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    Script to install Samba with settings for FOG

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    • cspenceC
      cspence Developer @Wayne Workman
      last edited by cspence

      @Wayne-Workman said:

      @cspence said:

      Kerberizing samba will not get in the way of this. If a job needs to be automated, a read-only account can be used.

      Kerberizing? Can that be done on a Linux machine? Say for instance the FOG admin has no windows servers? This is the case for many, many small businesses in U.S. and in countries in South America that can’t afford Windows Server.

      Kerberos is an MIT thing, not a Microsoft thing. Also, if you want to emulate active directory, there’s always LDAP/kerberos.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Wayne WorkmanW
        Wayne Workman
        last edited by

        Well I don’t know anything about Kerberos… that’d be up to you guys. 🙂

        Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
        Daily Clean Installation Results:
        https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
        FOG Reporting:
        https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

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        • cspenceC
          cspence Developer
          last edited by

          Basically, you don’t have credentials flying around in the clear. You use tickets.

          Wayne WorkmanW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Wayne WorkmanW
            Wayne Workman @cspence
            last edited by

            @cspence said:

            Basically, you don’t have credentials flying around in the clear. You use tickets.

            That sounds good.

            I was just outlining how some use FOG… didn’t mean to ruffle feathers at all.

            Some people do upload images with sensitive stuff on them…

            and some people do automated uploads and downloads…

            Those are the two main points I wanted to convey.

            Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
            Daily Clean Installation Results:
            https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
            FOG Reporting:
            https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

            cspenceC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • cspenceC
              cspence Developer @Wayne Workman
              last edited by

              @Wayne-Workman said:

              @cspence said:

              Basically, you don’t have credentials flying around in the clear. You use tickets.

              That sounds good.

              I was just outlining how some use FOG… didn’t mean to ruffle feathers at all.

              Some people do upload images with sensitive stuff on them…

              and some people do automated uploads and downloads…

              Those are the two main points I wanted to convey.

              Don’t sweat it. Tom and I were talking these points over just a moment ago. 😀

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Wayne WorkmanW
                Wayne Workman
                last edited by

                OK! so…

                Good news and bad news…

                GOOD NEWS:
                Tom integrated CIFS support into the inits and kernels within a matter of HOURS… wow!

                When I turn OFF nfs on my FOG server, and then do a “debug download”
                I can successfully issue a mount command via CIFS to the /images directory.

                I can then go into that directory and see my images, make files, delete files, etc.

                BAD NEWS:
                The script changes in my earlier post did not work…

                So… I hard coded everything… into this file:
                [CODE]/svn/trunk/src/buildroot/package/fog/scripts/bin/fog.checkin[/CODE]

                and I was using this command for mounting, more or less:
                [CODE]mount -t cifs -o username=root,password=PASSWORDHERE //10.0.0.3/images /images 2>/tmp/mntfail;[/CODE]

                and it would SEEM that it’s not using that command to mount… the error says “failed to mount on 10.0.0.3:/images blah blah” and I’m thinking that error is generated from the $storage variable… and isn’t actually the output from my actual command to mount.

                IMG_20150613_215650.jpg

                So… this begs the question… why can I issue the command to mount inside a debug download, but the regular download task fails?

                I’m convinced that somehow it’s not using the commands that I wrote into the aforementioned file.

                Here’s the file as it is… I just changed my password. Note that those mounting commands DO work if I issue them manually.

                [CODE]#!/bin/bash
                . /usr/share/fog/lib/funcs.sh
                RUN_CHKDSK=“”;
                HOSTNAME_EARLY=“0”;
                OS_ID_WIN7=“5”;
                OS_ID_WIN8=“6”;
                for arg in cat /proc/cmdline; do
                case “$arg” in
                initsh)
                ash -i;
                ;;
                nombr)
                nombr=1;
                ;;
                *)
                ;;
                esac
                done
                clear;
                displayBanner;
                #setupDNS $dns;
                osname=“”;
                mbrfile=“”;
                determineOS “$osid”;
                macWinSafe=echo $mac|sed 's/://g';
                cores=$(grep “core id” /proc/cpuinfo|sort -u|wc -l);
                sockets=$(grep “physical id” /proc/cpuinfo|sort -u|wc -l);
                cores=$((cores * sockets));
                arch=$(uname -m);
                if [ “$cores” == “0” ]; then
                cores=1;
                fi
                if [ “$chkdsk” == “1” ]; then
                RUN_CHKDSK=“-x”;
                fi
                if [ “$hostearly” == “1” ]; then
                HOSTNAME_EARLY=“1”;
                fi
                if [ “$mc” == “yes” ]; then
                method=“UDPCAST”;
                elif [ “$mc” == “bt” ]; then
                method=“Torrent-Casting”;
                else
                method=“NFS”;
                fi
                debugPause;
                #fdisk -l &> /tmp/fdisk-before;
                echo “”;
                dots “Checking Operating System”
                echo $osname;
                dots “Checking CPU Cores”
                echo $cores
                echo “”;
                dots “Send method”
                echo $method
                blGo=“0”;
                nfsServerName=“”;
                if [ “$mode” == “clamav” ]; then
                dots “Checking In”;
                queueinfo=wget -q -O - "http://${web}service/Pre_Stage1.php?mac=$mac&avmode=$avmode" 2>/dev/null;
                echo “Done”;
                debugPause;
                dots “Mounting Clamav”;
                if [ ! -d “/opt/fog/clamav” ]; then
                mkdir -p /opt/fog/clamav 2>/dev/null;
                fi
                #mount -o nolock,proto=tcp,rsize=32768,wsize=32768,intr,noatime $clamav /opt/fog/clamav;
                mkdir /opt
                mkdir /opt/fog
                mkdir /opt/fog/clamav
                mount -t cifs -o username=root,password=PASSWORDHERE //10.0.0.3/images /opt/fog/clamav;
                echo “Done”;
                debugPause;
                dots “Adding clamav to path”;
                if [ -d “/opt/fog/clamav/bin” ] && [ -d “/opt/fog/clamav/sbin” ]; then
                export PATH=$PATH:/opt/fog/clamav/bin:/opt/fog/clamav/sbin 2>/dev/null;
                else
                handleError “Cannot find clamav binaries to run task.”;
                fi
                echo “Done”;
                debugPause;
                fi
                if [ “$type” == “up” ]; then
                dots “Checking In”
                queueinfo=wget -q -O - "http://${web}service/Pre_Stage1.php?mac=$mac&type=$type" 2>/dev/null;
                echo “Done”;
                debugPause;
                dots “Mounting File System”
                mkdir /images 2>/dev/null;
                #mount -o nolock,proto=tcp,rsize=32768,wsize=32768,intr,noatime $storage /images &> /dev/null;
                mkdir /images
                mount -t cifs -o username=root,password=PASSWORDHERE //10.0.0.3/images /images &> /dev/null;
                if [ “$?” == 0 ]; then
                echo “Done”;
                else
                echo “Failed”;
                handleError “Unable to mount NFS”;
                fi
                debugPause;
                elif [ “$type” == “down” ] && [ “$capone” != “1” ]; then
                mac64=getMACAddresses | base64;
                dots “Attempting to send inventory”;
                doInventory 2>/dev/null;
                poststring=“mac=${mac64}&sysman=${sysman64}&sysproduct=${sysproduct64}&sysversion=${sysversion64}&sysserial=${sysserial64}&systype=${systype64}&biosversion=${biosversion64}&biosvendor=${biosvendor64}&biosdate=${biosdate64}&mbman=${mbman64}&mbproductname=${mbproductname64}&mbversion=${mbversion64}&mbserial=${mbserial64}&mbasset=${mbasset64}&cpuman=${cpuman64}&cpuversion=${cpuversion64}&cpucurrent=${cpucurrent64}&cpumax=${cpumax64}&mem=${mem64}&hdinfo=${hdinfo64}&caseman=${caseman64}&casever=${casever64}&caseserial=${caseserial64}&casesasset=${casesasset64}”;
                invres=“”;
                while [ “$invres” == “” ]; do
