Difference between revisions of "AD Samba4 Centos 7"
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Current operating system Samba 4 is run on: Centos 7 | Current operating system Samba 4 is run on: Centos 7 | ||
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=Samba 4 Active Directory Domain Controller= | =Samba 4 Active Directory Domain Controller= | ||
==Install CentOS== | ==Install CentOS== |
Latest revision as of 11:46, 19 April 2016
Contents
Purpose
The purpose of this wiki page is to document the steps needed to set up or recreate an Active Directory(AD) Environment using Samba 4. Not all features of a Windows Server AD are incorporated into Samba 4. At the time of writing/editing the current version of Samba 4 being used is: 4.1.16
This page serves to show how to Setup Samba 4 on a Centos 7 machine and migrate over from Centos 6.
Current operating system Samba 4 is run on: Centos 7
Samba 4 Active Directory Domain Controller
Install CentOS
- Install a minimal version of Centos 7 on a VM or dev box
Samba 4 Requirements
- Here is a minimal list of packages needed to compile Samba 4 with AD support
yum install perl gcc libacl-devel libblkid-devel gnutls-devel \ readline-devel python-devel gdb pkgconfig krb5-workstation \ zlib-devel setroubleshoot-server libaio-devel \ setroubleshoot-plugins policycoreutils-python \ libsemanage-python setools-libs-python setools-libs \ popt-devel libpcap-devel sqlite-devel libidn-devel \ libxml2-devel libacl-devel libsepol-devel libattr-devel \ keyutils-libs-devel cyrus-sasl-devel cups-devel bind-utils \ libxslt docbook-style-xsl openldap-devel pam-devel bzip2
- Here are optional packages that are used in this guide
yum install vim wget
Restoring
- we are coming from a working environment running on centos 6, we are going to restore our databases to /usr/local/samba and then compile and install Samba 4 over them
- I have tried installing samba first and then restoring form backup however samba was having issues with wind the Winbind.so binary, a recompile and install fixed that issue, however by restoring first we avoid having to reinstall samba after restore
- These folders probably wont be there if you havent installed samba before, check to see before running command
rm -rf /usr/local/samba/etc rm -rf /usr/local/samba/private rm -rf /usr/local/samba/var/locks/sysvol
- If /usr/local/samba does not exist(because samba has never been installed before) make the /usr/local/samba directory
mkdir /usr/local/samba
- change directories to where you have your backups and do a restore
cd /usr/local/backups tar -jxf etc.{Timestamp}.tar.bz2 -C /usr/local/samba/ tar -jxf samba4_private.{Timestamp}.tar.bz2 -C /usr/local/samba/ tar -jxf sysvol.{Timestamp}.tar.bz2 -C /usr/local/samba/
find /usr/local/samba/private/ -type f -name '*.ldb.bak' -print0 | while read -d $'\0' f ; do mv "$f" "${f%.bak}" ; done
- Our profiles are stored on an NFS server, copy over the auto.home file where our profiles are stored
scp root@AD1.DOMAIN.EDU:/etc/auto.home /etc/
- restart autofs
systemctl restart autofs
Installing Samba
- For stable Samba version visit: http://www.samba.org/
- or(as of 02-18-15):
wget http://www.samba.org/samba/ftp/stable/samba-4.1.16.tar.gz
- Extract the archive if not done so already
tar -zxvf samba-4.1.16.tar.gz cd ~/samba-4.1.16 ./configure --enable-debug --enable-selftest --with-ads --with-systemd --with-winbind
- If it completes successfully, make sure it is Building with Active Directory support, if not you may have forgotten a few packages
- Finally compile and then install
make make install
- libgnutls needs to be linked like so(upgrade specific install):
ln -s /usr/lib64/libgnutls.so.28 /usr/lib64/libgnutls.so.26
- The kerberos file needs to be configured properly
vim /etc/krb5.conf
dns_lookup_realm = false dns_lookup_kdc = true default_realm = DOMAIN.EDU
- add samba directory to bashrc file
echo 'export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/samba/bin' >> ~/.bashrc echo 'export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/samba/sbin' >> ~/.bashrc
- disable selinux for now
vim /etc/sysconfig/selinux
- change enforcing=enabled to
enforcing=disabled
- reboot the computer
shutdown -r now
Adding Samba to Systemd
- create a samba.service file at /etc/systemd/system/samba.service
vim /etc/systemd/system/samba.service [Unit] Description= Samba 4 Active Directory After=syslog.target After=network.target [Service] Type=forking PIDFile=/usr/local/samba/var/run/samba.pid ExecStart=/usr/local/samba/sbin/samba [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target
Adding winbind to nsswitch.conf
- add winbind to /etc/nsswitch.conf
vim /etc/nsswitch.conf
passwd: files winbind sss shadow: files sss group: files winbind sss
- link winbind so that nssswitch can find and enumerate domain
ln -s /usr/local/samba/lib/libnss_winbind.so.2 /lib64/libnss_winbind.so ln -s /lib64/libnss_winbind.so /lib64/libnss_winbind.so.2
Adding Backup Script
cp ~/samba-4.1.16/source4/scripting/bin/samba_backup /usr/local/samba/sbin chown root:root /usr/local/samba/sbin/samba_backup chmod 750 /usr/local/samba/sbin/samba_backup
- make backup directory
mkdir /usr/local/backups
- You can now run the samba backup script
samba_backup
- or just add it to cron for weekly backups
crontab -e
- insert the following
#Run a weekly backup on Rumba for samba4 Active Directory 0 3 * * 0 /usr/local/samba/bin/samba_backup >> /root/backup_logs/samba_bak.log 2>&1
Start/Stop Samba service
- start the Samba service
systemctl start samba
- enable the samba service on startup
systemctl enable samba
- check the status of samba
systemctl status samba
- If you need to stop the samba service use
systemctl stop samba
Firewall
- We prefer iptables so we are turning off firewalld and enabling iptables instead
systemctl stop firewalld # stop firewalld temporarily systemctl mask firewalld # not sure what mask does, but I assume its similar to disable yum install iptables-services # install iptables-services package systemctl enable iptables # Enable the service at boot-time
- add in your rules into /ets/sysconfig/iptables (do this while iptables is off)
systemctl start iptables # start iptables
- the following will save the rules located at /etc/sysconfig/iptables
service iptables save # save iptables rules in /etc/sysconfig/iptables, overwriting current set