(sorry in advance for the long post)

What I’m looking for:

Basically, without a lot of work to setup and maintain a Domain/Kerberos server, what’s the best way to provide consistent logins and remote folder/share (from a server) access across various Linux desktops


I’ve configured domain controllers using Samba. I’ve also configured Linux systems as domain-joined hosts. Between the two I tend to find that keeping talking - especially for systems that are only on infrequently - can be a bit troublesome. Updates sometimes break the Samba server, tokens expire, etc etc

I’ve also used NFS of various versions, but found v4 with the Kerberos implementation a bit finicky (for similar reasons to the SMB based implementation). NFSv3 of course is fairly fast and efficient, but lacks the user-level authentication and relies on IP’s for access-control.


Now it’s been awhile since I’ve given a shot at this except for some NFS shares between VMs and SSHFS for desktops, it would be nice to have a consistent but easily maintainable way to provided common shares for larger files (videos, albums, 3d models, and projects etc) without having to constantly troubleshoot. Maybe the domain/NFS route had gotten easier but it still seems to be fairly manual at times.

  • @phx@lemmy.caOP
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    9 months ago

    Update: Based on some other sources, it sounds like giving another shot at freeIPA might be worth investigating. It’s still got Samba etc and the last time I tried it things weren’t more RedHat exactly friendly to my favored flavor (Debian) but it sounds like it might be better supported now

    Update #2

    OMFG it’s years after I tried and FreeIPA on Debian is even more of a pain. Docker container issues galore, and it basically won’t start without adding a bunch of options that reduce the container security to a smoldering ruin