                invres=wget -O - --post-data="$poststring" "http://${web}service/inventory.php" 2>/dev/null;
                echo “$invres”;
                done
                debugPause;
                dots “Checking In”;
                while [ “$blGo” == “0” ]; do
                if [ “$capone” != “1” ]; then
                if [ “$mc” != “yes” -a “$mc” != “bt” ]; then
                queueinfo=wget -q -O - "http://${web}service/Pre_Stage1.php?mac=$mac&type=$type" 2>/dev/null;
                blPass=echo $queueinfo|grep "##";
                waittime=0;
                while [ ! -n “$blPass” ]; do
                echo -n " * $queueinfo (“;
                sec2String “$waittime”;
                echo “)”
                queueinfo=wget -q -O - "http://${web}service/Pre_Stage1.php?mac=$mac&type=$type" 2>/dev/null;
                blPass=echo $queueinfo | grep "##";
                sleep 5;
                waittime=$(expr $waittime “+” 5);
                done
                echo “Done”;
                debugPause;
                directive=”${queueinfo:3}“;
                if [ ! “$directive” = “GO” ]; then
                tmpStorageIp=echo $queueinfo|cut -d'@' -f2 2>/dev/null;
                tmpStorage=echo $queueinfo|cut -d'@' -f3 2>/dev/null;
                tmpName=echo $queueinfo|cut -d'@' -f4 2>/dev/null;
                if [ “$tmpStorage” != “” -a “$tmpStorageIp” != “” ]; then
                storage=$tmpStorage;
                storageip=$tmpStorageIp;
                nfsServerName=$tmpName;
                else
                handleError “Error determining storage server!”;
                exit 1;
                fi
                dots “Using Storage Node”
                echo “$nfsServerName”
                debugPause;
                fi
                else
                queueinfo=wget -q -O - "http://${web}service/mc_checkin.php?mac=$mac&type=$type" 2>/dev/null;
                blPass=echo $queueinfo|grep "##";
                echo “Done”;
                waittime=0;
                while [ ! -n “$blPass” ]; do
                echo -n " * $queueinfo (”;
                sec2String “$waittime”
                echo “)”
                queueinfo=wget -q -O - "http://${web}service/mc_checkin.php?mac=$mac&type=$type" 2>/dev/null;
                blPass=echo $queueinfo | grep "##";
                sleep 5;
                waittime=$(expr $waittime “+” 5);
                done
                if [ “$mc” == “bt” ]; then
                dots “Using image”
                # download $img.torrent file
                wget -q -O /tmp/$img.torrent http://${web}/service/torrent.php?torrent=$img;
                ctorrent /tmp/$img.torrent -x > /tmp/filelist.txt;
                torrentDownloadSize=cat /tmp/filelist.txt|grep "Total:*"|awk '{print $2}';
                echo “$img”;
                dots “Size of image to download”
                echo “$torrentDownloadSize MB”;
                debugPause;
                fi
                fi
                dots “Mounting File System”;
                mkdir /images $debugstring 2>/dev/null;
                #mount -o nolock,proto=tcp,rsize=32768,intr,noatime $storage /images 2>/tmp/mntfail;
                mkdir /images
                mount -t cifs -o username=root,password=PASSWORDHERE //10.0.0.3/images /images 2>/tmp/mntfail;
                mntRet=“$?”;
                if [ ! “$mntRet” == “0” ] && [ ! -f “/images/.mntcheck” ]; then
                blame=wget -q -O - "http://${web}service/blame.php?mac=$mac&type=$type" 2>/dev/null;
                if [ ! “$blame” == “##” ]; then
                echo “Failed”;
                echo “”;
                echo “Error during failure notification: $blame”;
                while [ ! “$blame” == “##” ]; do
                blame=wget -q -O - "http://${web}service/blame.php?mac=$mac&type=$type" 2>/dev/null;
                if [ ! “$blame” == “##” ]; then
                echo $blame;
                fi
                sleep 5;
                done
                else
                echo “Failed”;
                echo “”;
                cat /tmp/mntfail;
                echo “”;
                fi
                sleep 5;
                else
                echo “Done”;
                blGo=“1”;
                fi
                debugPause;
                fi
                done
                else
                echo “Done”;
                dots “Mounting File System”;
                mkdir /images $debugstring 2>/dev/null;
                #mount -o nolock,proto=tcp,rsize=32768,intr,noatime $storage /images 2>/tmp/mntfail;
                mount -t cifs -o username=root,password=PASSWORDHERE //10.0.0.3/images /images 2>/tmp/mntfail;
                echo “Done”;
                fi

