-Copyright (C) 1997-1998 - Samba-Team
+Copyright (C) 1997-2008 Samba-Team
The Samba-Team are committed to an aggressive program to deliver quality
controlled software to a well defined roadmap.
-The current Samba release 2.0.0 is called the "Domain Client Release"
-
-It correctly implements the Windows NT specific SMB calls,
-and will operate correctly as a client in a Windows NT
-Domain environment.
-
-In addition, the first implementation of the Web-based GUI
-management tool ships with 2.0.0, thus fullfilling some of
-the commitments made in the 1.9.18 release Roadmap document.
-
-Some work has been done on ensuring compatibility with
-Windows NT 5.0 (now Windows 2000 :-) although this is
-a somewhat (slowly) moving target.
+Please also look at the Samba3 and Samba4 pages of wiki.samba.org for more
+information.
The following development objectives for future releases
-are in place:
-
+are in progress:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-2.0.x - "NT Security update" - Allowing Windows NT Clients to
- manipulate file security and ownership using native tools.
+Samba-3.0.x This release turned into maintenance mode since we
+ released 3.2.
-2.0.xx - "Thin Server" mode, allowing a Samba server to be
- inserted into a network with no UNIX setup required.
- Some management capabilities for Samba using native NT tools.
- Provision of command-line equivalents to native NT tools.
+Samba-3.6.x This is the current stable Samba 3 release intended
+ for all Samba production server.
-2.X - "Domain Controller" - able to serve as a Windows NT PDC.
+Samba-4 Danger Will Robinson, a big code clean up with major
+ system redesign. More will be announced as this work
+ starts to take shape.
-X.XX - "Full Domain Integration" - allowing both PDC and BDC modes.
-Note that it is a given that the Samba Team will continue to track
-Windows (NT/2000) update releases, ensuring that Samba will work
+Note that it is a given that the Samba-Team will continue to track
+Windows (NT/200x) update releases, ensuring that Samba will work
well with whatever "Beta" releases Redmond throws our way :-).
You may also note that the release numbers get fuzzier the
further into the future the objectives get. This is intentional
-as we cannot yet commit to exact timeframes.
+as we cannot commit to exact timeframes.