Samba 4 Moves Closer to Active Directory Server Compatibility
For years, if you wanted an inexpensive, but Windows-compatible file and print server, you turned to Samba running on Linux. Now, with the first alpha release of Samba 4, this open-source project is moving closer to becoming a complete Windows 2003/Longhorn replacement.
Since Samba 3 arrived in 2003, Windows network administrators have been able to use Samba and Linux as a drop-in replacement for an NT file/print server. You could, and many have, used Samba in place of an NT PDC (primary domain controller).
Now, Samba is getting closer to being able to replace Server 2003 even in corporate WANs. As Andrew Barlett described in his 2005 paper, Samba 4 - Active Directory (PDF Link), "Samba version 4 is ... a massive leap forward in the way Samba is designed and built. This thesis attempts to take that further, but examining the protocol basis and implementation details adding support for hosting the Kerberos network authentication system into Samba4's partial implementation of an Active Directory Domain controller. Active Directory forms the heart of Microsoft's modern network architecture, and is the heart of many corporate networks. Producing a compatible product is important, if the Samba project is to remain relevant into the future."
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