                Local Variables:

                indent-tabs-mode: t

                sh-basic-offset: 4

                sh-indentation: 4

                tab-width: 4

                End:[/CODE]

                Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
                Daily Clean Installation Results:
                https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
                FOG Reporting:
                https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Wayne WorkmanW
                  Wayne Workman
                  last edited by

                  So I’ve decided the mount validation probably just doesn’t like the output from my mount command or something, and it THINKS it failed… when infact it succeeded…

                  So i’m gonna jimmy-rig this script so that it’s impossible to fail… rip out everything that has anything to do with “failing”

                  And THEN we will see if it fails or not… 🙂

                  Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
                  Daily Clean Installation Results:
                  https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
                  FOG Reporting:
                  https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Wayne WorkmanW
                    Wayne Workman
                    last edited by Wayne Workman

                    GOOD NEWS AND BAD NEWS… AGAIN!!!

                    Bad news:

                    did a debug download, was fiddling around with mounthing…

                    did this:
                    [CODE]rm -rf /images[/CODE]
                    before this:
                    [CODE]umount /images[/CODE]

                    and all of my images and data … GONE!!! MOTHER F@&*$#

                    Good news:

                    Restored my images from backup… was a process…

                    Ran another debug task.

                    created the /images directory manually at CLI
                    [CODE]mkdir /images[/CODE]

                    Mounted to the remote images directory via CLI (ensured NFS was NOT running first):
                    [CODE]mount -t cifs -o username=root,password=PASSWORDHERE //10.0.0.3/images /images[/CODE]

                    Issued the fog command:
                    [CODE]fog[/CODE]

                    and BADA BING bada BOOM

                    mounting passed and imaging finished without incident.

                    So… Conclusion… something is going wrong with mounting using the fog.checkin script. I don’t know what it is… I removed all the failure code and replaced it with the success code for EVERY section!

                    When I do the mount BEFORE the fog command, when the fog command tries to mount, I suppose it errors out, but is still somehow able to succeed?? Maybe because I made failing impossible??? I HAVE NO IDEA

                    BUT,

                    I JUST IMAGED USING SMB !!!

                    WOOOOOOOOT 👍 👯 :d 🍰 💃 🐣 🍨 😂 👌 😆 👋 💛

                    Now, as far as SPEED goes, I was running through a 1Gbps switch.

                    The source HDD was SATA 2 (3Gbps) and destination was the same (I think). The target host has a 2.93Ghz core 2 Duo processor with I think DDR 2 RAM.

                    I saw speeds at roughly 3.25 GB / min in the partclone window.

                    According to Google:
                    3.25 (gigabytes / minute) =
                    0.433333333 Gbps

                    Using the EXACT same hardware, but running the image download via NFS (ensuring SMB is turned OFF)

                    I saw the same sustained speeds of 3.25ish GB / min.

                    Could others please validate that there are no performance hits?
                    I’m using OLD equipment to test with.

