HP CIFS Server 3.0k Administrator's Guide version A.02.04

Step 4: Starting the HP CIFS Server......................................................................................................35
Starting and stopping Daemons Individually.................................................................................36
Configuring Automatic Start at System Boot..................................................................................36
Stopping and Re-starting Daemons to Apply New Settings...........................................................36
Other Samba Configuration Issues.......................................................................................................37
Translate Open-Mode Locks into HP-UX Advisory Locks.............................................................37
Performance Tuning using Change Notify......................................................................................37
Special Concerns when Using HP CIFS Server on a Network File System (NFS) or a Clustered
File System (CFS).............................................................................................................................37
NetBIOS Names Are Not Supported on Port 445...........................................................................38
3 Managing HP-UX File Access Permissions from Windows NT/XP/2000.............39
Introduction..........................................................................................................................................39
UNIX File Permissions and POSIX ACLs.............................................................................................39
Viewing UNIX Permissions From Windows...................................................................................39
The VxFS POSIX ACL File Permissions..........................................................................................42
Using the Windows NT Explorer GUI to Create ACLs........................................................................42
Using the Windows Vista Explorer GUI to Create ACLs.....................................................................45
POSIX ACLs and Windows 2000, Windows XP, and Windows Vista Clients.....................................48
Viewing UNIX Permissions from Windows 2000, Windows XP, and Windows Vista Clients.......48
Setting Permissions from Windows 2000, Windows XP, and Windows Vista Clients....................49
Viewing ACLs from Windows 2000 Clients....................................................................................51
Displaying the Owner of a File........................................................................................................51
HP CIFS Server Directory ACLs and Windows 2000, Windows XP, and Windows Vista Clients.......51
Directory ACL Types.......................................................................................................................51
Viewing ACLs from Windows 2000 Clients....................................................................................51
Viewing Basic ACLs from Windows 2000 Clients.....................................................................52
Viewing Advanced ACLs from Windows 2000 Clients.............................................................53
Mapping Windows 2000/XP Directory Inheritance Values to POSIX.............................................53
Modifying Directory ACLs From Windows 2000/XP Clients.........................................................54
Removing an ACE entry from Windows 2000/XP clients..........................................................55
Examples...............................................................................................................................55
Adding Directory ACLs From Windows 2000/XP Clients..............................................................57
POSIX Default Owner and Owning Group ACLs..........................................................................59
POSIX ACEs with zero permissions................................................................................................59
In Conclusion........................................................................................................................................59
4 Windows Style Domains.............................................................................................61
Introduction..........................................................................................................................................61
Advantages of the Samba Domain Model.......................................................................................61
Primary Domain Controllers...........................................................................................................61
Backup Domain Controllers............................................................................................................62
Advantages of Backup Domain Controllers..............................................................................62
Limitations.................................................................................................................................62
Domain Members............................................................................................................................62
Configure the HP CIFS Server as a PDC...............................................................................................62
Configure the HP CIFS Server as a BDC..............................................................................................63
Promote a BDC to a PDC in a Samba Domain................................................................................64
Domain Member Server........................................................................................................................64
Configure the HP CIFS Server as a Member Server........................................................................64
Join an HP CIFS Server to an NT Domian, Windows 2000/2003 (as a pre-Windows 2000 computer),
or Samba Domain............................................................................................................................66
Step-by-step Procedure..............................................................................................................66
4 Table of Contents