Samba

Introduction

Samba is a free software re-implementation, originally developed by Australian Andrew Tridgell, of SMB/CIFS networking protocol. As of version 3, Samba provides file and print services for various Microsoft Windows clients and can integrate with a Windows Server domain, either as a Primary Domain Controller (PDC) or as a domain member. It can also be part of an Active Directory domain.

Samba runs on most Unix and Unix-like systems, such as Linux, Solaris, AIX and the BSD variants, including Apple's Mac OS X Server (which was added to the Mac OS X client in version 10.2). Samba is standard on nearly all distributions of Linux and is commonly included as a basic system service on other Unix-based operating systems as well. Samba is released under the GNU General Public License. The name Samba comes from SMB (Server Message Block), the name of the standard protocol used by the Microsoft Windows network file system.

Samba Servers

Constituency Samba Server UNIX Server
Students lumier.cse.buffalo.edu sol.cse.buffalo.edu
Faculty kato.cse.buffalo.edu castor.cse.buffalo.edu

References

  1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samba_%28software%29
  2. http://www.samba.org