SWAT(8) | System Administration tools | SWAT(8) |
NAME¶
swat - Samba Web Administration ToolSYNOPSIS¶
swat
[-s <smb config file>] [-a] [-P]
DESCRIPTION¶
This tool is part of the samba(7) suite. swat allows a Samba administrator to configure the complex smb.conf(5) file via a Web browser. In addition, a swat configuration page has help links to all the configurable options in the smb.conf file allowing an administrator to easily look up the effects of any change. swat is run from inetdOPTIONS¶
-s smb configuration fileThe default configuration file path is
determined at compile time. The file specified contains the configuration
details required by the smbd(8) server. This is the file that swat will
modify. The information in this file includes server-specific information such
as what printcap file to use, as well as descriptions of all the services that
the server is to provide. See smb.conf for more information.
-a
This option disables authentication and places
swat in demo mode. In that mode anyone will be able to modify the smb.conf
file.
WARNING: Do NOT enable this option on a production server.
-P
This option restricts read-only users to the
password management page. swat can then be used to change user passwords
without users seeing the "View" and "Status" menu
buttons.
-d|--debuglevel=level
level is an integer from 0 to 10. The
default value if this parameter is not specified is 0.
The higher this value, the more detail will be logged to the log files about the
activities of the server. At level 0, only critical errors and serious
warnings will be logged. Level 1 is a reasonable level for day-to-day running
- it generates a small amount of information about operations carried out.
Levels above 1 will generate considerable amounts of log data, and should only
be used when investigating a problem. Levels above 3 are designed for use only
by developers and generate HUGE amounts of log data, most of which is
extremely cryptic.
Note that specifying this parameter here will override the
smb.conf.5.html# parameter in the smb.conf file.
-V|--version
Prints the program version number.
-s|--configfile <configuration file>
The file specified contains the configuration
details required by the server. The information in this file includes
server-specific information such as what printcap file to use, as well as
descriptions of all the services that the server is to provide. See smb.conf
for more information. The default configuration file name is determined at
compile time.
-l|--log-basename=logdirectory
Base directory name for log/debug files. The
extension ".progname" will be appended (e.g. log.smbclient,
log.smbd, etc...). The log file is never removed by the client.
-h|--help
Print a summary of command line options.
LAUNCHING¶
To launch SWAT just run your favorite web browser and point it at "http://localhost:901/". Note that you can attach to SWAT from any IP connected machine but connecting from a remote machine leaves your connection open to password sniffing as passwords will be sent in the clear over the wire.FILES¶
/etc/inetd.confThis file must contain suitable startup
information for the meta-daemon.
/etc/services
This file must contain a mapping of service
name (e.g., swat) to service port (e.g., 901) and protocol type (e.g.,
tcp).
/etc/samba/smb.conf
This is the default location of the
smb.conf(5) server configuration file that swat edits. This file
describes all the services the server is to make available to clients.
WARNINGS¶
swat will rewrite your smb.conf(5) file. It will rearrange the entries and delete all comments, include= and copy= options. If you have a carefully crafted smb.conf then back it up or don´t use swat!VERSION¶
This man page is correct for version 3 of the Samba suite.SEE ALSO¶
inetd(5), smbd(8), smb.conf(5)AUTHOR¶
The original Samba software and related utilities were created by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar to the way the Linux kernel is developed. The original Samba man pages were written by Karl Auer. The man page sources were converted to YODL format (another excellent piece of Open Source software, available at ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/) and updated for the Samba 2.0 release by Jeremy Allison. The conversion to DocBook for Samba 2.2 was done by Gerald Carter. The conversion to DocBook XML 4.2 for Samba 3.0 was done by Alexander Bokovoy.06/22/2012 | Samba 3.6 |