From Fedora Project Wiki
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In this example you will share a directory under your home and accessible only by your user.
In this example you will share a directory under your home and accessible only by your user.


Note: using the standard samba configuration (no backends, no modules), samba doesn't use the operating system users for authentication. So you have to create the samba user ''replicating'' the system one. However, the same system username must exist in order to handle filesystem permissions.
Samba does not use the operating system users for authentication, so your user account must be duplicated in Samba. So if your account is "jane" on the host, the user "jane" must also be added to Samba. The usernames must be the same, however the passwords do not.  


If your user name is "jane", you have to add the same username to samba. Please note: the samba password could be different from the system password.
Create a user called "jane" in Samba:
<pre>
sudo smbpasswd -a jane
</pre>


sudo smbpasswd -a jane
Create a directory to be the share for Jane, and set the correct SELinux context:
<pre>
mkdir /home/jane/share


sudo semanage fcontext --add --type "samba_share_t" ~/share
sudo restorecon -R ~/share
</pre>
</pre>


Add the share definition to the /etc/samba/smb.conf configuration file
Samba configuration lives in the /etc/samba/smb.conf file. Adding the following section at the end of the file will instruct Samba to set up a share for Jane called "share" at the /home/jane/share directory just created.
 
<pre>
<pre>
[share]
[share]
         comment = My Share
         comment = My Share
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         directory mask = 0755
         directory mask = 0755
         write list = user
         write list = user
 
</pre>
mkdir /home/jane/share
Restart Samba for the changes to take effect:
 
<pre>
sudo semanage fcontext --add --type "samba_share_t" ~/share
sudo restorecon -R ~/share
 
sudo systemctl restart smb
sudo systemctl restart smb
</pre>
</pre>


=== Sharing a directory for many users ===
=== Sharing a directory for many users ===

Revision as of 07:51, 29 May 2020

How to create a SAMBA share

Install and enable SAMBA

The following commands install SAMBA and set it to run via systemctl. This also sets the firewall to allow access to SAMBA from other computers.

sudo dnf install samba

sudo systemctl enable smb --now

firewall-cmd --get-active-zones
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=FedoraWorkstation --add-service=samba
sudo firewall-cmd --reload

sudo systemctl enable smb --now

Sharing a directory under your home

In this example you will share a directory under your home and accessible only by your user.

Samba does not use the operating system users for authentication, so your user account must be duplicated in Samba. So if your account is "jane" on the host, the user "jane" must also be added to Samba. The usernames must be the same, however the passwords do not.

Create a user called "jane" in Samba:

sudo smbpasswd -a jane

Create a directory to be the share for Jane, and set the correct SELinux context:

mkdir /home/jane/share

sudo semanage fcontext --add --type "samba_share_t" ~/share
sudo restorecon -R ~/share

Samba configuration lives in the /etc/samba/smb.conf file. Adding the following section at the end of the file will instruct Samba to set up a share for Jane called "share" at the /home/jane/share directory just created.

[share]
        comment = My Share
        path = /home/jane/share
        writeable = yes
        browseable = yes
        public = yes
        create mask = 0644
        directory mask = 0755
        write list = user

Restart Samba for the changes to take effect:

sudo systemctl restart smb

Sharing a directory for many users

In this example you will share a directory (outside your home) and you will create a group of users with the right to read/write to the share.

Create a system group

sudo groupadd myfamily

Remember: the samba user has to be also a system user, in order to respect filesystem permissions.

sudo useradd -G myfamily jack

sudo useradd -G myfamily maria

You can avoid to set a system password for such users, in order to prevent access the system via SSH or local login.

sudo smbpasswd -a jack
sudo smbpasswd -a maria

sudo mkdir /home/share
sudo chgrp myfamily /home/share
sudo chmod 770 /home/share
sudo semanage fcontext --add --type "samba_share_t" /home/share
sudo restorecon -R /home/share

Add this stanza to the /etc/samba/smb.conf, each share has its own section in the configuration file:

[family]
        comment = Family Share
        path = /home/share
        writeable = yes
        browseable = yes
        public = yes
        valid users = @myfamily
        create mask = 0660
        directory mask = 0770
        force group = +myfamily

Explanation:

valid users <-- only users of the group family have access rights (the @ sign denote a group name) force group = myfamily <--- force the creation of files and directories with this group, instead of with the user group create mask = 0660 <--- files on the filesystem are created with these permissions, so all the group users can read and write the files created by other users directory mask = 0770 <--- as before but for directories

Change a samba user password

Remember: system and samba password could be different. The system user is mandatory in order to handle filesystem permissions.

sudo smbpasswd maria

Remove a samba user

sudo smbpasswd -x maria

If you don't need the system user, remove it as well:

sudo userdel -r maria

Troubleshooting and logs

Samba log files are located in /var/log/samba/

tail -f /var/log/samba/log.smbd

You can increase the verbosity adding this directive to /etc/samba/smb.conf in the [global] stanza:

[global]

       loglevel = 5

To validate configuration file syntax: testparm

To display current samba connections, use the smbstatus command.


Trouble with accessing the share

- Be sure that the user exists as system user as well as samba user - Check if the shared directory has the right SELinux context

$ ls -dZ /home/share unconfined_u:object_r:samba_share_t:s0 /home/share

- Check if the system user has access rights to the shared directory ls -ld /home/share drwxrwx---. 5 root myfamily 4096 9 gen 15.45 /home/share

In this case the user should be in the myfamily group

- check in the configuration file if the user has access rights granted or he is in the appropriated group

Trouble with writing in the share

- Check in the samba configuration file if the user/group has write permissions - Check user group membership - Check the share directory permissions


https://selinuxproject.org/page/SambaRecipes