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Linux Workstations in a Windows Domain?

gsperling asks: "As Windows licensing costs are gradually increasing, and options for those licenses are decreasing, I am forced to investigate Windows alternatives. I am trying to begin rolling out Linux as an alternative desktop solution to my enterprise. I am an IT Manager for a company of approximately 65 users. We are incorporating a second company into ours in the next six months, and that 65 number will grow to well over 150. This is a solution that I need to start working on TODAY. We currently have a Windows 2000 Server. It is primarily used as a file and printer sharing server, along with maintaining all of the user accounts domain-wide. I would like to know how it is possible to get a Linux Workstation to authenticate against the user database in our Windows 2000 Server. I have exhaustively Google'd, read thousands of mailing list archives, and have still come up short. After I receive my results, I plan on publishing a whitepaper on how this is done, of course giving credit where credit is due." For those of you using Linux in the Enterprise, how have you managed to get Windows to play nice with any Linux boxen in your domain?

4 of 78 comments (clear)

  1. part of samba can do this for you, by Alex · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.samba.org/samba/docs/man/winbindd.8.htm l

    Alex

  2. Google Is Your Friend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Detailed instructions at the following: http://www.securityfocus.com/infocus/1563

  3. Interesting.... by Neck_of_the_Woods · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is just a question to the linux public, this maybe be just a little off topic but here we go anyway. I have karma to burn.

    Why do so many linux guys ignore "best tool for the job" and just force linux into a solution? I mean it is clear that linux has very good uses, just as windows does. Yet I have watched time and time again someone force linux or solaris into a job that would have worked better as a windows machine.

    Before you get on your high horse and scream that there is nothing that windows can do that linux can not do better just save it. Your wrong, dead wrong. In an all windows shop running .net and nothing but microsoft on the workstations there is no good reason to try to force them to program on linux/apache. There is not a good reason to try to force them to use samba, and there is not a good reason for DNS to be run on Linux in that shop.

    There are plenty of awesome reasons to use linux, but for petes sake your shooting yourself in the collective foot when you try to force linux in. You end up having management hear "integration" issues...The linux DNS is not talking to the ADS correctly....the Syslog server is not responding....that damn linux.....I could go on and on on this because someone forced linux into a shop that was all windows. Then did it poorly on top of that.

    I guess what I am trying to say is that Linux is not always the answer. Sometimes, you have to pick the best tool for the job, and sometimes that is not linux. Pick your battles my friends, and put linux in where it will shine like a white knight if your looking to change minds. Don't just take on every job with the idea that your going to "make them use linux". Find that perfect high profile job that linux will shine at, not the problem child job that you know is going to have issues.

    You want more linux in the shop? Start by putting it in the right place and follow up on it like you should. Don't just 1/2 ass force it.

    Just my 2 bits...I may just be bitter cleaning up after 1/2 assed linux imps that have gone wrong this week.

    --
    Neck_of_the_Woods
    #/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
    1. Re:Interesting.... by Neck_of_the_Woods · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree, if you have no other solution besides "free" you have a winner in linux.

      I was not really pointing at this story. As his needs and resources are the driving force here. If money is a major issue in the project then of course you are going with "the best tool for the job" in picking linux. Unless linux in the long wrong will cost you more man hours to support, eclipsing your savings on the free OS. This happens everyday, I know because I see it.

      The "best tool for the job" of course has to take money into consideration. But if you save 200 bucks on the OS, but then spend 10 hours trying to make it work with a windows domain what good has it done you. Unless management has no concept of TOS(total cost of ownership) this is a loosing battle. I will agree that most everything you do on Windows will cost you, but does it cost so much to get "ease of use", that you will to support it with you man hours?

      I guess if your time is worth nothing, then linux will always be the solution.

      --
      Neck_of_the_Woods
      #/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead