Samba is an Open Source/Free Software suite that provides seamless file and print services to SMB/CIFS clients. Samba is freely available under the GNU General Public License.
Latest Samba 2.2 release: Samba 2.2.8a (*security release*)
gzipped
bzip2
release notes
signature
Latest Samba 3.0 release: Samba 3.0.3
gzipped
bzip2
release notes
signature
The latest patch release of the 3.0 code base, Samba 3.0.3, is available for download in both gzipped format and bzip2 format. The GPG signature is for the uncompressed tarball. This is the latest stable release of Samba. This is the version that production Samba servers should be running for all current bug-fixes. There have been several issues fixed since the 3.0.2a release, and new features have been added as well. Please refer to the Release Notes for descriptions of the exact changes and new features.
Pre-built packages can be downloaded from the Binary_Packages directory on samba.org.
We are glad to have Deryck join the Samba team as the new maintainer of the web content on http://samba.org. In fact, he has already been hard at work now for about a week.
SambaXP (www.sambaxp.org), held in Göttingen, Germany April 5-7, was a success and a good time for all involved. Thirteen Samba Team members were present, leading ten talks and tutorials over the three days. SerNet did a great job as always of hosting. Thanks to everyone who worked hard to make the event the success that it was.
Slides are available from three of the talks here.
More to come from the conference when it becomes available.
On 4 April 2004, Samba development changed its version control system from CVS to Subversion. For more information on accessing Samba via Subversion see the Samba subversion page. To download Subversion go to subversion.tigris.org.
Tech book publisher Prentice Hall PTR announces that Samba-Team member John H. Terpstra's latest book, Samba-3 By Example: Practical Exercises to Successful Deployment (ISBN 0131472216), is now available at Amazon.com and direct from the publisher at www.informit.com/terpstra and at bookstores nationwide. Samba-3 By Example is the companion follow-up book to The Official Samba-3 HOWTO and Reference Guide (ISBN 0131453556), which was co-edited by John H. Terpstra and fellow Samba-Team member Jelmer R. Vernooij.
Samba-3 By Example was written in response to demand for real-world worked examples of Samba-3 configurations. A CD-ROM included within the book contains all examples of configuration files, scripts, and tools covered in the book. This CD-ROM also has the binary and source packages for SuSE and Red Hat Linux products.
Prentice Hall PTR is pleased to announce that the full source of both books, The Official Samba-3 HOWTO and Reference Guide and the new publication Samba-3 by Example have been posted to Samba.Org samba-docs public code tree. All books in the Bruce Perens' Open Source Series are published under the OPL.
For more information see: InformIT or Amazon.Com. The PDF and HTML versions of Samba-3 by Example (The Samba Guide) will appear on the Samba web site by April 14th under the documentation page.
The German PC Professionell Magazine has awarded Samba 3 as the Innovation of the years 2003/2004 in the category Network. Volker Lendecke has accepted the award at the Magazine's CeBIT party.
Tests by the UK magazine ITWEEK show that an untuned Samba3 server outperforms an untuned Windows 2003 server on the same hardware by a factor of 2.5 times. The news article is here and the test results in graph form are here.
Over the past few months, the SCO Group (formerly Caldera International, Inc.
a Linux distribution vendor) has been complaining about violations of its
Copyright works by the Linux kernel code.
Recently, Darl McBride, the Chief Executive Officer of SCO has been making
pejorative statements regarding the license used by the Linux kernel, the
GNU GPL. In a keynote speech he recently said:
"At the end of the day, the GPL is not about making software free; it's about destroying value."
Please use the closest mirror site for these web pages. The popularity of Samba puts a strain on our network. By using a mirror site you can do your bit to reduce the load.