
7149 incorrectly or are incapable of supporting larger block sizes, and
7150 for these clients you may need to disable raw reads.
7151
7152 In general this parameter should be viewed as a system tuning tool
7153 and left severely alone.
7154
7155 Default: read raw = yes
7156
7157 realm (G)
7158
7159 This option specifies the kerberos realm to use. The realm is used
7160 as the ADS equivalent of the NT4 domain. It is usually set to the
7161 DNS name of the kerberos server.
7162
7163 Default: realm =
7164
7165 Example: realm = mysambabox.mycompany.com
7166
7167 registry shares (G)
7168
7169 This turns on or off support for share definitions read from
7170 registry. Shares defined in smb.conf take precedence over shares
7171 with the same name defined in registry. See the section on
7172 registry-based configuration for details.
7173
7174 Note that this parameter defaults to no, but it is set to yes when
7175 config backend is set to registry.
7176
7177 Default: registry shares = no
7178
7179 Example: registry shares = yes
7180
7181 reject md5 clients (G)
7182
7183 This option controls whether the netlogon server (currently only in
7184 'active directory domain controller' mode), will reject clients
7185 which does not support NETLOGON_NEG_SUPPORTS_AES.
7186
7187 You can set this to yes if all domain members support aes. This
7188 will prevent downgrade attacks.
7189
7190 This option takes precedence to the 'allow nt4 crypto' option.
7191
7192 Default: reject md5 clients = no
7193
7194 reject md5 servers (G)
7195
7196 This option controls whether winbindd requires support for aes
7197 support for the netlogon secure channel.
7198
7199 The following flags will be required NETLOGON_NEG_ARCFOUR,
7200 NETLOGON_NEG_SUPPORTS_AES, NETLOGON_NEG_PASSWORD_SET2 and
7201 NETLOGON_NEG_AUTHENTICATED_RPC.
7202
7203 You can set this to yes if all domain controllers support aes. This
7204 will prevent downgrade attacks.
7205
7206 The behavior can be controlled per netbios domain by using 'reject
7207 md5 servers:NETBIOSDOMAIN = yes' as option.
7208
7209 This option takes precedence to the require strong key option.
7210
7211 Default: reject md5 servers = no
7212
7213 remote announce (G)
7214
7215 This option allows you to setup nmbd(8) to periodically announce
7216 itself to arbitrary IP addresses with an arbitrary workgroup name.
7217
7218 This is useful if you want your Samba server to appear in a remote
7219 workgroup for which the normal browse propagation rules don't work.
7220 The remote workgroup can be anywhere that you can send IP packets
7221 to.
7222
7223 For example:
7224
7225 remote announce = 192.168.2.255/SERVERS 192.168.4.255/STAFF
7226
7227 the above line would cause nmbd to announce itself to the two given
7228 IP addresses using the given workgroup names. If you leave out the
7229 workgroup name, then the one given in the workgroup parameter is
7230 used instead.
7231
7232 The IP addresses you choose would normally be the broadcast
7233 addresses of the remote networks, but can also be the IP addresses
7234 of known browse masters if your network config is that stable.
7235
7236 See the chapter on Network Browsing in the Samba-HOWTO book.
7237
7238 Default: remote announce =
7239
7240 remote browse sync (G)
7241
7242 This option allows you to setup nmbd(8) to periodically request
7243 synchronization of browse lists with the master browser of a Samba
7244 server that is on a remote segment. This option will allow you to
7245 gain browse lists for multiple workgroups across routed networks.
7246 This is done in a manner that does not work with any non-Samba
7247 servers.
7248
7249 This is useful if you want your Samba server and all local clients
7250 to appear in a remote workgroup for which the normal browse
7251 propagation rules don't work. The remote workgroup can be anywhere
7252 that you can send IP packets to.
7253
7254 For example:
7255
7256 remote browse sync = 192.168.2.255 192.168.4.255
7257
7258 the above line would cause nmbd to request the master browser on
7259 the specified subnets or addresses to synchronize their browse
7260 lists with the local server.
7261
7262 The IP addresses you choose would normally be the broadcast
7263 addresses of the remote networks, but can also be the IP addresses
7264 of known browse masters if your network config is that stable. If a
7265 machine IP address is given Samba makes NO attempt to validate that
7266 the remote machine is available, is listening, nor that it is in
7267 fact the browse master on its segment.
7268
7269 The remote browse sync may be used on networks where there is no
7270 WINS server, and may be used on disjoint networks where each
7271 network has its own WINS server.
7272
7273 Default: remote browse sync =
7274
7275 rename user script (G)
7276
7277 This is the full pathname to a script that will be run as root by
7278 smbd(8) under special circumstances described below.
7279
7280 When a user with admin authority or SeAddUserPrivilege rights
7281 renames a user (e.g.: from the NT4 User Manager for Domains), this
7282 script will be run to rename the POSIX user. Two variables, %uold
7283 and %unew, will be substituted with the old and new usernames,
7284 respectively. The script should return 0 upon successful
7285 completion, and nonzero otherwise.
7286
7287 Note
7288 The script has all responsibility to rename all the necessary
7289 data that is accessible in this posix method. This can mean
7290 different requirements for different backends. The tdbsam and
7291 smbpasswd backends will take care of the contents of their
7292 respective files, so the script is responsible only for
7293 changing the POSIX username, and other data that may required
7294 for your circumstances, such as home directory. Please also
7295 consider whether or not you need to rename the actual home
7296 directories themselves. The ldapsam backend will not make any
7297 changes, because of the potential issues with renaming the LDAP
7298 naming attribute. In this case the script is responsible for
7299 changing the attribute that samba uses (uid) for locating
7300 users, as well as any data that needs to change for other
7301 applications using the same directory.
7302 Default: rename user script =
7303
7304 require strong key (G)
7305
7306 This option controls whether winbindd requires support for md5
7307 strong key support for the netlogon secure channel.
7308
7309 The following flags will be required NETLOGON_NEG_STRONG_KEYS,
7310 NETLOGON_NEG_ARCFOUR and NETLOGON_NEG_AUTHENTICATED_RPC.
7311
7312 You can set this to no if some domain controllers only support des.
7313 This might allows weak crypto to be negotiated, may via downgrade
7314 attacks.
7315
7316 The behavior can be controlled per netbios domain by using 'require
7317 strong key:NETBIOSDOMAIN = no' as option.
7318
7319 Note for active directory domain this option is hardcoded to 'yes'
7320
7321 This option yields precedence to the reject md5 servers option.
7322
7323 This option takes precedence to the client schannel option.
7324
7325 Default: require strong key = yes
7326
7327 reset on zero vc (G)
7328
7329 This boolean option controls whether an incoming SMB1 session setup
7330 should kill other connections coming from the same IP. This matches
7331 the default Windows 2003 behaviour. Setting this parameter to yes
7332 becomes necessary when you have a flaky network and windows decides
7333 to reconnect while the old connection still has files with share
7334 modes open. These files become inaccessible over the new
7335 connection. The client sends a zero VC on the new connection, and
7336 Windows 2003 kills all other connections coming from the same IP.
7337 This way the locked files are accessible again. Please be aware
7338 that enabling this option will kill connections behind a
7339 masquerading router, and will not trigger for clients that only use
7340 SMB2 or SMB3.
7341
7342 Default: reset on zero vc = no
7343
7344 restrict anonymous (G)
7345
7346 The setting of this parameter determines whether SAMR and LSA
7347 DCERPC services can be accessed anonymously. This corresponds to
7348 the following Windows Server registry options:
7349
7350 HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Lsa\RestrictAnonymous
7351
7352
7353 The option also affects the browse option which is required by
7354 legacy clients which rely on Netbios browsing. While modern Windows
7355 version should be fine with restricting the access there could
7356 still be applications relying on anonymous access.
7357
7358 Setting restrict anonymous = 1 will disable anonymous SAMR access.
7359
7360 Setting restrict anonymous = 2 will, in addition to restricting
7361 SAMR access, disallow anonymous connections to the IPC$ share in
7362 general. Setting guest ok = yes on any share will remove the
7363 security advantage.
7364
7365 Default: restrict anonymous = 0
7366
7367 root
7368
7369 This parameter is a synonym for root directory.
7370
7371 root dir
7372
7373 This parameter is a synonym for root directory.
7374
7375 root directory (G)
7376
7377 The server will chroot() (i.e. Change its root directory) to this
7378 directory on startup. This is not strictly necessary for secure
7379 operation. Even without it the server will deny access to files not
7380 in one of the service entries. It may also check for, and deny
7381 access to, soft links to other parts of the filesystem, or attempts
7382 to use ".." in file names to access other directories (depending on
7383 the setting of the wide smbconfoptions parameter).
7384
7385 Adding a root directory entry other than "/" adds an extra level of
7386 security, but at a price. It absolutely ensures that no access is
7387 given to files not in the sub-tree specified in the root directory
7388 option, including some files needed for complete operation of the
7389 server. To maintain full operability of the server you will need to
7390 mirror some system files into the root directory tree. In
7391 particular you will need to mirror /etc/passwd (or a subset of it),
7392 and any binaries or configuration files needed for printing (if
7393 required). The set of files that must be mirrored is operating
7394 system dependent.
7395
7396 Default: root directory =
7397
7398 Example: root directory = /homes/smb
7399
7400 root postexec (S)
7401
7402 This is the same as the postexec parameter except that the command
7403 is run as root. This is useful for unmounting filesystems (such as
7404 CDROMs) after a connection is closed.
7405
7406 Default: root postexec =
7407
7408 root preexec (S)
7409
7410 This is the same as the preexec parameter except that the command
7411 is run as root. This is useful for mounting filesystems (such as
7412 CDROMs) when a connection is opened.
7413
7414 Default: root preexec =
7415
7416 root preexec close (S)
7417
7418 This is the same as the preexec close parameter except that the
7419 command is run as root.
7420
7421 Default: root preexec close = no
7422
7423 rpc big endian (G)
7424
7425 Setting this option will force the RPC client and server to
7426 transfer data in big endian.
7427
7428 If it is disabled, data will be transferred in little endian.
7429
7430 The behaviour is independent of the endianness of the host machine.
7431
7432 Default: rpc big endian = no
7433
7434 rpc_daemon:DAEMON (G)
7435
7436 Defines whether to use the embedded code or start a separate daemon
7437 for the defined rpc services. The rpc_daemon prefix must be
7438 followed by the server name, and a value.
7439
7440 Two possible values are currently supported:
7441
7442 disabled
7443 fork
7444
7445
7446 The classic method is to run rpc services as internal daemons
7447 embedded in smbd, therefore the external daemons are disabled by
7448 default.
7449
7450 Choosing the fork option will cause samba to fork a separate
7451 process for each daemon configured this way. Each daemon may in
7452 turn fork a number of children used to handle requests from
7453 multiple smbds and direct tcp/ip connections (if the Endpoint
7454 Mapper is enabled). Communication with smbd happens over named
7455 pipes and require that said pipes are forward to the external
7456 daemon (see rpc_server).
7457
7458 Forked RPC Daemons support dynamically forking children to handle
7459 connections. The heuristics about how many children to keep around
7460 and how fast to allow them to fork and also how many clients each
7461 child is allowed to handle concurrently is defined by parametrical
7462 options named after the daemon. Five options are currently
7463 supported:
7464
7465 prefork_min_children
7466 prefork_max_children
7467 prefork_spawn_rate
7468 prefork_max_allowed_clients
7469 prefork_child_min_life
7470
7471
7472 To set one of these options use the following syntax:
7473
7474 daemonname:prefork_min_children = 5
7475
7476
7477 Samba includes separate daemons for spoolss, lsarpc/lsass,
7478 netlogon, samr, FSRVP and mdssvc(Spotlight). Currently five daemons
7479 are available and they are called:
7480
7481 epmd
7482 lsasd
7483 spoolssd
7484 fssd
7485 mdssd
7486
7487
7488 Example:
7489
7490 rpc_daemon:spoolssd = fork
7491
7492
7493 Default: rpc_daemon:DAEMON = disabled
7494
7495 rpc_server:SERVER (G)
7496
7497 With this option you can define if a rpc service should be running
7498 internal/embedded in smbd or should be redirected to an external
7499 daemon like Samba4, the endpoint mapper daemon, the spoolss daemon
7500 or the new LSA service daemon. The rpc_server prefix must be
7501 followed by the pipe name, and a value.
7502
7503 This option can be set for each available rpc service in Samba. The
7504 following list shows all available pipe names services you can
7505 modify with this option.
7506
7507 · epmapper - Endpoint Mapper
7508
7509 · winreg - Remote Registry Service
7510
7511 · srvsvc - Remote Server Services
7512
7513 · lsarpc - Local Security Authority
7514
7515 · samr - Security Account Management
7516
7517 · netlogon - Netlogon Remote Protocol
7518
7519 · netdfs - Settings for Distributed File System
7520
7521 · dssetup - Active Directory Setup
7522
7523 · wkssvc - Workstation Services
7524
7525 · spoolss - Network Printing Spooler
7526
7527 · svcctl - Service Control
7528
7529 · ntsvcs - Plug and Play Services
7530
7531 · eventlog - Event Logger
7532
7533 · initshutdown - Init Shutdown Service
7534
7535 · mdssvc - Spotlight
7536
7537 Three possible values currently supported are: embedded external
7538 disabled
7539
7540 The classic method is to run every pipe as an internal function
7541 embedded in smbd. The defaults may vary depending on the service.
