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samba-container

Container images for Samba services.

Our images:

  • Are OCI formatted container images
  • Provide application-like high-level entrypoint scripts
  • Are available as pre-built stable and "nightly" variants
  • Are used by the samba-operator for Kubernetes
  • Don't require Kubernetes
  • Are available at quay.io

Image Types:

Image Type Repository Custom Entrypoint Features
Samba Server quay.io Yes Standalone file server, Domain member file server
AD Domain Controller quay.io Yes Active Directory Domain Controller
Client quay.io No Basic Userspace Client Utilities
Toolbox quay.io No Extra debugging and testing tools

Samba Server

The Samba server image defaults to the samba-container entrypoint.

In the default configuration, the server container image exports one share, named "share", with the path /share which is expected to be a volume provided by the host. A default user, named "sambauser" is predefined with a password of "samba". This simple mode of operation is great for quick demos. Example:

podman run --name samba --publish 10445:445 --volume=/path/on/host/to/share:/share:Z --rm  quay.io/samba.org/samba-server:latest

Note The port mapping option (--publish) is only needed when running as non-root, e.g. for testing purposes.

The samba-container entrypoint can perform many functions and is designed to make the container image act like a cohesive application. It can automate the management of Samba as well as the container environment to make them work together. This tool is provided by the sambacc project.

# print help
podman run --rm quay.io/samba.org/samba-server:latest --help
# print help for the run subcommand
podman run --rm quay.io/samba.org/samba-server:latest run --help

Changing the configuration

The behavior of the container can be changed by invoking it with specific arguments for the samba-container script and/or setting environment variables.

You can include a custom configuration via the following method:

$EDITOR /path/to/config/config.json
podman run --name samba  --publish 10445:445 --volume=/path/on/host/to/share:/share:Z --volume=/path/to/config:/etc/samba-container -e SAMBACC_CONFIG=/etc/samba-container/config.json -e SAMBA_CONTAINER_ID=myid  --rm  quay.io/samba.org/samba-server:latest

AD DC

The AD DC image defaults to the samba-dc-container entrypoint.

In the default configuration, the AD DC container image automatically provisions and serves a simple stock domain DOMAIN1.SINK.TEST. Because the Samba AD DC uses certain file system xattrs this container must currently be run with privileges. Example:

podman run --rm --privileged  quay.io/samba.org/samba-ad-server:latest

The samba-dc-container entrypoint can perform multiple functions as is designed to make the container image act like a cohesive application. It helps automate the provisioning of and/or connection to a domain. This tool is provided by the sambacc project.

Client

The project provides a simple samba client container image that can be useful for testing. One does not need to install the user space samba client locally but rather use the container image. It can run the samba client interactively when a TTY is available and can also be scripted for automated testing purposes. Example:

podman run --rm -it   quay.io/samba.org/samba-client:latest
[root@dc0419d28c4e /]# smbclient -U 'sambauser' //foo.example.org/share

Toolbox

The project provides a container image container containing the samba test suite program (smbtorture) as well as the user space client. This can be used for debugging and testing purposes. Example:

podman run --rm -it   quay.io/samba.org/samba-toolbox:latest
[root@dc0419d28c4e /]# smbtorture --help

Image Variants

The server images come in two variants: stable and nightly. The stable variant is what you get with the "latest" tag and includes Samba packages from the Linux distribution used in our base images. The "nightly" images are based on Samba packages created by the samba-integration project which builds and tests Samba builds before release. The nightly images are tagged with "nightly" instead of "latest".

Developers

Building the containers

# Build Everything
make build

Each container image type has a build target:

# Build the server image
make build-server
# Build the server with "nightly" samba
make build-nightly-server
# Build the client
make build-client
# And so on...

There are matching push-* rules that default to pushing the images to the "official" quay.io repositories. These rules can be executed by the appropriate github actions or by project maintainers.