                    Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
                    Daily Clean Installation Results:
                    https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
                    FOG Reporting:
                    https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • cspenceC
                      cspence Developer
                      last edited by

                      Just in case you’re interested: https://github.com/cspenceiv/fog-imager

                      I have been building a simplified set of imaging scripts. They’ll be fairly similar to what is in use now, but hopefully much easier to read and understand. I’m attempting to get away from a lot of things we currently do.

                      As of right now, I only have the upload script functional (on an experimental basis). That upload script does not support xfs and jfs (and others that aren’t supported officially by FOG yet). Additionally, it only does multi-disk, multi-partition creates for everything on a system.

                      Resizability is something I’ll look at later once the basics are taken care of here.

                      Right now, my test platform is a Arch live disk I built specifically for this testing (that way I’m not testing the buildroot image at the same time). Of course, this is also why I don’t have xfs and jfs support right now (big whoop for this testing).

                      …and of course, I’m just using samba shares.

                      Wayne WorkmanW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • Wayne WorkmanW
                        Wayne Workman @cspence
                        last edited by

                        @cspence Very nice work. Have you seen any performance hits during your testing?

                        Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
                        Daily Clean Installation Results:
                        https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
                        FOG Reporting:
                        https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

                        cspenceC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • cspenceC
                          cspence Developer @Wayne Workman
                          last edited by

                          @Wayne-Workman said:

                          @cspence Very nice work. Have you seen any performance hits during your testing?

                          At this point, it’s all about building a working prototype with VMs. But my other testing didn’t show any slow down using samba. Then again, I’m just using plain SATA drives.

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                          • Wayne WorkmanW
                            Wayne Workman
                            last edited by

                            This doesn’t rely on an internet connection to return the default external IP.

                            default_info=$(ip route list | awk '/^default/ {print $5}')
                            default_info=$(ip -o -f inet addr show $default_info | awk '{print $4}' | cut -f1 -d"/")
                            echo $default_info
                            

                            Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
                            Daily Clean Installation Results:
                            https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
                            FOG Reporting:
                            https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • Wayne WorkmanW
                              Wayne Workman
                              last edited by

                              Topic moved to Tutorials simply because of the Samba setup script in the OP.

                              Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
                              Daily Clean Installation Results:
                              https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
                              FOG Reporting:
                              https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

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                              • Wayne WorkmanW
                                Wayne Workman
                                last edited by Wayne Workman

                                This gets the IP of eth0 and sticks it into a variable.

                                eth0IP="$(ip addr show | grep eth0 | grep -o "inet [0-9]*\.[0-9]*\.[0-9]*\.[0-9]*" | grep -o "[0-9]*\.[0-9]*\.[0-9]*\.[0-9]*")"
                                

                                Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
                                Daily Clean Installation Results:
                                https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
                                FOG Reporting:
                                https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

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                                • Wayne WorkmanW
                                  Wayne Workman
                                  last edited by

                                  I had to update the script.
                                  The ftp password is now surrounded by single quotes instead of double quotes. Fixed the extraction for that. Also I fixed a typo for ‘share modes’ and I also fixed some warnings by moving the security and passdb backend parameters to global instead of sectional.

                                  I also added some output at the bottom of the script that tells you the username and password used.

                                  installsamba.sh

                                  Here’s the code:

                                  # Last Modified:
                                  # 10-15-2015
                                  #
                                  # Author: Wayne Guy Workman
                                  # Feel free to share, just give credit. :-)
                                  #
                                  # Install samba and samba client.
                                  #
                                  yum install -y samba samba-client
                                  #
                                  # Move the old samba configuration file.
                                  #
                                  mv /etc/samba/smb.conf /etc/samba/smb.conf.old
                                  #
                                  # Make a new config file, then fill it with settings.
                                  #
                                  touch /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  #beware, below line overwrites anything in /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo '#' > /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  #below lines append to the end of /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo '#This file was generated by an automated installation script' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo '#for FOG 1.3.0 and higher to share the default /images directory.' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo '#Original Author: Wayne Workman' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo '#' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo 'security = user' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo 'passdb backend = tdbsam' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo '[images]' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo 'path = /images' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo 'read only = no' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo 'unix charset = utf-8' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo 'dos charset = cp932' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  #
                                  #
                                  # The bleow bit extracts the out-facing IP. Only works if there is one interface.
                                  # This is for extra security, prevents an IP not from your network getting in, even if they know the username / password.
                                  #
                                  # the last part determines the number of octects set for "hosts allow". -f 1-1 is one, -f 1-2 is two, -f 1-3 is three
                                  #
                                  ServerIP="$( ip route get 8.8.8.8 | awk 'NR==1 {print $NF}' | cut -d '.' -f 1-2 )"
                                  #
                                  #
                                  echo '# The below line defines what IP ranges are allowed. They are space delemeted.' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo '# For instance, if you wanted local loopback address, the 10.0.0. range,' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo '# and the 192.168.1 range, and a specifc public IP of 50.50.50.50,' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo '# It would be this:' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo '# hosts allow = 127.0.0.1 10.0.0. 192.168.1. 50.50.50.50' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo "hosts allow = "$ServerIP"." >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  #
                                  # Continue with building the smb.conf file...
                                  #
                                  echo 'create mode = 0777' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo 'directory mode = 0777' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo 'share modes = yes' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  echo 'writable = yes' >> /etc/samba/smb.conf
                                  #
                                  # Below gets the ftp user & pass from /opt/fot/.fogsettings and "assumes" it matches the local linux user
                                  # Credit for trying?
                                  #
                                  user="$(grep 'storageftpuser=' /opt/fog/.fogsettings | awk -F'"' '{$0=$2}1')"
                                  pass="$(grep 'storageftppass=' /opt/fog/.fogsettings | cut -d \' -f2 )"
                                  #
                                  # Set the samba user with the credentials.
                                  #
                                  (echo "$pass"; echo "$pass") | smbpasswd -s -a $user
                                  systemctl enable smb.service
                                  systemctl restart smb.service
                                  echo " "
                                  echo _______________________________
                                  echo "You might want to note the below info."
                                  echo "Your SMB Username is: " $user
                                  echo "Your SMB Password is: " $pass
                                  echo "If you want to make custom changes to shares,"
                                  echo "The config file is /etc/samba/smb.conf"
                                  echo _______________________________
                                  

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                                  • Wayne WorkmanW
                                    Wayne Workman
                                    last edited by

                                    I’ve turned this script into a project on SourceForge: https://sourceforge.net/p/samba-for-fog/svn/HEAD/tree/

                                    Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
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                                    https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
                                    FOG Reporting:
                                    https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

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                                    • Wayne WorkmanW
                                      Wayne Workman
                                      last edited by

                                      svn checkout svn://svn.code.sf.net/p/samba-for-fog/svn/ samba-for-fog-svn
                                      cd samba-for-fog-svn
                                      ./installsamba.sh
                                      

                                      Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
                                      Daily Clean Installation Results:
                                      https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
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                                      https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

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                                      • G
                                        Gilou
                                        last edited by

                                        Well… if you really want to protect your images, you’d also need to secure the access to the imaging process… It’s true that if /images requires auth, it makes it harder for someone to leak your images, however you’d need to make sure your attacker can’t just fake the MAC of a to-be-imaged computer and just retrieve your fog image with the credentials… 😉

                                        I’d say using samba/cifs is a bit overkill, especially if you don’t have proper security on layer2… But I see the point 😉

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                                        • Wayne WorkmanW
                                          Wayne Workman @Gilou
                                          last edited by

                                          @Gilou Setting up Samba started as a test for imaging through Samba.

                                          But now, it’s mostly just for easy backup and transfer using Windows. Ultimately the Samba solution can be used by people however they see fit.

                                          Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!
                                          Daily Clean Installation Results:
                                          https://fogtesting.fogproject.us/
                                          FOG Reporting:
                                          https://fog-external-reporting-results.fogproject.us/

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