7542
7543 Choosing the external option allows one to run a separate daemon or
7544 even a completely independent (3rd party) server capable of
7545 interfacing with samba via the MS-RPC interface over named pipes.
7546
7547 Currently in Samba3 we support four daemons, spoolssd, epmd, lsasd
7548 and mdssd. These daemons can be enabled using the rpc_daemon
7549 option. For spoolssd you have to enable the daemon and proxy the
7550 named pipe with:
7551
7552 Examples:
7553
7554 rpc_daemon:lsasd = fork
7555 rpc_server:lsarpc = external
7556 rpc_server:samr = external
7557 rpc_server:netlogon = external
7558
7559 rpc_server:spoolss = external
7560 rpc_server:epmapper = disabled
7561
7562 rpc_daemon:mdssd = fork
7563 rpc_server:mdssvc = external
7564
7565
7566 There is one special option which allows you to enable rpc services
7567 to listen for ncacn_ip_tcp connections too. Currently this is only
7568 used for testing and doesn't scale!
7569
7570 rpc_server:tcpip = yes
7571
7572
7573 Default: rpc_server:SERVER = embedded
7574
7575 rpc server dynamic port range (G)
7576
7577 This parameter tells the RPC server which port range it is allowed
7578 to use to create a listening socket for LSA, SAM, Netlogon and
7579 others without wellknown tcp ports. The first value is the lowest
7580 number of the port range and the second the highest.
7581
7582 This applies to RPC servers in all server roles.
7583
7584 Default: rpc server dynamic port range = 49152-65535
7585
7586 rpc server port (G)
7587
7588 Specifies which port the server should listen on for DCE/RPC over
7589 TCP/IP traffic.
7590
7591 This controls the default port for all protocols, except for
7592 NETLOGON.
7593
7594 If unset, the first available port from rpc server dynamic port
7595 range is used, e.g. 49152.
7596
7597 The NETLOGON server will use the next available port, e.g. 49153.
7598 To change this port use (eg) rpc server port:netlogon = 4000.
7599
7600 Furthermore, all RPC servers can have the port they use specified
7601 independenty, with (for example) rpc server port:drsuapi = 5000.
7602
7603 This option applies currently only when samba(8) runs as an active
7604 directory domain controller.
7605
7606 The default value 0 causes Samba to select the first available port
7607 from rpc server dynamic port range.
7608
7609 Default: rpc server port = 0
7610
7611 samba kcc command (G)
7612
7613 This option specifies the path to the Samba KCC command. This
7614 script is used for replication topology replication.
7615
7616 It should not be necessary to modify this option except for testing
7617 purposes or if the samba_kcc was installed in a non-default
7618 location.
7619
7620 Default: samba kcc command =
7621 /builddir/build/BUILD/samba-4.12.2/source4/scripting/bin/samba_kcc
7622
7623 Example: samba kcc command = /usr/local/bin/kcc
7624
7625 security (G)
7626
7627 This option affects how clients respond to Samba and is one of the
7628 most important settings in the smb.conf file.
7629
7630 The default is security = user, as this is the most common setting,
7631 used for a standalone file server or a DC.
7632
7633 The alternatives are security = ads or security = domain, which
7634 support joining Samba to a Windows domain
7635
7636 You should use security = user and map to guest if you want to
7637 mainly setup shares without a password (guest shares). This is
7638 commonly used for a shared printer server.
7639
7640 The different settings will now be explained.
7641
7642 SECURITY = AUTO
7643
7644 This is the default security setting in Samba, and causes Samba to
7645 consult the server role parameter (if set) to determine the
7646 security mode.
7647
7648 SECURITY = USER
7649
7650 If server role is not specified, this is the default security
7651 setting in Samba. With user-level security a client must first
7652 "log-on" with a valid username and password (which can be mapped
7653 using the username map parameter). Encrypted passwords (see the
7654 encrypted passwords parameter) can also be used in this security
7655 mode. Parameters such as user and guest only if set are then
7656 applied and may change the UNIX user to use on this connection, but
7657 only after the user has been successfully authenticated.
7658
7659 Note that the name of the resource being requested is not sent to
7660 the server until after the server has successfully authenticated
7661 the client. This is why guest shares don't work in user level
7662 security without allowing the server to automatically map unknown
7663 users into the guest account. See the map to guest parameter for
7664 details on doing this.
7665
7666 SECURITY = DOMAIN
7667
7668 This mode will only work correctly if net(8) has been used to add
7669 this machine into a Windows NT Domain. It expects the encrypted
7670 passwords parameter to be set to yes. In this mode Samba will try
7671 to validate the username/password by passing it to a Windows NT
7672 Primary or Backup Domain Controller, in exactly the same way that a
7673 Windows NT Server would do.
7674
7675 Note that a valid UNIX user must still exist as well as the account
7676 on the Domain Controller to allow Samba to have a valid UNIX
7677 account to map file access to.
7678
7679 Note that from the client's point of view security = domain is the
7680 same as security = user. It only affects how the server deals with
7681 the authentication, it does not in any way affect what the client
7682 sees.
7683
7684 Note that the name of the resource being requested is not sent to
7685 the server until after the server has successfully authenticated
7686 the client. This is why guest shares don't work in user level
7687 security without allowing the server to automatically map unknown
7688 users into the guest account. See the map to guest parameter for
7689 details on doing this.
7690
7691 See also the password server parameter and the encrypted passwords
7692 parameter.
7693
7694 SECURITY = ADS
7695
7696 In this mode, Samba will act as a domain member in an ADS realm. To
7697 operate in this mode, the machine running Samba will need to have
7698 Kerberos installed and configured and Samba will need to be joined
7699 to the ADS realm using the net utility.
7700
7701 Note that this mode does NOT make Samba operate as a Active
7702 Directory Domain Controller.
7703
7704 Note that this forces require strong key = yes and client schannel
7705 = yes for the primary domain.
7706
7707 Read the chapter about Domain Membership in the HOWTO for details.
7708
7709 Default: security = AUTO
7710
7711 Example: security = DOMAIN
7712
7713 security mask (S)
7714
7715 This parameter has been removed for Samba 4.0.0.
7716
7717 No default
7718
7719 max protocol
7720
7721 This parameter is a synonym for server max protocol.
7722
7723 protocol
7724
7725 This parameter is a synonym for server max protocol.
7726
7727 server max protocol (G)
7728
7729 The value of the parameter (a string) is the highest protocol level
7730 that will be supported by the server.
7731
7732 Possible values are :
7733
7734 · LANMAN1: First modern version of the protocol. Long
7735 filename support.
7736
7737 · LANMAN2: Updates to Lanman1 protocol.
7738
7739 · NT1: Current up to date version of the protocol. Used by
7740 Windows NT. Known as CIFS.
7741
7742 · SMB2: Re-implementation of the SMB protocol. Used by
7743 Windows Vista and later versions of Windows. SMB2 has
7744 sub protocols available.
7745
7746 · SMB2_02: The earliest SMB2 version.
7747
7748 · SMB2_10: Windows 7 SMB2 version.
7749
7750 · SMB2_22: Early Windows 8 SMB2 version.
7751
7752 · SMB2_24: Windows 8 beta SMB2 version.
7753
7754 By default SMB2 selects the SMB2_10 variant.
7755
7756 · SMB3: The same as SMB2. Used by Windows 8. SMB3 has sub
7757 protocols available.
7758
7759 · SMB3_00: Windows 8 SMB3 version. (mostly the
7760 same as SMB2_24)
7761
7762 · SMB3_02: Windows 8.1 SMB3 version.
7763
7764 · SMB3_10: early Windows 10 technical preview
7765 SMB3 version.
7766
7767 · SMB3_11: Windows 10 technical preview SMB3
7768 version (maybe final).
7769
7770 By default SMB3 selects the SMB3_11 variant.
7771
7772 Normally this option should not be set as the automatic negotiation
7773 phase in the SMB protocol takes care of choosing the appropriate
7774 protocol.
7775
7776 Default: server max protocol = SMB3
7777
7778 Example: server max protocol = LANMAN1
7779
7780 min protocol
7781
7782 This parameter is a synonym for server min protocol.
7783
7784 server min protocol (G)
7785
7786 This setting controls the minimum protocol version that the server
7787 will allow the client to use.
7788
7789 Normally this option should not be set as the automatic negotiation
7790 phase in the SMB protocol takes care of choosing the appropriate
7791 protocol unless you have legacy clients which are SMB1 capable
7792 only.
7793
7794 See Related command: server max protocol for a full list of
7795 available protocols.
7796
7797 Default: server min protocol = SMB2_02
7798
7799 Example: server min protocol = NT1
7800
7801 server multi channel support (G)
7802
7803 This boolean parameter controls whether smbd(8) will support SMB3
7804 multi-channel.
7805
7806 This parameter was added with version 4.4.
7807
7808 Warning: Note that this feature is still considered experimental.
7809 Use it at your own risk: Even though it may seem to work well in
7810 testing, it may result in data corruption under some race
7811 conditions. Future releases may improve this situation.
7812
7813 Default: server multi channel support = no
7814
7815 server role (G)
7816
7817 This option determines the basic operating mode of a Samba server
7818 and is one of the most important settings in the smb.conf file.
7819
7820 The default is server role = auto, as causes Samba to operate
7821 according to the security setting, or if not specified as a simple
7822 file server that is not connected to any domain.
7823
7824 The alternatives are server role = standalone or server role =
7825 member server, which support joining Samba to a Windows domain,
7826 along with server role = domain controller, which run Samba as a
7827 Windows domain controller.
7828
7829 You should use server role = standalone and map to guest if you
7830 want to mainly setup shares without a password (guest shares). This
7831 is commonly used for a shared printer server.
7832
7833 SERVER ROLE = AUTO
7834
7835 This is the default server role in Samba, and causes Samba to
7836 consult the security parameter (if set) to determine the server
7837 role, giving compatible behaviours to previous Samba versions.
7838
7839 SERVER ROLE = STANDALONE
7840
7841 If security is also not specified, this is the default security
7842 setting in Samba. In standalone operation, a client must first
7843 "log-on" with a valid username and password (which can be mapped
7844 using the username map parameter) stored on this machine. Encrypted
7845 passwords (see the encrypted passwords parameter) are by default
7846 used in this security mode. Parameters such as user and guest only
7847 if set are then applied and may change the UNIX user to use on this
7848 connection, but only after the user has been successfully
7849 authenticated.
7850
7851 SERVER ROLE = MEMBER SERVER
7852
7853 This mode will only work correctly if net(8) has been used to add
7854 this machine into a Windows Domain. It expects the encrypted
7855 passwords parameter to be set to yes. In this mode Samba will try
7856 to validate the username/password by passing it to a Windows or
7857 Samba Domain Controller, in exactly the same way that a Windows
7858 Server would do.
7859
7860 Note that a valid UNIX user must still exist as well as the account
7861 on the Domain Controller to allow Samba to have a valid UNIX
7862 account to map file access to. Winbind can provide this.
7863
7864 SERVER ROLE = CLASSIC PRIMARY DOMAIN CONTROLLER
7865
7866 This mode of operation runs a classic Samba primary domain
7867 controller, providing domain logon services to Windows and Samba
7868 clients of an NT4-like domain. Clients must be joined to the domain
7869 to create a secure, trusted path across the network. There must be
7870 only one PDC per NetBIOS scope (typcially a broadcast network or
7871 clients served by a single WINS server).
7872
7873 SERVER ROLE = CLASSIC BACKUP DOMAIN CONTROLLER
7874
7875 This mode of operation runs a classic Samba backup domain
7876 controller, providing domain logon services to Windows and Samba
7877 clients of an NT4-like domain. As a BDC, this allows multiple Samba
7878 servers to provide redundant logon services to a single NetBIOS
7879 scope.
7880
7881 SERVER ROLE = ACTIVE DIRECTORY DOMAIN CONTROLLER
7882
7883 This mode of operation runs Samba as an active directory domain
7884 controller, providing domain logon services to Windows and Samba
7885 clients of the domain. This role requires special configuration,
7886 see the Samba4 HOWTO
7887
7888 Default: server role = AUTO
7889
7890 Example: server role = ACTIVE DIRECTORY DOMAIN CONTROLLER
7891
7892 server schannel (G)
7893
7894 This option is deprecated with Samba 4.8 and will be removed in
7895 future. At the same time the default changed to yes, which will be
7896 the hardcoded behavior in future. If you have the need for the
7897 behavior of "auto" to be kept, please file a bug at
7898 https://bugzilla.samba.org.
7899
7900 This controls whether the server offers or even demands the use of
7901 the netlogon schannel. server schannel = no does not offer the
7902 schannel, server schannel = auto offers the schannel but does not
7903 enforce it, and server schannel = yes denies access if the client
7904 is not able to speak netlogon schannel. This is only the case for
7905 Windows NT4 before SP4.
7906
7907 Please note that with this set to no, you will have to apply the
7908 WindowsXP WinXP_SignOrSeal.reg registry patch found in the
7909 docs/registry subdirectory of the Samba distribution tarball.
7910
7911 Default: server schannel = yes
7912
7913 Example: server schannel = auto
7914
7915 server services (G)
7916
7917 This option contains the services that the Samba daemon will run.
7918
7919 An entry in the smb.conf file can either override the previous
7920 value completely or entries can be removed from or added to it by
7921 prefixing them with + or -.
7922
7923 Default: server services = s3fs, rpc, nbt, wrepl, ldap, cldap, kdc,
7924 drepl, winbindd, ntp_signd, kcc, dnsupdate, dns
7925
7926 Example: server services = -s3fs, +smb
7927
7928 server signing (G)
7929
7930 This controls whether the client is allowed or required to use SMB1
7931 and SMB2 signing. Possible values are default, auto, mandatory and
7932 disabled.
7933
7934 By default, and when smb signing is set to default, smb signing is
7935 required when server role is active directory domain controller and
7936 disabled otherwise.
7937
7938 When set to auto, SMB1 signing is offered, but not enforced. When
7939 set to mandatory, SMB1 signing is required and if set to disabled,
7940 SMB signing is not offered either.
7941
7942 For the SMB2 protocol, by design, signing cannot be disabled. In
7943 the case where SMB2 is negotiated, if this parameter is set to
7944 disabled, it will be treated as auto. Setting it to mandatory will
7945 still require SMB2 clients to use signing.
7946
7947 Default: server signing = default
7948
7949 server string (G)
7950
7951 This controls what string will show up in the printer comment box
7952 in print manager and next to the IPC connection in net view. It can
7953 be any string that you wish to show to your users.
7954
7955 It also sets what will appear in browse lists next to the machine
7956 name.
7957
7958 A %v will be replaced with the Samba version number.
7959
7960 A %h will be replaced with the hostname.
7961
7962 Default: server string = Samba %v
7963
7964 Example: server string = University of GNUs Samba Server
7965
7966 set primary group script (G)
7967
7968 Thanks to the Posix subsystem in NT a Windows User has a primary
7969 group in addition to the auxiliary groups. This script sets the
7970 primary group in the unix user database when an administrator sets
7971 the primary group from the windows user manager or when fetching a
7972 SAM with net rpc vampire. %u will be replaced with the user whose
7973 primary group is to be set. %g will be replaced with the group to
7974 set.
7975
7976 Default: set primary group script =
7977
7978 Example: set primary group script = /usr/sbin/usermod -g '%g' '%u'
7979
7980 set quota command (G)
7981
7982 The set quota command should only be used whenever there is no
7983 operating system API available from the OS that samba can use.
7984
7985 This option is only available if Samba was compiled with quota
7986 support.
7987
7988 This parameter should specify the path to a script that can set
7989 quota for the specified arguments.
7990
7991 The specified script should take the following arguments:
7992
7993 · 1 - path to where the quota needs to be set. This needs
7994 to be interpreted relative to the current working
7995 directory that the script may also check for.
7996
7997 · 2 - quota type
7998
7999 · 1 - user quotas
8000
8001 · 2 - user default quotas (uid = -1)
8002
8003 · 3 - group quotas
8004
8005 · 4 - group default quotas (gid = -1)
8006
8007
8008 · 3 - id (uid for user, gid for group, -1 if N/A)
8009
8010 · 4 - quota state (0 = disable, 1 = enable, 2 = enable and
8011 enforce)
8012
8013 · 5 - block softlimit
8014
8015 · 6 - block hardlimit
8016
8017 · 7 - inode softlimit
8018
8019 · 8 - inode hardlimit
8020
8021 · 9(optional) - block size, defaults to 1024
8022
8023 The script should output at least one line of data on success. And
8024 nothing on failure.
8025
8026 Default: set quota command =
8027
8028 Example: set quota command = /usr/local/sbin/set_quota
8029
8030 share backend (G)
8031
8032 This option specifies the backend that will be used to access the
8033 configuration of file shares.
8034
8035 Traditionally, Samba file shares have been configured in the
8036 smb.conf file and this is still the default.
8037
8038 At the moment there are no other supported backends.
8039
8040 Default: share backend = classic
8041
8042 share:fake_fscaps (G)
8043
8044 This is needed to support some special application that makes
8045 QFSINFO calls to check whether we set the SPARSE_FILES bit (0x40).
8046 If this bit is not set that particular application refuses to work
8047 against Samba. With share:fake_fscaps = 64 the SPARSE_FILES file
8048 system capability flag is set. Use other decimal values to specify
8049 the bitmask you need to fake.
8050
8051 Default: share:fake_fscaps = 0
8052
8053 short preserve case (S)
8054
8055 This boolean parameter controls if new files which conform to 8.3
8056 syntax, that is all in upper case and of suitable length, are
8057 created upper case, or if they are forced to be the default case.
8058 This option can be use with preserve case = yes to permit long
8059 filenames to retain their case, while short names are lowered.
8060
8061 See the section on NAME MANGLING.
8062
8063 Default: short preserve case = yes
8064
8065 show add printer wizard (G)
8066
8067 With the introduction of MS-RPC based printing support for Windows
8068 NT/2000 client in Samba 2.2, a "Printers..." folder will appear on
8069 Samba hosts in the share listing. Normally this folder will contain
8070 an icon for the MS Add Printer Wizard (APW). However, it is
8071 possible to disable this feature regardless of the level of
8072 privilege of the connected user.
8073
8074 Under normal circumstances, the Windows NT/2000 client will open a
8075 handle on the printer server with OpenPrinterEx() asking for
8076 Administrator privileges. If the user does not have administrative
8077 access on the print server (i.e is not root or has granted the
8078 SePrintOperatorPrivilege), the OpenPrinterEx() call fails and the
8079 client makes another open call with a request for a lower privilege
8080 level. This should succeed, however the APW icon will not be
8081 displayed.
8082
8083 Disabling the show add printer wizard parameter will always cause
8084 the OpenPrinterEx() on the server to fail. Thus the APW icon will
8085 never be displayed.
8086
8087 Note
8088 This does not prevent the same user from having administrative
8089 privilege on an individual printer.
8090 Default: show add printer wizard = yes
8091
8092 shutdown script (G)
8093
8094 This a full path name to a script called by smbd(8) that should
8095 start a shutdown procedure.
8096
8097 If the connected user possesses the SeRemoteShutdownPrivilege,
8098 right, this command will be run as root.
8099
8100 The %z %t %r %f variables are expanded as follows:
8101
8102 · %z will be substituted with the shutdown message sent to
8103 the server.
8104
8105 · %t will be substituted with the number of seconds to
8106 wait before effectively starting the shutdown procedure.
8107
8108 · %r will be substituted with the switch -r. It means
8109 reboot after shutdown for NT.
8110
8111 · %f will be substituted with the switch -f. It means
8112 force the shutdown even if applications do not respond
8113 for NT.
8114
8115 Shutdown script example:
8116
8117 #!/bin/bash
8118
8119 time=$2
8120 let time="${time} / 60"
8121 let time="${time} + 1"
8122
8123 /sbin/shutdown $3 $4 +$time $1 &
8124
8125
8126 Shutdown does not return so we need to launch it in background.
8127
8128 Default: shutdown script =
8129
8130 Example: shutdown script = /usr/local/samba/sbin/shutdown %m %t %r
8131 %f
8132
8133 smb2 leases (G)
8134
8135 This boolean option tells smbd whether to globally negotiate SMB2
8136 leases on file open requests. Leasing is an SMB2-only feature which
8137 allows clients to aggressively cache files locally above and beyond
8138 the caching allowed by SMB1 oplocks.
8139
8140 This is only available with oplocks = yes and kernel oplocks = no.
8141
8142 Note that the write cache won't be used for file handles with a
8143 smb2 write lease.
8144
8145 Default: smb2 leases = yes
8146
8147 smb2 max credits (G)
8148
8149 This option controls the maximum number of outstanding simultaneous
8150 SMB2 operations that Samba tells the client it will allow. This is
8151 similar to the max mux parameter for SMB1. You should never need to
8152 set this parameter.
8153
8154 The default is 8192 credits, which is the same as a Windows 2008R2
8155 SMB2 server.
8156
8157 Default: smb2 max credits = 8192
8158
8159 smb2 max read (G)
8160
8161 This option specifies the protocol value that smbd(8) will return
8162 to a client, informing the client of the largest size that may be
8163 returned by a single SMB2 read call.
8164
8165 The maximum is 8388608 bytes (8MiB), which is the same as a Windows
8166 Server 2012 r2.
8167
8168 Please note that the default is 8MiB, but it's limit is based on
8169 the smb2 dialect (64KiB for SMB == 2.0, 8MiB for SMB >= 2.1 with
8170 LargeMTU). Large MTU is not supported over NBT (tcp port 139).
8171
8172 Default: smb2 max read = 8388608
8173
8174 smb2 max trans (G)
8175
8176 This option specifies the protocol value that smbd(8) will return
8177 to a client, informing the client of the largest size of buffer
8178 that may be used in querying file meta-data via QUERY_INFO and
8179 related SMB2 calls.
8180
8181 The maximum is 8388608 bytes (8MiB), which is the same as a Windows
8182 Server 2012 r2.
8183
8184 Please note that the default is 8MiB, but it's limit is based on
8185 the smb2 dialect (64KiB for SMB == 2.0, 1MiB for SMB >= 2.1 with
8186 LargeMTU). Large MTU is not supported over NBT (tcp port 139).
8187
8188 Default: smb2 max trans = 8388608
8189
8190 smb2 max write (G)
8191
8192 This option specifies the protocol value that smbd(8) will return
8193 to a client, informing the client of the largest size that may be
8194 sent to the server by a single SMB2 write call.
8195
8196 The maximum is 8388608 bytes (8MiB), which is the same as a Windows
8197 Server 2012 r2.
8198
8199 Please note that the default is 8MiB, but it's limit is based on
8200 the smb2 dialect (64KiB for SMB == 2.0, 8MiB for SMB => 2.1 with
8201 LargeMTU). Large MTU is not supported over NBT (tcp port 139).
8202
8203 Default: smb2 max write = 8388608
8204
8205 smbd async dosmode (S)
8206
8207 This parameter control whether the fileserver will use sync or
8208 async methods for fetching the DOS attributes when doing a
8209 directory listing. By default sync methods will be used.
8210
8211 Default: smbd async dosmode = no
8212
8213 smbd getinfo ask sharemode (S)
8214
8215 This parameter allows disabling fetching file write time from the
8216 open file handle database locking.tdb when a client requests file
8217 or directory metadata. It's a performance optimisation at the
8218 expense of protocol correctness.
8219
8220 Default: smbd getinfo ask sharemode = yes
8221
8222 smbd max async dosmode (S)
8223
8224 This parameter controls how many async operations to fetch the DOS
8225 attributes the fileserver will queue when doing directory listings.
8226
8227 Default: smbd max async dosmode = aio max threads * 2
8228
8229 smbd profiling level (G)
8230
8231 This parameter allows the administrator to enable profiling
8232 support.
8233
8234 Possible values are off, count and on.
8235
8236 Default: smbd profiling level = off
8237
8238 Example: smbd profiling level = on
8239
8240 smbd search ask sharemode (S)
8241
8242 This parameter allows disabling fetching file write time from the
8243 open file handle database locking.tdb. It's a performance
8244 optimisation at the expense of protocol correctness.
8245
8246 Default: smbd search ask sharemode = yes
8247
8248 smb encrypt (S)
8249
8250 This parameter controls whether a remote client is allowed or
8251 required to use SMB encryption. It has different effects depending
8252 on whether the connection uses SMB1 or SMB2 and newer:
8253
8254 · If the connection uses SMB1, then this option controls
8255 the use of a Samba-specific extension to the SMB
8256 protocol introduced in Samba 3.2 that makes use of the
8257 Unix extensions.
8258
8259 · If the connection uses SMB2 or newer, then this option
8260 controls the use of the SMB-level encryption that is
8261 supported in SMB version 3.0 and above and available in
8262 Windows 8 and newer.
8263
8264 This parameter can be set globally and on a per-share bases.
8265 Possible values are off (or disabled), enabled (or auto, or
8266 if_required), desired, and required (or mandatory). A special value
8267 is default which is the implicit default setting of enabled.
8268
8269 Effects for SMB1
8270 The Samba-specific encryption of SMB1 connections is an
8271 extension to the SMB protocol negotiated as part of the UNIX
8272 extensions. SMB encryption uses the GSSAPI (SSPI on Windows)
8273 ability to encrypt and sign every request/response in a SMB
8274 protocol stream. When enabled it provides a secure method of
8275 SMB/CIFS communication, similar to an ssh protected session,
8276 but using SMB/CIFS authentication to negotiate encryption and
8277 signing keys. Currently this is only supported smbclient of by
8278 Samba 3.2 and newer, and hopefully soon Linux CIFSFS and
8279 MacOS/X clients. Windows clients do not support this feature.
8280
8281 This may be set on a per-share basis, but clients may chose to
8282 encrypt the entire session, not just traffic to a specific
8283 share. If this is set to mandatory then all traffic to a share
8284 must be encrypted once the connection has been made to the
8285 share. The server would return "access denied" to all
8286 non-encrypted requests on such a share. Selecting encrypted
8287 traffic reduces throughput as smaller packet sizes must be used
8288 (no huge UNIX style read/writes allowed) as well as the
8289 overhead of encrypting and signing all the data.
8290
8291 If SMB encryption is selected, Windows style SMB signing (see
8292 the server signing option) is no longer necessary, as the
8293 GSSAPI flags use select both signing and sealing of the data.
8294
8295 When set to auto or default, SMB encryption is offered, but not
8296 enforced. When set to mandatory, SMB encryption is required and
8297 if set to disabled, SMB encryption can not be negotiated.
8298
8299 Effects for SMB2
8300 Native SMB transport encryption is available in SMB version 3.0
8301 or newer. It is only offered by Samba if server max protocol is
8302 set to SMB3 or newer. Clients supporting this type of
8303 encryption include Windows 8 and newer, Windows server 2012 and
8304 newer, and smbclient of Samba 4.1 and newer.
8305
8306 The protocol implementation offers various options:
8307
8308 · The capability to perform SMB encryption can be
8309 negotiated during protocol negotiation.
8310
8311 · Data encryption can be enabled globally. In that
8312 case, an encryption-capable connection will have all
8313 traffic in all its sessions encrypted. In particular
8314 all share connections will be encrypted.
8315
8316 · Data encryption can also be enabled per share if not
8317 enabled globally. For an encryption-capable
8318 connection, all connections to an encryption-enabled
8319 share will be encrypted.
8320
8321 · Encryption can be enforced. This means that session
8322 setups will be denied on non-encryption-capable
8323 connections if data encryption has been enabled
8324 globally. And tree connections will be denied for
8325 non-encryption capable connections to shares with
8326 data encryption enabled.
8327
8328 These features can be controlled with settings of smb encrypt
8329 as follows:
8330
8331 · Leaving it as default, explicitly setting default,
8332 or setting it to enabled globally will enable
8333 negotiation of encryption but will not turn on data
8334 encryption globally or per share.
8335
8336 · Setting it to desired globally will enable
8337 negotiation and will turn on data encryption on
8338 sessions and share connections for those clients
8339 that support it.
8340
8341 · Setting it to required globally will enable
8342 negotiation and turn on data encryption on sessions
8343 and share connections. Clients that do not support
8344 encryption will be denied access to the server.
8345
8346 · Setting it to off globally will completely disable
8347 the encryption feature for all connections. Setting
8348 smb encrypt = required for individual shares (while
8349 it's globally off) will deny access to this shares
8350 for all clients.
8351
8352 · Setting it to desired on a share will turn on data
8353 encryption for this share for clients that support
8354 encryption if negotiation has been enabled globally.
8355
8356 · Setting it to required on a share will enforce data
8357 encryption for this share if negotiation has been
8358 enabled globally. I.e. clients that do not support
8359 encryption will be denied access to the share.
8360
8361 Note that this allows per-share enforcing to be
8362 controlled in Samba differently from Windows: In
8363 Windows, RejectUnencryptedAccess is a global
8364 setting, and if it is set, all shares with data
8365 encryption turned on are automatically enforcing
8366 encryption. In order to achieve the same effect in
8367 Samba, one has to globally set smb encrypt to
8368 enabled, and then set all shares that should be
8369 encrypted to required. Additionally, it is possible
8370 in Samba to have some shares with encryption
8371 required and some other shares with encryption only
8372 desired, which is not possible in Windows.
8373
8374 · Setting it to off or enabled for a share has no
8375 effect.
8376
8377
8378 Default: smb encrypt = default
8379
8380 smb passwd file (G)
8381
8382 This option sets the path to the encrypted smbpasswd file. By
8383 default the path to the smbpasswd file is compiled into Samba.
8384
8385 An example of use is:
8386
8387 smb passwd file = /etc/samba/smbpasswd
8388
8389 Default: smb passwd file = /var/lib/samba/private/smbpasswd
8390
8391 smb ports (G)
8392
8393 Specifies which ports the server should listen on for SMB traffic.
8394
8395 Default: smb ports = 445 139
8396
8397 socket options (G)
8398
8399 Warning
8400 Modern server operating systems are tuned for high network
8401 performance in the majority of situations; when you set socket
8402 options you are overriding those settings. Linux in particular
8403 has an auto-tuning mechanism for buffer sizes that will be
8404 disabled if you specify a socket buffer size. This can
8405 potentially cripple your TCP/IP stack.
8406
8407 Getting the socket options correct can make a big difference to
8408 your performance, but getting them wrong can degrade it by just
8409 as much. As with any other low level setting, if you must make
8410 changes to it, make small changes and test the effect before
8411 making any large changes.
8412
8413 This option allows you to set socket options to be used when
8414 talking with the client.
8415
8416 Socket options are controls on the networking layer of the
8417 operating systems which allow the connection to be tuned.
8418
8419 This option will typically be used to tune your Samba server for
8420 optimal performance for your local network. There is no way that
8421 Samba can know what the optimal parameters are for your net, so you
8422 must experiment and choose them yourself. We strongly suggest you
8423 read the appropriate documentation for your operating system first
8424 (perhaps man setsockopt will help).
8425
8426 You may find that on some systems Samba will say "Unknown socket
8427 option" when you supply an option. This means you either
8428 incorrectly typed it or you need to add an include file to
8429 includes.h for your OS. If the latter is the case please send the
8430 patch to samba-technical@lists.samba.org.
8431
8432 Any of the supported socket options may be combined in any way you
8433 like, as long as your OS allows it.
8434
8435 This is the list of socket options currently settable using this
8436 option:
8437
8438 · SO_KEEPALIVE
8439
8440 · SO_REUSEADDR
8441
8442 · SO_BROADCAST
8443
8444 · TCP_NODELAY
8445
8446 · TCP_KEEPCNT *
8447
8448 · TCP_KEEPIDLE *
8449
8450 · TCP_KEEPINTVL *
8451
8452 · IPTOS_LOWDELAY
8453
8454 · IPTOS_THROUGHPUT
8455
8456 · SO_REUSEPORT
8457
8458 · SO_SNDBUF *
8459
8460 · SO_RCVBUF *
8461
8462 · SO_SNDLOWAT *
8463
8464 · SO_RCVLOWAT *
8465
8466 · SO_SNDTIMEO *
8467
8468 · SO_RCVTIMEO *
8469
8470 · TCP_FASTACK *
8471
8472 · TCP_QUICKACK
8473
8474 · TCP_NODELAYACK
8475
8476 · TCP_KEEPALIVE_THRESHOLD *
8477
8478 · TCP_KEEPALIVE_ABORT_THRESHOLD *
8479
8480 · TCP_DEFER_ACCEPT *
8481
8482 Those marked with a '*' take an integer argument. The others can
8483 optionally take a 1 or 0 argument to enable or disable the option,
8484 by default they will be enabled if you don't specify 1 or 0.
8485
8486 To specify an argument use the syntax SOME_OPTION = VALUE for
8487 example SO_SNDBUF = 8192. Note that you must not have any spaces
8488 before or after the = sign.
8489
8490 If you are on a local network then a sensible option might be:
8491
8492 socket options = IPTOS_LOWDELAY
8493
8494 If you have a local network then you could try:
8495
8496 socket options = IPTOS_LOWDELAY TCP_NODELAY
8497
8498 If you are on a wide area network then perhaps try setting
8499 IPTOS_THROUGHPUT.
8500
8501 Note that several of the options may cause your Samba server to
8502 fail completely. Use these options with caution!
8503
8504 Default: socket options = TCP_NODELAY
8505
8506 Example: socket options = IPTOS_LOWDELAY
8507
8508 spn update command (G)
8509
8510 This option sets the command that for updating servicePrincipalName
8511 names from spn_update_list.
8512
8513 Default: spn update command =
8514 /builddir/build/BUILD/samba-4.12.2/source4/scripting/bin/samba_spnupdate
8515
8516 Example: spn update command = /usr/local/sbin/spnupdate
8517
8518 spoolss: architecture (G)
8519
8520 Windows spoolss print clients only allow association of server-side
8521 drivers with printers when the driver architecture matches the
8522 advertised print server architecture. Samba's spoolss print server
8523 architecture can be changed using this parameter.
8524
8525 Default: spoolss: architecture = Windows NT x86
8526
8527 Example: spoolss: architecture = Windows x64
8528
8529 spoolss: os_major (G)
8530
8531 Windows might require a new os version number. This option allows
8532 to modify the build number. The complete default version number is:
8533 5.0.2195 (Windows 2000). The example is 6.1.7601 (Windows 2008 R2).
8534
8535 Default: spoolss: os_major = 5
8536
8537 Example: spoolss: os_major = 6
8538
8539 spoolss: os_minor (G)
8540
8541 Windows might require a new os version number. This option allows
8542 to modify the build number. The complete default version number is:
8543 5.0.2195 (Windows 2000). The example is 6.1.7601 (Windows 2008 R2).
8544
8545 Default: spoolss: os_minor = 0
8546
8547 Example: spoolss: os_minor = 1
8548
8549 spoolss: os_build (G)
8550
8551 Windows might require a new os version number. This option allows
8552 to modify the build number. The complete default version number is:
8553 5.0.2195 (Windows 2000). The example is 6.1.7601 (Windows 2008 R2).
8554
8555 Default: spoolss: os_build = 2195
8556
8557 Example: spoolss: os_build = 7601
8558
8559 spoolss_client: os_major (G)
8560
8561 Windows might require a new os version number. This option allows
8562 to modify the build number. The complete default version number is:
8563 6.1.7007 (Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2).
8564
8565 Default: spoolss_client: os_major = 6
8566
8567 spoolss_client: os_minor (G)
8568
8569 Windows might require a new os version number. This option allows
8570 to modify the build number. The complete default version number is:
8571 6.1.7007 (Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2).
8572
8573 Default: spoolss_client: os_minor = 1
8574
8575 spoolss_client: os_build (G)
8576
8577 Windows might require a new os version number. This option allows
8578 to modify the build number. The complete default version number is:
8579 6.1.7007 (Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2).
8580
8581 Default: spoolss_client: os_build = 7007
8582
8583 spotlight (S)
8584
8585 This parameter controls whether Samba allows Spotlight queries on a
8586 share. For controlling indexing of filesystems you also have to use
8587 Tracker's own configuration system.
8588
8589 Spotlight has several prerequisites:
8590
8591 · Samba must be configured and built with Spotlight
8592 support.
8593
8594 · The mdssvc RPC service must be enabled, see below.
8595
8596 · Tracker integration must be setup and the share must be
8597 indexed by Tracker.
8598
8599 For a detailed set of instructions please see
8600 https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Spotlight.
8601
8602 The Spotlight RPC service can either be enabled as embedded RPC
8603 service:
8604
8605 [Global]
8606 rpc_server:mdsvc = embedded
8607
8608 Or it can be run in a separate RPC service daemon:
8609
8610 [Global]
8611 rpc_server:mdssd = fork
8612 rpc_server:mdsvc = external
8613
8614 Default: spotlight = no
8615
8616 spotlight backend (S)
8617
8618 Spotlight search backend. Available backends:
8619
8620 · noindex - a backend that returns no results.
8621
8622
8623 · tracker - Gnome Tracker.
8624
8625 · elasticsearch - a backend that uses JSON and REST over
8626 HTTP(s) to query an Elasticsearch server.
8627
8628
8629 Default: spotlight backend = noindex
8630
8631 stat cache (G)
8632
8633 This parameter determines if smbd(8) will use a cache in order to
8634 speed up case insensitive name mappings. You should never need to
8635 change this parameter.
8636
8637 Default: stat cache = yes
8638
8639 state directory (G)
8640
8641 Usually, most of the TDB files are stored in the lock directory.
8642 Since Samba 3.4.0, it is possible to differentiate between TDB
8643 files with persistent data and TDB files with non-persistent data
8644 using the state directory and the cache directory options.
8645
8646 This option specifies the directory where TDB files containing
8647 important persistent data will be stored.
8648
8649 Default: state directory = /var/lib/samba
8650
8651 Example: state directory = /var/run/samba/locks/state
8652
8653 store dos attributes (S)
8654
8655 If this parameter is set Samba attempts to first read DOS
8656 attributes (SYSTEM, HIDDEN, ARCHIVE or READ-ONLY) from a filesystem
8657 extended attribute, before mapping DOS attributes to UNIX
8658 permission bits (such as occurs with map hidden and map readonly).
8659 When set, DOS attributes will be stored onto an extended attribute
8660 in the UNIX filesystem, associated with the file or directory. When
8661 this parameter is set it will override the parameters map hidden,
8662 map system, map archive and map readonly and they will behave as if
8663 they were set to off. This parameter writes the DOS attributes as a
8664 string into the extended attribute named "user.DOSATTRIB". This
8665 extended attribute is explicitly hidden from smbd clients
8666 requesting an EA list. On Linux the filesystem must have been
8667 mounted with the mount option user_xattr in order for extended
8668 attributes to work, also extended attributes must be compiled into
8669 the Linux kernel. In Samba 3.5.0 and above the "user.DOSATTRIB"
8670 extended attribute has been extended to store the create time for a
8671 file as well as the DOS attributes. This is done in a backwards
8672 compatible way so files created by Samba 3.5.0 and above can still
8673 have the DOS attribute read from this extended attribute by earlier
8674 versions of Samba, but they will not be able to read the create
8675 time stored there. Storing the create time separately from the
8676 normal filesystem meta-data allows Samba to faithfully reproduce
8677 NTFS semantics on top of a POSIX filesystem. The default has
8678 changed to yes in Samba release 4.9.0 and above to allow better
8679 Windows fileserver compatibility in a default install.
8680
8681 Default: store dos attributes = yes
8682
8683 strict allocate (S)
8684
8685 This is a boolean that controls the handling of disk space
8686 allocation in the server. When this is set to yes the server will
8687 change from UNIX behaviour of not committing real disk storage
8688 blocks when a file is extended to the Windows behaviour of actually
8689 forcing the disk system to allocate real storage blocks when a file
8690 is created or extended to be a given size. In UNIX terminology this
8691 means that Samba will stop creating sparse files.
8692
8693 This option is really designed for file systems that support fast
8694 allocation of large numbers of blocks such as extent-based file
8695 systems. On file systems that don't support extents (most notably
8696 ext3) this can make Samba slower. When you work with large files
8697 over >100MB on file systems without extents you may even run into
8698 problems with clients running into timeouts.
8699
8700 When you have an extent based filesystem it's likely that we can
8701 make use of unwritten extents which allows Samba to allocate even
8702 large amounts of space very fast and you will not see any timeout
8703 problems caused by strict allocate. With strict allocate in use you
8704 will also get much better out of quota messages in case you use
8705 quotas. Another advantage of activating this setting is that it
8706 will help to reduce file fragmentation.
8707
8708 To give you an idea on which filesystems this setting might
8709 currently be a good option for you: XFS, ext4, btrfs, ocfs2 on
8710 Linux and JFS2 on AIX support unwritten extents. On Filesystems
8711 that do not support it, preallocation is probably an expensive
8712 operation where you will see reduced performance and risk to let
8713 clients run into timeouts when creating large files. Examples are
8714 ext3, ZFS, HFS+ and most others, so be aware if you activate this
8715 setting on those filesystems.
8716
8717 Default: strict allocate = no
8718
8719 strict locking (S)
8720
8721 This is an enumerated type that controls the handling of file
8722 locking in the server. When this is set to yes, the server will
8723 check every read and write access for file locks, and deny access
8724 if locks exist. This can be slow on some systems.
8725
8726 When strict locking is set to Auto (the default), the server
8727 performs file lock checks only on non-oplocked files. As most
8728 Windows redirectors perform file locking checks locally on oplocked
8729 files this is a good trade off for improved performance.
8730
8731 When strict locking is disabled, the server performs file lock
8732 checks only when the client explicitly asks for them.
8733
8734 Well-behaved clients always ask for lock checks when it is
8735 important. So in the vast majority of cases, strict locking = Auto
8736 or strict locking = no is acceptable.
8737
8738 Default: strict locking = Auto
8739
8740 strict rename (S)
8741
8742 By default a Windows SMB server prevents directory renames when
8743 there are open file or directory handles below it in the filesystem
8744 hierarchy. Historically Samba has always allowed this as POSIX
8745 filesystem semantics require it.
8746
8747 This boolean parameter allows Samba to match the Windows behavior.
8748 Setting this to "yes" is a very expensive change, as it forces
8749 Samba to travers the entire open file handle database on every
8750 directory rename request. In a clustered Samba system the cost is
8751 even greater than the non-clustered case.
8752
8753 When set to "no" smbd only checks the local process the client is
8754 attached to for open files below a directory being renamed, instead
8755 of checking for open files across all smbd processes.
8756
8757 Because of the expense in fully searching the database, the default
8758 is "no", and it is recommended to be left that way unless a
8759 specific Windows application requires it to be changed.
8760
8761 If the client has requested UNIX extensions (POSIX pathnames) then
8762 renames are always allowed and this parameter has no effect.
8763
8764 Default: strict rename = no
8765
8766 strict sync (S)
8767
8768 This parameter controls whether Samba honors a request from an SMB
8769 client to ensure any outstanding operating system buffer contents
8770 held in memory are safely written onto stable storage on disk. If
8771 set to yes, which is the default, then Windows applications can
8772 force the smbd server to synchronize unwritten data onto the disk.
8773 If set to no then smbd will ignore client requests to synchronize
8774 unwritten data onto stable storage on disk.
8775
8776 In Samba 4.7.0, the default for this parameter changed from no to
8777 yes to better match the expectations of SMB2/3 clients and improve
8778 application safety when running against smbd.
8779
8780 The flush request from SMB2/3 clients is handled asynchronously
8781 inside smbd, so leaving the parameter as the default value of yes
8782 does not block the processing of other requests to the smbd
8783 process.
8784
8785 Legacy Windows applications (such as the Windows 98 explorer shell)
8786 seemed to confuse writing buffer contents to the operating system
8787 with synchronously writing outstanding data onto stable storage on
8788 disk. Changing this parameter to no means that smbd(8) will ignore
8789 the Windows applications request to synchronize unwritten data onto
8790 disk. Only consider changing this if smbd is serving obsolete SMB1
8791 Windows clients prior to Windows XP (Windows 98 and below). There
8792 should be no need to change this setting for normal operations.
8793
8794 Default: strict sync = yes
8795
8796 svcctl list (G)
8797
8798 This option defines a list of init scripts that smbd will use for
8799 starting and stopping Unix services via the Win32 ServiceControl
8800 API. This allows Windows administrators to utilize the MS
8801 Management Console plug-ins to manage a Unix server running Samba.
8802
8803 The administrator must create a directory name svcctl in Samba's
8804 $(libdir) and create symbolic links to the init scripts in
8805 /etc/init.d/. The name of the links must match the names given as
8806 part of the svcctl list.
8807
8808 Default: svcctl list =
8809
8810 Example: svcctl list = cups postfix portmap httpd
8811
8812 sync always (S)
8813
8814 This is a boolean parameter that controls whether writes will
8815 always be written to stable storage before the write call returns.
8816 If this is no then the server will be guided by the client's
8817 request in each write call (clients can set a bit indicating that a
8818 particular write should be synchronous). If this is yes then every
8819 write will be followed by a fsync() call to ensure the data is
8820 written to disk. Note that the strict sync parameter must be set to
8821 yes in order for this parameter to have any effect.
8822
8823 Default: sync always = no
8824
8825 syslog (G)
8826
8827 This parameter maps how Samba debug messages are logged onto the
8828 system syslog logging levels. Samba debug level zero maps onto
8829 syslog LOG_ERR, debug level one maps onto LOG_WARNING, debug level
8830 two maps onto LOG_NOTICE, debug level three maps onto LOG_INFO. All
8831 higher levels are mapped to LOG_DEBUG.
8832
8833 This parameter sets the threshold for sending messages to syslog.
8834 Only messages with debug level less than this value will be sent to
8835 syslog. There still will be some logging to log.[sn]mbd even if
8836 syslog only is enabled.
8837
8838 The logging parameter should be used instead. When logging is set,
8839 it overrides the syslog parameter.
8840
8841 Default: syslog = 1
8842
8843 syslog only (G)
8844
8845 If this parameter is set then Samba debug messages are logged into
8846 the system syslog only, and not to the debug log files. There still
8847 will be some logging to log.[sn]mbd even if syslog only is enabled.
8848
8849 The logging parameter should be used instead. When logging is set,
8850 it overrides the syslog only parameter.
8851
8852 Default: syslog only = no
8853
8854 template homedir (G)
8855
8856 When filling out the user information for a Windows NT user, the
8857 winbindd(8) daemon uses this parameter to fill in the home
8858 directory for that user. If the string %D is present it is
8859 substituted with the user's Windows NT domain name. If the string
8860 %U is present it is substituted with the user's Windows NT user
8861 name.
8862
8863 Default: template homedir = /home/%D/%U
8864
8865 template shell (G)
8866
8867 When filling out the user information for a Windows NT user, the
8868 winbindd(8) daemon uses this parameter to fill in the login shell
8869 for that user.
8870
8871 Default: template shell = /bin/false
8872
8873 time server (G)
8874
8875 This parameter determines if nmbd(8) advertises itself as a time
8876 server to Windows clients.
8877
8878 Default: time server = no
8879
8880 debug timestamp
8881
8882 This parameter is a synonym for timestamp logs.
8883
8884 timestamp logs (G)
8885
8886 Samba debug log messages are timestamped by default. If you are
8887 running at a high debug level these timestamps can be distracting.
8888 This boolean parameter allows timestamping to be turned off.
8889
8890 Default: timestamp logs = yes
8891
8892 tls cafile (G)
8893
8894 This option can be set to a file (PEM format) containing CA
8895 certificates of root CAs to trust to sign certificates or
8896 intermediate CA certificates.
8897
8898 This path is relative to private dir if the path does not start
8899 with a /.
8900
8901 Default: tls cafile = tls/ca.pem
8902
8903 tls certfile (G)
8904
8905 This option can be set to a file (PEM format) containing the RSA
8906 certificate.
8907
8908 This path is relative to private dir if the path does not start
8909 with a /.
8910
8911 Default: tls certfile = tls/cert.pem
8912
8913 tls crlfile (G)
8914
8915 This option can be set to a file containing a certificate
8916 revocation list (CRL).
8917
8918 This path is relative to private dir if the path does not start
8919 with a /.
8920
8921 Default: tls crlfile =
8922
8923 tls dh params file (G)
8924
8925 This option can be set to a file with Diffie-Hellman parameters
8926 which will be used with DH ciphers.
8927
8928 This path is relative to private dir if the path does not start
8929 with a /.
8930
8931 Default: tls dh params file =
8932
8933 tls enabled (G)
8934
8935 If this option is set to yes, then Samba will use TLS when possible
8936 in communication.
8937
8938 Default: tls enabled = yes
8939
8940 tls keyfile (G)
8941
8942 This option can be set to a file (PEM format) containing the RSA
8943 private key. This file must be accessible without a pass-phrase,
8944 i.e. it must not be encrypted.
8945
8946 This path is relative to private dir if the path does not start
8947 with a /.
8948
8949 Default: tls keyfile = tls/key.pem
8950
8951 tls priority (G)
8952
8953 This option can be set to a string describing the TLS protocols to
8954 be supported in the parts of Samba that use GnuTLS, specifically
8955 the AD DC.
8956
8957 The default turns off SSLv3, as this protocol is no longer
8958 considered secure after CVE-2014-3566 (otherwise known as POODLE)
8959 impacted SSLv3 use in HTTPS applications.
8960
8961 The valid options are described in the GNUTLS Priority-Strings
8962 documentation at
8963 http://gnutls.org/manual/html_node/Priority-Strings.html
8964
8965 Default: tls priority = NORMAL:-VERS-SSL3.0
8966
8967 tls verify peer (G)
8968
8969 This controls if and how strict the client will verify the peer's
8970 certificate and name. Possible values are (in increasing order):
8971 no_check, ca_only, ca_and_name_if_available, ca_and_name and
8972 as_strict_as_possible.
8973
8974 When set to no_check the certificate is not verified at all, which
8975 allows trivial man in the middle attacks.
8976
8977 When set to ca_only the certificate is verified to be signed from a
8978 ca specified in the tls ca file option. Setting tls ca file to a
8979 valid file is required. The certificate lifetime is also verified.
8980 If the tls crl file option is configured, the certificate is also
8981 verified against the ca crl.
8982
8983 When set to ca_and_name_if_available all checks from ca_only are
8984 performed. In addition, the peer hostname is verified against the
8985 certificate's name, if it is provided by the application layer and
8986 not given as an ip address string.
8987
8988 When set to ca_and_name all checks from ca_and_name_if_available
8989 are performed. In addition the peer hostname needs to be provided
8990 and even an ip address is checked against the certificate's name.
8991
8992 When set to as_strict_as_possible all checks from ca_and_name are
8993 performed. In addition the tls crl file needs to be configured.
8994 Future versions of Samba may implement additional checks.
8995
8996 Default: tls verify peer = as_strict_as_possible
8997
8998 unicode (G)
8999
9000 Specifies whether the server and client should support unicode.
9001
9002 If this option is set to false, the use of ASCII will be forced.
9003
9004 Default: unicode = yes
9005
9006 unix charset (G)
9007
9008 Specifies the charset the unix machine Samba runs on uses. Samba
9009 needs to know this in order to be able to convert text to the
9010 charsets other SMB clients use.
9011
9012 This is also the charset Samba will use when specifying arguments
9013 to scripts that it invokes.
9014
9015 Default: unix charset = UTF-8
9016
9017 Example: unix charset = ASCII
9018
9019 unix extensions (G)
9020
9021 This boolean parameter controls whether Samba implements the CIFS
9022 UNIX extensions, as defined by HP. These extensions enable Samba to
9023 better serve UNIX CIFS clients by supporting features such as
9024 symbolic links, hard links, etc... These extensions require a
9025 similarly enabled client, and are of no current use to Windows
9026 clients.
9027
9028 Note if this parameter is turned on, the wide links parameter will
9029 automatically be disabled.
9030
9031 See the parameter allow insecure wide links if you wish to change
9032 this coupling between the two parameters.
9033
9034 Default: unix extensions = yes
9035
9036 unix password sync (G)
9037
9038 This boolean parameter controls whether Samba attempts to
9039 synchronize the UNIX password with the SMB password when the
9040 encrypted SMB password in the smbpasswd file is changed. If this is
9041 set to yes the program specified in the passwd program parameter is
9042 called AS ROOT - to allow the new UNIX password to be set without
9043 access to the old UNIX password (as the SMB password change code
9044 has no access to the old password cleartext, only the new).
9045
9046 This option has no effect if samba is running as an active
9047 directory domain controller, in that case have a look at the
9048 password hash gpg key ids option and the samba-tool user
9049 syncpasswords command.
9050
9051 Default: unix password sync = no
9052
9053 use client driver (S)
9054
9055 This parameter applies only to Windows NT/2000 clients. It has no
9056 effect on Windows 95/98/ME clients. When serving a printer to
9057 Windows NT/2000 clients without first installing a valid printer
9058 driver on the Samba host, the client will be required to install a
9059 local printer driver. From this point on, the client will treat the
9060 print as a local printer and not a network printer connection. This
9061 is much the same behavior that will occur when disable spoolss =
9062 yes.
9063
9064 The differentiating factor is that under normal circumstances, the
9065 NT/2000 client will attempt to open the network printer using
9066 MS-RPC. The problem is that because the client considers the
9067 printer to be local, it will attempt to issue the OpenPrinterEx()
9068 call requesting access rights associated with the logged on user.
9069 If the user possesses local administrator rights but not root
9070 privilege on the Samba host (often the case), the OpenPrinterEx()
9071 call will fail. The result is that the client will now display an
9072 "Access Denied; Unable to connect" message in the printer queue
9073 window (even though jobs may successfully be printed).
9074
9075 If this parameter is enabled for a printer, then any attempt to
9076 open the printer with the PRINTER_ACCESS_ADMINISTER right is mapped
9077 to PRINTER_ACCESS_USE instead. Thus allowing the OpenPrinterEx()
9078 call to succeed. This parameter MUST not be enabled on a print
9079 share which has valid print driver installed on the Samba server.
9080
9081 Default: use client driver = no
9082
9083 use mmap (G)
9084
9085 This global parameter determines if the tdb internals of Samba can
9086 depend on mmap working correctly on the running system. Samba
9087 requires a coherent mmap/read-write system memory cache. Currently
9088 only HPUX does not have such a coherent cache, and so this
9089 parameter is set to no by default on HPUX. On all other systems
9090 this parameter should be left alone. This parameter is provided to
9091 help the Samba developers track down problems with the tdb internal
9092 code.
9093
9094 Default: use mmap = yes
9095
9096 username level (G)
9097
9098 This option helps Samba to try and 'guess' at the real UNIX
9099 username, as many DOS clients send an all-uppercase username. By
9100 default Samba tries all lowercase, followed by the username with
9101 the first letter capitalized, and fails if the username is not
9102 found on the UNIX machine.
9103
9104 If this parameter is set to non-zero the behavior changes. This
9105 parameter is a number that specifies the number of uppercase
9106 combinations to try while trying to determine the UNIX user name.
9107 The higher the number the more combinations will be tried, but the
9108 slower the discovery of usernames will be. Use this parameter when
9109 you have strange usernames on your UNIX machine, such as
9110 AstrangeUser .
9111
9112 This parameter is needed only on UNIX systems that have case
9113 sensitive usernames.
9114
9115 Default: username level = 0
9116
9117 Example: username level = 5
9118
9119 username map (G)
9120
9121 This option allows you to specify a file containing a mapping of
9122 usernames from the clients to the server. This can be used for
9123 several purposes. The most common is to map usernames that users
9124 use on DOS or Windows machines to those that the UNIX box uses. The
9125 other is to map multiple users to a single username so that they
9126 can more easily share files.
9127
9128 Please note that for user mode security, the username map is
9129 applied prior to validating the user credentials. Domain member
9130 servers (domain or ads) apply the username map after the user has
9131 been successfully authenticated by the domain controller and
9132 require fully qualified entries in the map table (e.g. biddle =
9133 DOMAIN\foo).
9134
9135 The map file is parsed line by line. Each line should contain a
9136 single UNIX username on the left then a '=' followed by a list of
9137 usernames on the right. The list of usernames on the right may
9138 contain names of the form @group in which case they will match any
9139 UNIX username in that group. The special client name '*' is a
9140 wildcard and matches any name. Each line of the map file may be up
9141 to 1023 characters long.
9142
9143 The file is processed on each line by taking the supplied username
9144 and comparing it with each username on the right hand side of the
9145 '=' signs. If the supplied name matches any of the names on the
9146 right hand side then it is replaced with the name on the left.
9147 Processing then continues with the next line.
9148
9149 If any line begins with a '#' or a ';' then it is ignored.
9150
9151 If any line begins with an '!' then the processing will stop after
9152 that line if a mapping was done by the line. Otherwise mapping
9153 continues with every line being processed. Using '!' is most useful
9154 when you have a wildcard mapping line later in the file.
9155
9156 For example to map from the name admin or administrator to the UNIX
9157 name
9158 root you would use:
9159
9160 root = admin administrator
9161
9162 Or to map anyone in the UNIX group system to the UNIX name sys you
9163 would use:
9164
9165 sys = @system
9166
9167 You can have as many mappings as you like in a username map file.
9168
9169 If your system supports the NIS NETGROUP option then the netgroup
9170 database is checked before the /etc/group database for matching
9171 groups.
9172
9173 You can map Windows usernames that have spaces in them by using
9174 double quotes around the name. For example:
9175
9176 tridge = "Andrew Tridgell"
9177
9178 would map the windows username "Andrew Tridgell" to the unix
9179 username "tridge".
9180
9181 The following example would map mary and fred to the unix user sys,
9182 and map the rest to guest. Note the use of the '!' to tell Samba to
9183 stop processing if it gets a match on that line:
9184
9185 !sys = mary fred
9186 guest = *
9187
9188 Note that the remapping is applied to all occurrences of usernames.
9189 Thus if you connect to \\server\fred and fred is remapped to mary
9190 then you will actually be connecting to \\server\mary and will need
9191 to supply a password suitable for mary not fred. The only exception
9192 to this is the username passed to a Domain Controller (if you have
9193 one). The DC will receive whatever username the client supplies
9194 without modification.
9195
9196 Also note that no reverse mapping is done. The main effect this has
9197 is with printing. Users who have been mapped may have trouble
9198 deleting print jobs as PrintManager under WfWg will think they
9199 don't own the print job.
9200
9201 Samba versions prior to 3.0.8 would only support reading the fully
9202 qualified username (e.g.: DOMAIN\user) from the username map when
9203 performing a kerberos login from a client. However, when looking up
9204 a map entry for a user authenticated by NTLM[SSP], only the login
9205 name would be used for matches. This resulted in inconsistent
9206 behavior sometimes even on the same server.
9207
9208 The following functionality is obeyed in version 3.0.8 and later:
9209
9210 When performing local authentication, the username map is applied
9211 to the login name before attempting to authenticate the connection.
9212
9213 When relying upon a external domain controller for validating
9214 authentication requests, smbd will apply the username map to the
9215 fully qualified username (i.e. DOMAIN\user) only after the user
9216 has been successfully authenticated.
9217
9218 An example of use is:
9219
9220 username map = /usr/local/samba/lib/users.map
9221
9222 Default: username map = # no username map
9223
9224 username map cache time (G)
9225
9226 Mapping usernames with the username map or username map script
9227 features of Samba can be relatively expensive. During login of a
9228 user, the mapping is done several times. In particular, calling the
9229 username map script can slow down logins if external databases have
9230 to be queried from the script being called.
9231
9232 The parameter username map cache time controls a mapping cache. It
9233 specifies the number of seconds a mapping from the username map
9234 file or script is to be efficiently cached. The default of 0 means
9235 no caching is done.
9236
9237 Default: username map cache time = 0
9238
9239 Example: username map cache time = 60
9240
9241 username map script (G)
9242
9243 This script is a mutually exclusive alternative to the username map
9244 parameter. This parameter specifies and external program or script
9245 that must accept a single command line option (the username
9246 transmitted in the authentication request) and return a line on
9247 standard output (the name to which the account should mapped). In
9248 this way, it is possible to store username map tables in an LDAP or
9249 NIS directory services.
9250
9251 Default: username map script =
9252
9253 Example: username map script = /etc/samba/scripts/mapusers.sh
9254
9255 usershare allow guests (G)
9256
9257 This parameter controls whether user defined shares are allowed to
9258 be accessed by non-authenticated users or not. It is the equivalent
9259 of allowing people who can create a share the option of setting
9260 guest ok = yes in a share definition. Due to its security sensitive
9261 nature, the default is set to off.
9262
9263 Default: usershare allow guests = no
9264
9265 usershare max shares (G)
9266
9267 This parameter specifies the number of user defined shares that are
9268 allowed to be created by users belonging to the group owning the
9269 usershare directory. If set to zero (the default) user defined
9270 shares are ignored.
9271
9272 Default: usershare max shares = 0
9273
9274 usershare owner only (G)
9275
9276 This parameter controls whether the pathname exported by a user
9277 defined shares must be owned by the user creating the user defined
9278 share or not. If set to True (the default) then smbd checks that
9279 the directory path being shared is owned by the user who owns the
9280 usershare file defining this share and refuses to create the share
9281 if not. If set to False then no such check is performed and any
9282 directory path may be exported regardless of who owns it.
9283
9284 Default: usershare owner only = yes
9285
9286 usershare path (G)
9287
9288 This parameter specifies the absolute path of the directory on the
9289 filesystem used to store the user defined share definition files.
9290 This directory must be owned by root, and have no access for other,
9291 and be writable only by the group owner. In addition the "sticky"
9292 bit must also be set, restricting rename and delete to owners of a
9293 file (in the same way the /tmp directory is usually configured).
9294 Members of the group owner of this directory are the users allowed
9295 to create usershares.
9296
9297 For example, a valid usershare directory might be
9298 /usr/local/samba/lib/usershares, set up as follows.
9299
9300 ls -ld /usr/local/samba/lib/usershares/
9301 drwxrwx--T 2 root power_users 4096 2006-05-05 12:27 /usr/local/samba/lib/usershares/
9302
9303
9304 In this case, only members of the group "power_users" can create
9305 user defined shares.
9306
9307 Default: usershare path = /var/lib/samba/usershares
9308
9309 usershare prefix allow list (G)
9310
9311 This parameter specifies a list of absolute pathnames the root of
9312 which are allowed to be exported by user defined share definitions.
9313 If the pathname to be exported doesn't start with one of the
9314 strings in this list, the user defined share will not be allowed.
9315 This allows the Samba administrator to restrict the directories on
9316 the system that can be exported by user defined shares.
9317
9318 If there is a "usershare prefix deny list" and also a "usershare
9319 prefix allow list" the deny list is processed first, followed by
9320 the allow list, thus leading to the most restrictive
9321 interpretation.
9322
9323 Default: usershare prefix allow list =
9324
9325 Example: usershare prefix allow list = /home /data /space
9326
9327 usershare prefix deny list (G)
9328
9329 This parameter specifies a list of absolute pathnames the root of
9330 which are NOT allowed to be exported by user defined share
9331 definitions. If the pathname exported starts with one of the
9332 strings in this list the user defined share will not be allowed.
9333 Any pathname not starting with one of these strings will be allowed
9334 to be exported as a usershare. This allows the Samba administrator
9335 to restrict the directories on the system that can be exported by
9336 user defined shares.
9337
9338 If there is a "usershare prefix deny list" and also a "usershare
9339 prefix allow list" the deny list is processed first, followed by
9340 the allow list, thus leading to the most restrictive
9341 interpretation.
9342
9343 Default: usershare prefix deny list =
9344
9345 Example: usershare prefix deny list = /etc /dev /private
9346
9347 usershare template share (G)
9348
9349 User defined shares only have limited possible parameters such as
9350 path, guest ok, etc. This parameter allows usershares to "cloned"
9351 from an existing share. If "usershare template share" is set to the
9352 name of an existing share, then all usershares created have their
9353 defaults set from the parameters set on this share.
9354
9355 The target share may be set to be invalid for real file sharing by
9356 setting the parameter "-valid = False" on the template share
9357 definition. This causes it not to be seen as a real exported share
9358 but to be able to be used as a template for usershares.
9359
9360 Default: usershare template share =
9361
9362 Example: usershare template share = template_share
9363
9364 use sendfile (S)
9365
9366 If this parameter is yes, and the sendfile() system call is
9367 supported by the underlying operating system, then some SMB read
9368 calls (mainly ReadAndX and ReadRaw) will use the more efficient
9369 sendfile system call for files that are exclusively oplocked. This
9370 may make more efficient use of the system CPU's and cause Samba to
9371 be faster. Samba automatically turns this off for clients that use
9372 protocol levels lower than NT LM 0.12 and when it detects a client
9373 is Windows 9x (using sendfile from Linux will cause these clients
9374 to fail).
9375
9376 Default: use sendfile = no
9377
9378 utmp (G)
9379
9380 This boolean parameter is only available if Samba has been
9381 configured and compiled with the option --with-utmp. If set to yes
9382 then Samba will attempt to add utmp or utmpx records (depending on
9383 the UNIX system) whenever a connection is made to a Samba server.
9384 Sites may use this to record the user connecting to a Samba share.
9385
9386 Due to the requirements of the utmp record, we are required to
9387 create a unique identifier for the incoming user. Enabling this
9388 option creates an n^2 algorithm to find this number. This may
9389 impede performance on large installations.
