vfs_fruit
8
Samba
System Administration tools
&doc.version;
vfs_fruit
Enhanced OS X and Netatalk interoperability
vfs objects = fruit
DESCRIPTION
This VFS module is part of the
samba
7 suite.
The vfs_fruit module provides
enhanced compatibility with Apple SMB clients and
interoperability with a Netatalk 3 AFP fileserver.
The module should be stacked with
vfs_catia if enabling character conversion and
must be stacked with vfs_streams_xattr, see the
example section for the correct config.
The module enables alternate data streams (ADS) support
for a share, intercepts the OS X special streams "AFP_AfpInfo"
and "AFP_Resource" and handles them in a special way. All
other named streams are deferred to
vfs_streams_xattr which must be loaded
together with vfs_fruit.
Be careful when mixing shares with and without
vfs_fruit. OS X clients negotiate SMB2 AAPL protocol
extensions on the first tcon, so mixing shares with and
without fruit will globally disable AAPL if the first tcon is
without fruit.
Having shares with ADS support enabled for OS X client
is worthwhile because it resembles the behaviour of Apple's
own SMB server implementation and it avoids certain severe
performance degradations caused by Samba's case sensitivity
semantics.
The OS X metadata and resource fork stream can be stored
in a way compatible with Netatalk 3 by setting
fruit:resource = file and
fruit:metadata = netatalk.
OS X maps NTFS illegal characters to the Unicode private
range in SMB requests. By setting fruit:encoding =
native, all mapped characters are converted to
native ASCII characters.
Finally, share access modes are optionally checked
against Netatalk AFP sharing modes by setting
fruit:locking = netatalk.
This module is not stackable other than described in
this manpage.
GLOBAL OPTIONS
The following options must be set in the global smb.conf section
and won't take effect when set per share.
fruit:aapl = yes | no
A global option whether to enable Apple's SMB2+
extension codenamed AAPL. Default
yes. This extension enhances
several deficiencies when connecting from Macs:
directory enumeration is enriched with
Mac relevant filesystem metadata (UNIX mode,
FinderInfo, resource fork size and effective
permission), as a result the Mac client doesn't need
to fetch this metadata individually per directory
entry resulting in an often tremendous performance
increase.
The ability to query and modify the
UNIX mode of directory entries.
There's a set of per share options that come into play when
fruit:aapl is enabled. These options, listed
below, can be used to disable the computation of specific Mac
metadata in the directory enumeration context, all are enabled by
default:
readdir_attr:aapl_rsize = yes | no
readdir_attr:aapl_finder_info = yes | no
readdir_attr:aapl_max_access = yes | no
See below for a description of these options.
fruit:nfs_aces = yes | no
A global option whether support for
querying and modifying the UNIX mode of directory entries via NFS
ACEs is enabled, default yes.
fruit:copyfile = yes | no
A global option whether to enable OS X
specific copychunk ioctl that requests a copy of a whole file
along with all attached metadata.
WARNING: the copyfile request is blocking the
client while the server does the copy.
The default is no.
fruit:model = MacSamba
This option defines the model string inside the AAPL
extension and will determine the appearance of the icon representing the
Samba server in the Finder window.
The default is MacSamba.
OPTIONS
The following options can be set either in the global smb.conf section
or per share.
fruit:resource = [ file | xattr | stream ]
Controls where the OS X resource fork is stored.
Due to a spelling bug in all Samba versions older then
4.6.0, this option can also be given as
fruit:ressource, ie with two s.
Settings:
file (default) - use a ._
AppleDouble file compatible with OS X and
Netatalk
xattr - use a
xattr, requires a filesystem with large xattr support
and a file IO API compatible with xattrs, this boils
down to Solaris and derived platforms and
ZFS
stream (experimental) - pass
the stream on to the next module in the VFS stack.
Warning: this option should not be used
with the streams_xattr module due to the
extended attributes size limitations of most
filesystems.
fruit:time machine = [ yes | no ]
Controls if Time Machine support via the FULLSYNC volume
capability is advertised to clients.
yes - Enables Time Machine
support for this share. Also registers the share with mDNS in
case Samba is built with mDNS support.
no (default) Disables
advertising Time Machine support.
