file sharing

stephan schutter rhl at farorbit.com
Thu Jan 15 22:28:36 UTC 2004


Thank you Alan. Me to. 

And once again, I am not talking about servers, and I do not see how being
able to authenticate to Active Directory by default is "unsafe".

-----Original Message-----
From: fedora-test-list-admin at redhat.com
[mailto:fedora-test-list-admin at redhat.com] On Behalf Of Alan Cox
Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2004 4:17 PM
To: fedora-test-list at redhat.com
Subject: Re: file sharing

On Thu, Jan 15, 2004 at 03:47:16PM -0600, Epps, Aaron M. wrote:
>     I think the Fedora project has chosen to give everyone a secure
installation by default, if you want to open up your system to the world
after the fact that's your choice.  Again, there is no "hacking" involved in
setting this up, unless you consider using a CLI and editing config files
"hacking".  Also you must keep in mind that Samba has to reverse engineer
everything to work with AD, which M$ stole from Novell, and that is by no
means a trivial task.  I'd say if you really wanted to demo to your company
the power/flexibility/freedom of Linux to setup a Samba server as a domain
controller.  Then try using the GUI Samba Authentication tool and see if it
works... I bet it would.

Im not sure the Fedora set up is perfect. I'd still really like to get
into a situation where the first time I go to say cups and add a printer
it also kicks the firewall tools to sort out if you want remote access,
and it takes it away when its no longer relevant

Little project for someone 8)


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