9390
9391 Default: utmp = no
9392
9393 utmp directory (G)
9394
9395 This parameter is only available if Samba has been configured and
9396 compiled with the option --with-utmp. It specifies a directory
9397 pathname that is used to store the utmp or utmpx files (depending
9398 on the UNIX system) that record user connections to a Samba server.
9399 By default this is not set, meaning the system will use whatever
9400 utmp file the native system is set to use (usually /var/run/utmp on
9401 Linux).
9402
9403 Default: utmp directory = # Determined automatically
9404
9405 Example: utmp directory = /var/run/utmp
9406
9407 -valid (S)
9408
9409 This parameter indicates whether a share is valid and thus can be
9410 used. When this parameter is set to false, the share will be in no
9411 way visible nor accessible.
9412
9413 This option should not be used by regular users but might be of
9414 help to developers. Samba uses this option internally to mark
9415 shares as deleted.
9416
9417 Default: -valid = yes
9418
9419 valid users (S)
9420
9421 This is a list of users that should be allowed to login to this
9422 service. Names starting with '@', '+' and '&' are interpreted using
9423 the same rules as described in the invalid users parameter.
9424
9425 If this is empty (the default) then any user can login. If a
9426 username is in both this list and the invalid users list then
9427 access is denied for that user.
9428
9429 The current servicename is substituted for %S. This is useful in
9430 the [homes] section.
9431
9432 Note: When used in the [global] section this parameter may have
9433 unwanted side effects. For example: If samba is configured as a
9434 MASTER BROWSER (see local master, os level, domain master,
9435 preferred master) this option will prevent workstations from being
9436 able to browse the network.
9437
9438 Default: valid users = # No valid users list (anyone can login)
9439
9440 Example: valid users = greg, @pcusers
9441
9442 veto files (S)
9443
9444 This is a list of files and directories that are neither visible
9445 nor accessible. Each entry in the list must be separated by a '/',
9446 which allows spaces to be included in the entry. '*' and '?' can be
9447 used to specify multiple files or directories as in DOS wildcards.
9448
9449 Each entry must be a unix path, not a DOS path and must not include
9450 the unix directory separator '/'.
9451
9452 Note that the case sensitive option is applicable in vetoing files.
9453
9454 One feature of the veto files parameter that it is important to be
9455 aware of is Samba's behaviour when trying to delete a directory. If
9456 a directory that is to be deleted contains nothing but veto files
9457 this deletion will fail unless you also set the delete veto files
9458 parameter to yes.
9459
9460 Setting this parameter will affect the performance of Samba, as it
9461 will be forced to check all files and directories for a match as
9462 they are scanned.
9463
9464 Examples of use include:
9465
9466 ; Veto any files containing the word Security,
9467 ; any ending in .tmp, and any directory containing the
9468 ; word root.
9469 veto files = /*Security*/*.tmp/*root*/
9470
9471 ; Veto the Apple specific files that a NetAtalk server
9472 ; creates.
9473 veto files = /.AppleDouble/.bin/.AppleDesktop/Network Trash Folder/
9474
9475 Default: veto files = # No files or directories are vetoed
9476
9477 veto oplock files (S)
9478
9479 This parameter is only valid when the oplocks parameter is turned
9480 on for a share. It allows the Samba administrator to selectively
9481 turn off the granting of oplocks on selected files that match a
9482 wildcarded list, similar to the wildcarded list used in the veto
9483 files parameter.
9484
9485 You might want to do this on files that you know will be heavily
9486 contended for by clients. A good example of this is in the NetBench
9487 SMB benchmark program, which causes heavy client contention for
9488 files ending in .SEM. To cause Samba not to grant oplocks on these
9489 files you would use the line (either in the [global] section or in
9490 the section for the particular NetBench share.
9491
9492 An example of use is:
9493
9494 veto oplock files = /.*SEM/
9495
9496 Default: veto oplock files = # No files are vetoed for oplock
9497 grants
9498
9499 vfs object
9500
9501 This parameter is a synonym for vfs objects.
9502
9503 vfs objects (S)
9504
9505 This parameter specifies the backend names which are used for Samba
9506 VFS I/O operations. By default, normal disk I/O operations are used
9507 but these can be overloaded with one or more VFS objects. Be aware
9508 that the definition of this parameter will overwrite a possible
9509 previous definition of the vfs objects parameter.
9510
9511 Default: vfs objects =
9512
9513 Example: vfs objects = extd_audit recycle
9514
9515 volume (S)
9516
9517 This allows you to override the volume label returned for a share.
9518 Useful for CDROMs with installation programs that insist on a
9519 particular volume label.
9520
9521 Default: volume = # the name of the share
9522
9523 wide links (S)
9524
9525 This parameter controls whether or not links in the UNIX file
9526 system may be followed by the server. Links that point to areas
9527 within the directory tree exported by the server are always
9528 allowed; this parameter controls access only to areas that are
9529 outside the directory tree being exported.
9530
9531 Note: Turning this parameter on when UNIX extensions are enabled
9532 will allow UNIX clients to create symbolic links on the share that
9533 can point to files or directories outside restricted path exported
9534 by the share definition. This can cause access to areas outside of
9535 the share. Due to this problem, this parameter will be
9536 automatically disabled (with a message in the log file) if the unix
9537 extensions option is on.
9538
9539 See the parameter allow insecure wide links if you wish to change
9540 this coupling between the two parameters.
9541
9542 Default: wide links = no
9543
9544 winbind cache time (G)
9545
9546 This parameter specifies the number of seconds the winbindd(8)
9547 daemon will cache user and group information before querying a
9548 Windows NT server again.
9549
9550 This does not apply to authentication requests, these are always
9551 evaluated in real time unless the winbind offline logon option has
9552 been enabled.
9553
9554 Default: winbind cache time = 300
9555
9556 winbindd socket directory (G)
9557
9558 This setting controls the location of the winbind daemon's socket.
9559
9560 Except within automated test scripts, this should not be altered,
9561 as the client tools (nss_winbind etc) do not honour this parameter.
9562 Client tools must then be advised of the altered path with the
9563 WINBINDD_SOCKET_DIR environment variable.
9564
9565 Default: winbindd socket directory = /run/samba/winbindd
9566
9567 winbind enum groups (G)
9568
9569 On large installations using winbindd(8) it may be necessary to
9570 suppress the enumeration of groups through the setgrent(),
9571 getgrent() and endgrent() group of system calls. If the winbind
9572 enum groups parameter is no, calls to the getgrent() system call
9573 will not return any data.
9574
9575 Warning
9576 Turning off group enumeration may cause some programs to behave
9577 oddly.
9578 Default: winbind enum groups = no
9579
9580 winbind enum users (G)
9581
9582 On large installations using winbindd(8) it may be necessary to
9583 suppress the enumeration of users through the setpwent(),
9584 getpwent() and endpwent() group of system calls. If the winbind
9585 enum users parameter is no, calls to the getpwent system call will
9586 not return any data.
9587
9588 Warning
9589 Turning off user enumeration may cause some programs to behave
9590 oddly. For example, the finger program relies on having access
9591 to the full user list when searching for matching usernames.
9592 Default: winbind enum users = no
9593
9594 winbind expand groups (G)
9595
9596 This option controls the maximum depth that winbindd will traverse
9597 when flattening nested group memberships of Windows domain groups.
9598 This is different from the winbind nested groups option which
9599 implements the Windows NT4 model of local group nesting. The
9600 "winbind expand groups" parameter specifically applies to the
9601 membership of domain groups.
9602
9603 This option also affects the return of non nested group memberships
9604 of Windows domain users. With the new default "winbind expand
9605 groups = 0" winbind does not query group memberships at all.
9606
9607 Be aware that a high value for this parameter can result in system
9608 slowdown as the main parent winbindd daemon must perform the group
9609 unrolling and will be unable to answer incoming NSS or
9610 authentication requests during this time.
9611
9612 The default value was changed from 1 to 0 with Samba 4.2. Some
9613 broken applications (including some implementations of newgrp and
9614 sg) calculate the group memberships of users by traversing groups,
9615 such applications will require "winbind expand groups = 1". But the
9616 new default makes winbindd more reliable as it doesn't require SAMR
9617 access to domain controllers of trusted domains.
9618
9619 Default: winbind expand groups = 0
9620
9621 winbind:ignore domains (G)
9622
9623 Allows one to enter a list of trusted domains winbind should ignore
9624 (untrust). This can avoid the overhead of resources from attempting
9625 to login to DCs that should not be communicated with.
9626
9627 Default: winbind:ignore domains =
9628
9629 Example: winbind:ignore domains = DOMAIN1, DOMAIN2
9630
9631 winbind max clients (G)
9632
9633 This parameter specifies the maximum number of clients the
9634 winbindd(8) daemon can connect with. The parameter is not a hard
9635 limit. The winbindd(8) daemon configures itself to be able to
9636 accept at least that many connections, and if the limit is reached,
9637 an attempt is made to disconnect idle clients.
9638
9639 Default: winbind max clients = 200
9640
9641 winbind max domain connections (G)
9642
9643 This parameter specifies the maximum number of simultaneous
9644 connections that the winbindd(8) daemon should open to the domain
9645 controller of one domain. Setting this parameter to a value greater
9646 than 1 can improve scalability with many simultaneous winbind
9647 requests, some of which might be slow.
9648
9649 Note that if winbind offline logon is set to Yes, then only one DC
9650 connection is allowed per domain, regardless of this setting.
9651
9652 Default: winbind max domain connections = 1
9653
9654 Example: winbind max domain connections = 10
9655
9656 winbind nested groups (G)
9657
9658 If set to yes, this parameter activates the support for nested
9659 groups. Nested groups are also called local groups or aliases. They
9660 work like their counterparts in Windows: Nested groups are defined
9661 locally on any machine (they are shared between DC's through their
9662 SAM) and can contain users and global groups from any trusted SAM.
9663 To be able to use nested groups, you need to run nss_winbind.
9664
9665 Default: winbind nested groups = yes
9666
9667 winbind normalize names (G)
9668
9669 This parameter controls whether winbindd will replace whitespace in
9670 user and group names with an underscore (_) character. For example,
9671 whether the name "Space Kadet" should be replaced with the string
9672 "space_kadet". Frequently Unix shell scripts will have difficulty
9673 with usernames contains whitespace due to the default field
9674 separator in the shell. If your domain possesses names containing
9675 the underscore character, this option may cause problems unless the
9676 name aliasing feature is supported by your nss_info plugin.
9677
9678 This feature also enables the name aliasing API which can be used
9679 to make domain user and group names to a non-qualified version.
9680 Please refer to the manpage for the configured idmap and nss_info
9681 plugin for the specifics on how to configure name aliasing for a
9682 specific configuration. Name aliasing takes precedence (and is
9683 mutually exclusive) over the whitespace replacement mechanism
9684 discussed previously.
9685
9686 Default: winbind normalize names = no
9687
9688 Example: winbind normalize names = yes
9689
9690 winbind nss info (G)
9691
9692 This parameter is designed to control how Winbind retrieves Name
9693 Service Information to construct a user's home directory and login
9694 shell. Currently the following settings are available:
9695
9696 · template - The default, using the parameters of template
9697 shell and template homedir)
9698
9699 · <sfu | sfu20 | rfc2307 > - When Samba is running in
9700 security = ads and your Active Directory Domain
9701 Controller does support the Microsoft "Services for
9702 Unix" (SFU) LDAP schema, winbind can retrieve the login
9703 shell and the home directory attributes directly from
9704 your Directory Server. For SFU 3.0 or 3.5 simply choose
9705 "sfu", if you use SFU 2.0 please choose "sfu20".
9706
9707 Note that for the idmap backend idmap_ad you need to
9708 configure those settings in the idmap configuration
9709 section. Make sure to consult the documentation of the
9710 idmap backend that you are using.
9711
9712
9713 Default: winbind nss info = template
9714
9715 Example: winbind nss info = sfu
9716
9717 winbind offline logon (G)
9718
9719 This parameter is designed to control whether Winbind should allow
9720 one to login with the pam_winbind module using Cached Credentials.
9721 If enabled, winbindd will store user credentials from successful
9722 logins encrypted in a local cache.
9723
9724 Default: winbind offline logon = no
9725
9726 Example: winbind offline logon = yes
9727
9728 winbind reconnect delay (G)
9729
9730 This parameter specifies the number of seconds the winbindd(8)
9731 daemon will wait between attempts to contact a Domain controller
9732 for a domain that is determined to be down or not contactable.
9733
9734 Default: winbind reconnect delay = 30
9735
9736 winbind refresh tickets (G)
9737
9738 This parameter is designed to control whether Winbind should
9739 refresh Kerberos Tickets retrieved using the pam_winbind module.
9740
9741 Default: winbind refresh tickets = no
9742
9743 Example: winbind refresh tickets = yes
9744
9745 winbind request timeout (G)
9746
9747 This parameter specifies the number of seconds the winbindd(8)
9748 daemon will wait before disconnecting either a client connection
9749 with no outstanding requests (idle) or a client connection with a
9750 request that has remained outstanding (hung) for longer than this
9751 number of seconds.
