6.1 HP IBRIX X9000 Network Storage System File System User Guide (TA768-96061, June 2012)

Deleting CIFS shares
To delete a CIFS share, select the share on the Computer Management window, right-click, and
select Delete.
Linux static user mapping with Active Directory
Linux static user mapping (also called UID/GID mapping or RFC2307 support) allows you to use
LDAP as a Network Information Service.
Linux static user mapping must be enabled when you configure Active Directory for user
authentication (see “Configuring authentication for CIFS, FTP, and HTTP” (page 54)).
If you configure LDAP ID mapping as the secondary authentication service, authentication uses the
IDs assigned in AD if they exist. If an ID is not found in an AD entry, authentication looks in LDAP
for a user or group of the same name and uses the corresponding ID assigned in LDAP. The primary
group and all supplemental groups are still determined by the AD configuration.
You can also assign UIDs, GIDs, and other POSIX attributes such as the home directory, primary
group and shell to users and groups in Active Directory. To add static entries to Active Directory,
complete these steps:
Configure Active Directory.
Assign POSIX attributes to users and groups in Active Directory.
NOTE: Mapping UID 0 and GID 0 to any AD user or group is not compatible with CIFS static
mapping.
Configuring Active Directory
Your Windows Domain Controller machines must be running Windows Server 2003 R2 or Windows
Server 2008 R2. Configure the Active Directory domain as follows:
Install Identity Management for UNIX.
Activate the Active Directory Schema MMC snap-in.
Add the uidNumber and gidNumber attributes to the partial-attribute-set of the AD global
catalog.
You can perform these procedures from any domain controller. However, the account used to add
attributes to the partial-attribute-set must be a member of the Schema Admins group.
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