This option enforces the following settings per share (or
for all shares if enabled globally):
durable handles = yes
kernel oplocks = no
kernel share modes = no
posix locking = no
fruit:time machine max size = SIZE [K|M|G|T|P]
Useful for Time Machine: limits the reported disksize, thus
preventing Time Machine from using the whole real disk space for
backup. The option takes a number plus an optional unit.
IMPORTANT: This is an approximated
calculation that only takes into account the contents of Time
Machine sparsebundle images. Therefore you MUST
NOT use this volume to store other content when using
this option, because it would NOT be accounted.
The calculation works by reading the band size from the
Info.plist XML file of the sparsebundle, reading the bands/
directory counting the number of band files, and then multiplying
one with the other.
fruit:metadata = [ stream | netatalk ]
Controls where the OS X metadata stream is stored:
netatalk (default) - use
Netatalk compatible xattr
stream - pass the
stream on to the next module in the VFS
stack
fruit:locking = [ netatalk | none ]
none (default) - no
cross protocol locking
netatalk - use
cross protocol locking with Netatalk
fruit:encoding = [ native | private ]
Controls how the set of illegal NTFS ASCII
character, commonly used by OS X clients, are stored in
the filesystem.
Important: this is known to not fully
work with fruit:metadata=stream or
fruit:resource=stream.
private (default) -
store characters as encoded by the OS X client: mapped
to the Unicode private range
native - store
characters with their native ASCII
value. Important: this option
requires the use of vfs_catia in
the VFS module stack as shown in the examples
section.
fruit:veto_appledouble = yes | no
Note: this option only applies when
fruit:resource is set to
file (the default).
When fruit:resource is set to
file, vfs_fruit may create ._ AppleDouble
files. This options controls whether these ._ AppleDouble files
are vetoed which prevents the client from accessing them.
Vetoing ._ files may break some applications, e.g.
extracting Mac ZIP archives from Mac clients fails,
because they contain ._ files. rsync will
also be unable to sync files beginning with underscores, as
the temporary files it uses for these will start with ._ and
so cannot be created.
Setting this option to
false will fix this, but the abstraction leak of
exposing the internally created ._ files may have other
unknown side effects.
The default is yes.
fruit:posix_rename = yes | no
Whether to enable POSIX directory rename behaviour
for OS X clients. Without this, directories can't be
renamed if any client has any file inside it
(recursive!) open.
The default is yes.
readdir_attr:aapl_rsize = yes | no
Return resource fork size in SMB2 FIND responses.
The default is yes.
readdir_attr:aapl_finder_info = yes | no
Return FinderInfo in SMB2 FIND responses.
The default is yes.
readdir_attr:aapl_max_access = yes | no
Return the user's effective maximum permissions in SMB2 FIND
responses. This is an expensive computation, setting this to off
pretends the use has maximum effective permissions.
The default is yes.
fruit:wipe_intentionally_left_blank_rfork = yes | no
Whether to wipe Resource Fork data that matches the special
286 bytes sized placeholder blob that macOS client create on
occasion. The blob contains a string This resource fork
intentionally left blank
, the remaining bytes being mostly
zero. There being no one use of this data, it is probably safe to
discard it. When this option is enabled, this module truncates the
Resource Fork stream to 0 bytes.
The default is no.
fruit:delete_empty_adfiles = yes | no
Whether to delete empty AppleDouble files. Empty means that
the resource fork entry in the AppleDouble files is of size 0, or
the size is exactly 286 bytes and the content matches a special
boilerplate resource fork created my macOS.
The default is no.
fruit:zero_file_id = yes | no
Whether to return zero to queries of on-disk file
identifier if the client has negotiated AAPL.
Mac applications and / or the Mac SMB client code expect the
on-disk file identifier to have the semantics of HFS+ Catalog Node
Identifier (CNID). Samba provides File-IDs based on a file's inode
number which gets recycled across file creation and deletion and
can therefor not be used for Mac client. Returning a file identifier of
zero causes the Mac client to stop using and trusting the file id
returned from the server.
The default is yes.
fruit:convert_adouble = yes | no
Whether an attempt shall be made to convert ._ AppleDouble
sidecar files to native streams (xattrs when using
vfs_streams_xattr). The main use case for this conversion is
transparent migration from a server config without streams support
where the macOS client created those AppleDouble sidecar
files.
The default is yes.
EXAMPLES
catia fruit streams_xattr
file
netatalk
netatalk
native
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.