9752
9753 Default: winbind request timeout = 60
9754
9755 winbind rpc only (G)
9756
9757 Setting this parameter to yes forces winbindd to use RPC instead of
9758 LDAP to retrieve information from Domain Controllers.
9759
9760 Default: winbind rpc only = no
9761
9762 winbind scan trusted domains (G)
9763
9764 This option only takes effect when the security option is set to
9765 domain or ads. If it is set to yes (the default), winbindd
9766 periodically tries to scan for new trusted domains and adds them to
9767 a global list inside of winbindd. The list can be extracted with
9768 wbinfo --trusted-domains --verbose. This matches the behaviour of
9769 Samba 4.7 and older.
9770
9771 The construction of that global list is not reliable and often
9772 incomplete in complex trust setups. In most situations the list is
9773 not needed any more for winbindd to operate correctly. E.g. for
9774 plain file serving via SMB using a simple idmap setup with autorid,
9775 tdb or ad. However some more complex setups require the list, e.g.
9776 if you specify idmap backends for specific domains. Some
9777 pam_winbind setups may also require the global list.
9778
9779 If you have a setup that doesn't require the global list, you
9780 should set winbind scan trusted domains = no.
9781
9782 Default: winbind scan trusted domains = yes
9783
9784 winbind sealed pipes (G)
9785
9786 This option controls whether any requests from winbindd to domain
9787 controllers pipe will be sealed. Disabling sealing can be useful
9788 for debugging purposes.
9789
9790 The behavior can be controlled per netbios domain by using 'winbind
9791 sealed pipes:NETBIOSDOMAIN = no' as option.
9792
9793 Default: winbind sealed pipes = yes
9794
9795 winbind separator (G)
9796
9797 This parameter allows an admin to define the character used when
9798 listing a username of the form of DOMAIN \user. This parameter is
9799 only applicable when using the pam_winbind.so and nss_winbind.so
9800 modules for UNIX services.
9801
9802 Please note that setting this parameter to + causes problems with
9803 group membership at least on glibc systems, as the character + is
9804 used as a special character for NIS in /etc/group.
9805
9806 Default: winbind separator = \
9807
9808 Example: winbind separator = +
9809
9810 winbind use default domain (G)
9811
9812 This parameter specifies whether the winbindd(8) daemon should
9813 operate on users without domain component in their username. Users
9814 without a domain component are treated as is part of the winbindd
9815 server's own domain. While this does not benefit Windows users, it
9816 makes SSH, FTP and e-mail function in a way much closer to the way
9817 they would in a native unix system.
9818
9819 This option should be avoided if possible. It can cause confusion
9820 about responsibilities for a user or group. In many situations it
9821 is not clear whether winbind or /etc/passwd should be seen as
9822 authoritative for a user, likewise for groups.
9823
9824 Default: winbind use default domain = no
9825
9826 Example: winbind use default domain = yes
9827
9828 winbind use krb5 enterprise principals (G)
9829
9830 winbindd is able to get kerberos tickets for pam_winbind with
9831 krb5_auth or wbinfo -K/--krb5auth=.
9832
9833 winbindd (at least on a domain member) is never be able to have a
9834 complete picture of the trust topology (which is managed by the
9835 DCs). There might be uPNSuffixes and msDS-SPNSuffixes values, which
9836 don't belong to any AD domain at all.
9837
9838 With winbind scan trusted domains = no winbindd don't even get an
9839 incomplete picture of the topology.
9840
9841 It is not really required to know about the trust topology. We can
9842 just rely on the [K]DCs of our primary domain (e.g.
9843 PRIMARY.A.EXAMPLE.COM) and use enterprise principals e.g.
9844 upnfromB@B.EXAMPLE.COM@PRIMARY.A.EXAMPLE.COM and follow the
9845 WRONG_REALM referrals in order to find the correct DC. The final
9846 principal might be userfromB@INTERNALB.EXAMPLE.PRIVATE.
9847
9848 With winbind use krb5 enterprise principals = yes winbindd
9849 enterprise principals will be used.
9850
9851 Default: winbind use krb5 enterprise principals = no
9852
9853 Example: winbind use krb5 enterprise principals = yes
9854
9855 winsdb:local_owner (G)
9856
9857 This specifies the address that is stored in the winsOwner
9858 attribute, of locally registered winsRecord-objects. The default is
9859 to use the ip-address of the first network interface.
9860
9861 No default
9862
9863 winsdb:dbnosync (G)
9864
9865 This parameter disables fsync() after changes of the WINS database.
9866
9867 Default: winsdb:dbnosync = no
9868
9869 wins hook (G)
9870
9871 When Samba is running as a WINS server this allows you to call an
9872 external program for all changes to the WINS database. The primary
9873 use for this option is to allow the dynamic update of external name
9874 resolution databases such as dynamic DNS.
9875
9876 The wins hook parameter specifies the name of a script or
9877 executable that will be called as follows:
9878
9879 wins_hook operation name nametype ttl IP_list
9880
9881 · The first argument is the operation and is one of "add",
9882 "delete", or "refresh". In most cases the operation can
9883 be ignored as the rest of the parameters provide
9884 sufficient information. Note that "refresh" may
9885 sometimes be called when the name has not previously
9886 been added, in that case it should be treated as an add.
9887
9888 · The second argument is the NetBIOS name. If the name is
9889 not a legal name then the wins hook is not called. Legal
9890 names contain only letters, digits, hyphens, underscores
9891 and periods.
9892
9893 · The third argument is the NetBIOS name type as a 2 digit
9894 hexadecimal number.
9895
9896 · The fourth argument is the TTL (time to live) for the
9897 name in seconds.
9898
9899 · The fifth and subsequent arguments are the IP addresses
9900 currently registered for that name. If this list is
9901 empty then the name should be deleted.
9902
9903 An example script that calls the BIND dynamic DNS update program
9904 nsupdate is provided in the examples directory of the Samba source
9905 code.
9906
9907 No default
9908
9909 wins proxy (G)
9910
9911 This is a boolean that controls if nmbd(8) will respond to
9912 broadcast name queries on behalf of other hosts. You may need to
9913 set this to yes for some older clients.
9914
9915 Default: wins proxy = no
9916
9917 wins server (G)
9918
9919 This specifies the IP address (or DNS name: IP address for
9920 preference) of the WINS server that nmbd(8) should register with.
9921 If you have a WINS server on your network then you should set this
9922 to the WINS server's IP.
9923
9924 You should point this at your WINS server if you have a
9925 multi-subnetted network.
9926
9927 If you want to work in multiple namespaces, you can give every wins
9928 server a 'tag'. For each tag, only one (working) server will be
9929 queried for a name. The tag should be separated from the ip address
9930 by a colon.
9931
9932 Note
9933 You need to set up Samba to point to a WINS server if you have
9934 multiple subnets and wish cross-subnet browsing to work
9935 correctly.
9936 See the chapter in the Samba3-HOWTO on Network Browsing.
9937
9938 Default: wins server =
9939
9940 Example: wins server = mary:192.9.200.1 fred:192.168.3.199
9941 mary:192.168.2.61 # For this example when querying a certain name,
9942 192.19.200.1 will be asked first and if that doesn't respond
9943 192.168.2.61. If either of those doesn't know the name
9944 192.168.3.199 will be queried.
9945
9946 Example: wins server = 192.9.200.1 192.168.2.61
9947
9948 wins support (G)
9949
9950 This boolean controls if the nmbd(8) process in Samba will act as a
9951 WINS server. You should not set this to yes unless you have a
9952 multi-subnetted network and you wish a particular nmbd to be your
9953 WINS server. Note that you should NEVER set this to yes on more
9954 than one machine in your network.
9955
9956 Default: wins support = no
9957
9958 workgroup (G)
9959
9960 This controls what workgroup your server will appear to be in when
9961 queried by clients. Note that this parameter also controls the
9962 Domain name used with the security = domain setting.
9963
9964 Default: workgroup = WORKGROUP
9965
9966 Example: workgroup = MYGROUP
9967
9968 wreplsrv:periodic_interval (G)
9969
9970 This maximum interval in seconds between 2 periodically scheduled
9971 runs where we check for wins.ldb changes and do push notifications
9972 to our push partners. Also wins_config.ldb changes are checked in
9973 that interval and partner configuration reloads are done.
9974
9975 Default: wreplsrv:periodic_interval = 15
9976
9977 wreplsrv:propagate name releases (G)
9978
9979 If this parameter is enabled, then explicit (from the client) and
9980 implicit (via the scavenging) name releases are propagated to the
9981 other servers directly, even if there are still other addresses
9982 active, this applies to SPECIAL GROUP (2) and MULTIHOMED (3)
9983 entries. Also the replication conflict merge algorithm for SPECIAL
9984 GROUP (2) entries discards replica addresses where the address
9985 owner is the local server, if the address was not stored locally
9986 before. The merge result is propagated directly in case an address
9987 was discarded. A Windows servers doesn't propagate name releases of
9988 SPECIAL GROUP (2) and MULTIHOMED (3) entries directly, which means
9989 that Windows servers may return different results to name queries
9990 for SPECIAL GROUP (2) and MULTIHOMED (3) names. The option doesn't
9991 have much negative impact if Windows servers are around, but be
9992 aware that they might return unexpected results.
9993
9994 Default: wreplsrv:propagate name releases = no
9995
9996 wreplsrv:scavenging_interval (G)
9997
9998 This is the interval in s between 2 scavenging runs which clean up
9999 the WINS database and changes the states of expired name records.
10000 Defaults to half of the value of wreplsrv:renew_interval.
10001
10002 No default
10003
10004 wreplsrv:tombstone_extra_timeout (G)
10005
10006 This is the time in s the server needs to be up till we'll remove
10007 tombstone records from our database. Defaults to 3 days.
10008
10009 Default: wreplsrv:tombstone_extra_timeout = 259200
10010
10011 wreplsrv:tombstone_interval (G)
10012
10013 This is the interval in s till released records of the WINS server
10014 become tombstone. Defaults to 6 days.
10015
10016 Default: wreplsrv:tombstone_interval = 518400
10017
10018 wreplsrv:tombstone_timeout (G)
10019
10020 This is the interval in s till tombstone records are deleted from
10021 the WINS database. Defaults to 1 day.
10022
10023 Default: wreplsrv:tombstone_timeout = 86400
10024
10025 wreplsrv:verify_interval (G)
10026
10027 This is the interval in s till we verify active replica records
10028 with the owning WINS server. Unfortunately not implemented yet.
10029 Defaults to 24 days.
10030
10031 Default: wreplsrv:verify_interval = 2073600
10032
10033 writable
10034
10035 This parameter is a synonym for writeable.
10036
10037 write ok
10038
10039 This parameter is a synonym for writeable.
10040
10041 writeable (S)
10042
10043 Inverted synonym for read only.
10044
10045 Default: writeable = no
10046
10047 write list (S)
10048
10049 This is a list of users that are given read-write access to a
10050 service. If the connecting user is in this list then they will be
10051 given write access, no matter what the read only option is set to.
10052 The list can include group names using the @group syntax.
10053
10054 Note that if a user is in both the read list and the write list
10055 then they will be given write access.
10056
10057 Default: write list =
10058
10059 Example: write list = admin, root, @staff
10060
10061 write raw (G)
10062
10063 This is ignored if async smb echo handler is set, because this
10064 feature is incompatible with raw write SMB requests
10065
10066 If enabled, raw writes allow writes of 65535 bytes in one packet.
10067 This typically provides a major performance benefit for some very,
10068 very old clients.
10069
10070 However, some clients either negotiate the allowable block size
10071 incorrectly or are incapable of supporting larger block sizes, and
10072 for these clients you may need to disable raw writes.
10073
10074 In general this parameter should be viewed as a system tuning tool
10075 and left severely alone.
10076
10077 Default: write raw = yes
10078
10079 wtmp directory (G)
10080
10081 This parameter is only available if Samba has been configured and
10082 compiled with the option --with-utmp. It specifies a directory
10083 pathname that is used to store the wtmp or wtmpx files (depending
10084 on the UNIX system) that record user connections to a Samba server.
10085 The difference with the utmp directory is the fact that user info
10086 is kept after a user has logged out.
10087
10088 By default this is not set, meaning the system will use whatever
10089 utmp file the native system is set to use (usually /var/run/wtmp on
10090 Linux).
10091
10092 Default: wtmp directory =
10093
10094 Example: wtmp directory = /var/log/wtmp
10095
10097 Although the configuration file permits service names to contain
10098 spaces, your client software may not. Spaces will be ignored in
10099 comparisons anyway, so it shouldn't be a problem - but be aware of the
10100 possibility.
10101
10102 On a similar note, many clients - especially DOS clients - limit
10103 service names to eight characters. smbd(8) has no such limitation, but
10104 attempts to connect from such clients will fail if they truncate the
10105 service names. For this reason you should probably keep your service
10106 names down to eight characters in length.
10107
10108 Use of the [homes] and [printers] special sections make life for an
10109 administrator easy, but the various combinations of default attributes
10110 can be tricky. Take extreme care when designing these sections. In
10111 particular, ensure that the permissions on spool directories are
10112 correct.
10113
10115 This man page is part of version 4.12.2 of the Samba suite.
10116
10118 samba(7), smbpasswd(8), smbd(8), nmbd(8), winbindd(8), samba(8), samba-
10119 tool(8), smbclient(1), nmblookup(1), testparm(1).
10120
10122 The original Samba software and related utilities were created by
10123 Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed by the Samba Team as an Open
10124 Source project similar to the way the Linux kernel is developed.
10125
10126
10127
10128Samba 4.12.2 04/28/2020 SMB.CONF(5)