Samba
This guide will help you on how to use samba on nixos.
Server setup
Example setup for creating a public guest share called public
and a private share called private
.
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
services.samba = {
enable = true;
securityType = "user";
openFirewall = true;
settings = {
global = {
"workgroup" = "WORKGROUP";
"server string" = "smbnix";
"netbios name" = "smbnix";
"security" = "user";
#"use sendfile" = "yes";
#"max protocol" = "smb2";
# note: localhost is the ipv6 localhost ::1
"hosts allow" = "192.168.0. 127.0.0.1 localhost";
"hosts deny" = "0.0.0.0/0";
"guest account" = "nobody";
"map to guest" = "bad user";
};
"public" = {
"path" = "/mnt/Shares/Public";
"browseable" = "yes";
"read only" = "no";
"guest ok" = "yes";
"create mask" = "0644";
"directory mask" = "0755";
"force user" = "username";
"force group" = "groupname";
};
"private" = {
"path" = "/mnt/Shares/Private";
"browseable" = "yes";
"read only" = "no";
"guest ok" = "no";
"create mask" = "0644";
"directory mask" = "0755";
"force user" = "username";
"force group" = "groupname";
};
};
};
services.samba-wsdd = {
enable = true;
openFirewall = true;
};
services.avahi = {
publish.enable = true;
publish.userServices = true;
# ^^ Needed to allow samba to automatically register mDNS records (without the need for an `extraServiceFile`
nssmdns4 = true;
# ^^ Not one hundred percent sure if this is needed- if it aint broke, don't fix it
enable = true;
openFirewall = true;
};
networking.firewall.enable = true;
networking.firewall.allowPing = true;
The samba-wsdd
service and avahi is used to advertise the shares to Windows hosts.
User Authentication
For a user called my_user
to be authenticated on the samba server, you must add their password using
smbpasswd -a my_user
Configuration
Apple Time Machine
In addition to the example above, add this to your configuration:
services.samba = {
settings = {
"tm_share" = {
"path" = "/mnt/Shares/tm_share";
"valid users" = "username";
"public" = "no";
"writeable" = "yes";
"force user" = "username";
# Below are the most imporant for macOS compatibility
# Change the above to suit your needs
"fruit:aapl" = "yes";
"fruit:time machine" = "yes";
"vfs objects" = "catia fruit streams_xattr";
};
};
};
# Ensure Time Machine can discover the share without `tmutil`
services.avahi = {
extraServiceFiles = {
timemachine = ''
<?xml version="1.0" standalone='no'?>
<!DOCTYPE service-group SYSTEM "avahi-service.dtd">
<service-group>
<name replace-wildcards="yes">%h</name>
<service>
<type>_smb._tcp</type>
<port>445</port>
</service>
<service>
<type>_device-info._tcp</type>
<port>0</port>
<txt-record>model=TimeCapsule8,119</txt-record>
</service>
<service>
<type>_adisk._tcp</type>
<txt-record>dk0=adVN=tm_share,adVF=0x82</txt-record>
<txt-record>sys=waMa=0,adVF=0x100</txt-record>
</service>
</service-group>
'';
};
};
Printer sharing
services.samba.package = pkgs.sambaFull;
A printer share that allows printing to all members in the local network
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
services.samba = {
enable = true;
package = pkgs.sambaFull;
openFirewall = true;
settings = {
"load printers" = "yes";
"printing" = "cups";
"printcap name" = "cups";
};
"printers" = {
"comment" = "All Printers";
"path" = "/var/spool/samba";
"public" = "yes";
"browseable" = "yes";
# to allow user 'guest account' to print.
"guest ok" = "yes";
"writable" = "no";
"printable" = "yes";
"create mode" = 0700;
};
};
};
systemd.tmpfiles.rules = [
"d /var/spool/samba 1777 root root -"
];
The `samba` packages comes without CUPS printing support compiled in, however `sambaFull` features printer sharing support.
Active Directory Domain Controller
We will setup an AD DC just like the the Samba Wiki.
Let's add the following nix config, updating the adDomain
, adWorkgroup
, adNetbiosName
and staticIp
according to your needs.
{ config, lib, pkgs, ... }:
with lib;
let
cfg = config.services.samba;
samba = cfg.package;
nssModulesPath = config.system.nssModules.path;
adDomain = "samdom.example.com";
adWorkgroup = "SAM";
adNetbiosName = "SAMDOM";
staticIp = "10.42.129.160";
in {
# Disable resolveconf, we're using Samba internal DNS backend
systemd.services.resolvconf.enable = false;
environment.etc = {
resolvconf = {
text = ''
search ${adDomain}
nameserver ${staticIp}
'';
};
};
# Rebuild Samba with LDAP, MDNS and Domain Controller support
nixpkgs.overlays = [ (self: super: {
samba = (super.samba.override {
enableLDAP = true;
enableMDNS = true;
enableDomainController = true;
enableProfiling = true; # Optional for logging
# Set pythonpath manually (bellow with overrideAttrs) as it is not set on 22.11 due to bug
}).overrideAttrs (finalAttrs: previousAttrs: {
pythonPath = with super; [ python3Packages.dnspython python3Packages.markdown tdb ldb talloc ];
});
})];
# Disable default Samba `smbd` service, we will be using the `samba` server binary
systemd.services.samba-smbd.enable = false;
systemd.services.samba = {
description = "Samba Service Daemon";
requiredBy = [ "samba.target" ];
partOf = [ "samba.target" ];
serviceConfig = {
ExecStart = "${samba}/sbin/samba --foreground --no-process-group";
ExecReload = "${pkgs.coreutils}/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID";
LimitNOFILE = 16384;
PIDFile = "/run/samba.pid";
Type = "notify";
NotifyAccess = "all"; #may not do anything...
};
unitConfig.RequiresMountsFor = "/var/lib/samba";
};
services.samba = {
enable = true;
enableNmbd = false;
enableWinbindd = false;
configText = ''
# Global parameters
[global]
dns forwarder = ${staticIp}
netbios name = ${adNetbiosName}
realm = ${toUpper adDomain}
server role = active directory domain controller
workgroup = ${adWorkgroup}
idmap_ldb:use rfc2307 = yes
[sysvol]
path = /var/lib/samba/sysvol
read only = No
[netlogon]
path = /var/lib/samba/sysvol/${adDomain}/scripts
read only = No
'';
};
}
After evaluating, you should see that the Samba service crashed because we haven't setup the database yet.
To do that, let's run the following command, updated with your own configuration:
samba-tool domain provision --server-role=dc --use-rfc2307 --dns-backend=SAMBA_INTERNAL --realm=SAMDOM.EXAMPLE.COM --domain=SAMDOM --adminpass=Passw0rd
Then restart the samba service with sudo systemctl restart samba
, and you're ready to go!
Samba Client
CIFS mount configuration
The following snippets shows how to mount a CIFS (Windows) share in NixOS.
Replace all <FIELDS>
with concrete values:
{
# For mount.cifs, required unless domain name resolution is not needed.
environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.cifs-utils ];
fileSystems."/mnt/share" = {
device = "//<IP_OR_HOST>/path/to/share";
fsType = "cifs";
options = let
# this line prevents hanging on network split
automount_opts = "x-systemd.automount,noauto,x-systemd.idle-timeout=60,x-systemd.device-timeout=5s,x-systemd.mount-timeout=5s";
in ["${automount_opts},credentials=/etc/nixos/smb-secrets"];
};
}
Also create /etc/nixos/smb-secrets with the following content (domain=
can be optional)
username=<USERNAME>
domain=<DOMAIN>
password=<PASSWORD>
By default, CIFS shares are mounted as root. If mounting as user is desirable, `uid`, `gid` and usergroup arguments can be provided as part of the filesystem options:
{
fileSystems."/mnt/share" = {
# ... rest of the filesystem config omitted
options = let
automount_opts = "x-systemd.automount,noauto,x-systemd.idle-timeout=60,x-systemd.device-timeout=5s,x-systemd.mount-timeout=5s,user,users";
in ["${automount_opts},credentials=/etc/nixos/smb-secrets,uid=1000,gid=100"];
# or if you have specified `uid` and `gid` explicitly through NixOS configuration,
# you can refer to them rather than hard-coding the values:
# in ["${automount_opts},credentials=/etc/nixos/smb-secrets,uid=${toString config.users.users.<username>.uid},gid=${toString config.users.groups.<group>.gid}"];
};
}
Firewall configuration
Samba discovery of machines and shares may need the firewall to be tuned (source):
in /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
, add:
networking.firewall.extraCommands = ''iptables -t raw -A OUTPUT -p udp -m udp --dport 137 -j CT --helper netbios-ns'';
Command line
List shares
smbclient --list localhost
This should print
$ smbclient --list localhost Password for [WORKGROUP\user]: Sharename Type Comment --------- ---- ------- public Disk IPC$ IPC IPC Service (smbnix) SMB1 disabled -- no workgroup available
Mount as guest. public
is your share name
nix-shell -p cifs-utils mkdir mnt sudo mount.cifs -o sec=none //localhost/public mnt
mount as user. user
is your username
sudo mount.cifs -o sec=ntlmssp,username=user //localhost/public mnt
sec=ntlmssp
should work.
for more values, see `man mount.cifs` (search for `sec=arg`)
Many GTK-based file managers like Nautilus, Thunar, and PCManFM can browse samba shares thanks to GVFS. GVFS is a dbus daemon which must be running for this to work. If you use Gnome, you have nothing to do as the module already enables it for you, but in less full-featured desktop environments, some further configuration options are needed.
The generic way of enabling GVFS is to add this in /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
:
services.gvfs.enable = true;
There are however some special cases.
XFCE
Xfce comes with a slimmed-down version of GVFS by default which comes with samba support compiled out. To have smb:// support in Thunar, we will use GNOME's full-featured version of GVFS:
services.gvfs = {
enable = true;
package = lib.mkForce pkgs.gnome3.gvfs;
};
No desktop environment
GVFS relies on polkit to gain privileges for some operations. Polkit needs an authentication agent to ask for credentials. Desktop environments usually provide one but if you have no desktop environment, you may have to install one yourself:
Excerpt of /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
:
environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [ lxqt.lxqt-policykit ]; # provides a default authentification client for policykit
DBUS
Furthermore, if you happen to start your Window Manager directly, via .xinitrc
, or directly invoke a Wayland compositor such as Sway, you should ensure that you launch dbus at startup in your session and export its environment. If you do not have a dbus session in your environment, you will see errors such as "Operation not supported" when attempting to browse the network.
For example, if you are using .xinitrc
, you could invoke dbus-launch
:
export `dbus-launch` # starts dbus and exports its address
exec xterm # your prefered Window Manager
(You need to restart your Window Manager to have the changes in .xinitrc
to take place.)
If you are using a Wayland compositor like Sway, you can run it under dbus-run-session
for the same effect:
dbus-run-session sway
(Because dbus-run-session
exits when the child process exits, it is only appropriate to use dbus-run-session
with a process that will be running during the entire session. This is the case for Wayland compositors, but is not necessarily true for all configurations of X11 window managers.)
Troubleshooting
Server log
sudo journalctl -u samba-smbd.service -f
Stale file handle
Trying to read the contents of a remote file leads to the following error message: "Stale file handle". If you have mounted a share via the method described in "cfis mount", adding the option noserverino
might fix this problem. [1]
NT_STATUS_INVALID_NETWORK_RESPONSE
The error
protocol negotiation failed: NT_STATUS_INVALID_NETWORK_RESPONSE
means "access denied".
Probably you must fix your server's hosts allow
section.
Note that localhost
is the ipv6 localhost ::1
,
and 127.0.0.1
is the ipv4 localhost
Permission denied
Maybe check the guest account
setting in your server config.
The default value is nobody
,
but the user nobody
has no access to /home/user
:
$ sudo -u nobody ls /home/user [sudo] password for user: ls: cannot open directory '/home/user': Permission denied
As workaround, set guest account = user
,
where user
is your username