[fdo] Integration of network-softwares like samba,
nfs and sftp with the desktop
Philip Van Hoof
spamfrommailing at freax.org
Tue Oct 19 11:24:30 PDT 2004
Hi there,
I would like to enable the desktop user to create shared folders, for
example using protocols like Samba, nfs and sftp.
For the user to make this possible, the user needs (on a Linux machine
configured with the defaults of most current Linux distributions) root
privileges.
However. In a desktop environment, in my humble opinion the possibility
for a normal user to configure a simple share within his or her own
home-directory should exist. Worse! It should be easy! Really easy!!
No wait, you don't understand what I am saying yet. REALLLYYY easy. My
girlfriend should NOT have to read ANY document. Yet she SHOULD have to
just KNOW by the freaking menu labels how to do it. You get my point?
To make this possible we could, for example, create a small daemon which
runs as a user with the right privileges to alter that part of the
configuration of systems like Samba, nfs and sftp (openssh), and alter
softwares like Nautilus.
A very simple (but perhaps quick-n-dirty) solution would be to take a
tool like Fedoras system-config-samba and turn it into an ORBit server,
and let applications (like nautilus) talk CORBA to configure Samba.
It would also be a possibility if the developers of technologies related
to the desktop-world, stick their selfish heads together to create a
standard for talking with the normal-user about such configuration.
A lot like, on the GNOME desktop, gconf. It would be nice and easy for
GNOME application if a system like Samba would peek into the gconf-
configuration-settings of a user to know about shares this user has set.
(And then we have the stupid discussion with the KDE people who believe
their configuration system is superior with GConf bla bli bla bla).
Any such solution should happen, of course, in a secure fashion. Being
opensource, we know that we can code this in a secure fashion, don't we?
It would be nice if we could get the attention of those people involved
with the softwares mentioned. I have strong beliefs that the Linux
desktop is ready for integration with all those parts that made the
Operating System strong in the server-room.
I am willing to put my energy into getting it to that point, if and only
if people are with me. And not against the idea, not against the
concept. Not if people are "just" scared and paranoïa of security-issues
while not knowing one little thing about secure-programming. There is
nothing scary to it, in my humble opinion. Yeah Microsoft makes a lot
security mistakes and perhaps those happen because they want to
integrate such security-critical tasks with the desktop-environment. But
that doesn't mean that we shouldn't do it the way it should be done. It
means that the Linux desktop might have the advantage that this system
has been coded in a way that allows all this integration to happen: in a
secure fashion.
ps. Before Januari I will have ten vacation days left. I would like to
spend them doing something (very) useful for the Linux desktop. Last
time I decided to help Gaute Hope create gnome-schedule, which has been
more or less a success. This issue is one of the many that have been
itching me for a long time, so I am being serious about it. I am not
only looking for talkers.. I am looking for doers.
--
Philip Van Hoof, Software Developer @ Cronos
home: me at freax dot org
gnome: pvanhoof at gnome dot org
work: philip dot vanhoof at cronos dot be
junk: philip dot vanhoof at gmail dot com
http://www.freax.be, http://www.freax.eu.org
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