This is an updated version on my previous entry where I was installing it on Ubuntu 18.04. Now it reflects newer version of the Ubuntu and Samba itself which got a fix for CVE-2021-44142. I based this tutorial on Mac TimeMachine with Samba 4.8.* on Ubuntu 18.10
Due to the recent pandemic outbreak I had to switch to working from home. At the office I am using MacBook Pro which gets backed up to the dedicated Time Capsule device. It works as expected, nothing extra there. Unfortunately at home I didn’t have such contraption, but I had a custom built NAS based on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. It turns out that you can emulate Time Machine by using Samba, just need to build it yourself as the one shipped lacks Spotlight support.
First step is to install tools and dependencies required:
apt update
apt install -y libreadline-dev git build-essential libattr1-dev libblkid-dev autoconf python-dev python-dnspython libacl1-dev gdb pkg-config libpopt-dev libldap2-dev dnsutils acl attr libbsd-dev docbook-xsl libcups2-dev libgnutls28-dev tracker libtracker-sparql-2.0-dev libpam0g-dev libavahi-client-dev libavahi-common-dev bison flex avahi-daemon liblmdb-dev libjansson-dev libgpgme-dev libarchive-dev
libparse-yapp-perl libicu-dev python3-pyasn1 python3-markdown python3-dnspython libtasn1-bin
Create file /etc/avahi/services/timemachine.service
with following contents:
<?xml version="1.0" standalone='no'?> <!DOCTYPE service-group SYSTEM "avahi-service.dtd"> <service-group> <name replace-wildcards="yes">%h</name> <service> <type>_smb._tcp</type> <port>445</port> </service> <service> <type>_device-info._tcp</type> <port>0</port> <txt-record>model=TimeCapsule8,119</txt-record> </service> <service> <type>_adisk._tcp</type> <txt-record>sys=waMa=0,adVF=0x100</txt-record> <txt-record>dk0=adVN=TimeMachine Home,adVF=0x82</txt-record> </service> </service-group>
Download Samba source code archive and verify it. You need to unzip the tar file first as tar file is signed and not gzipped file (which is a bit odd).
cd /usr/src
wget https://download.samba.org/pub/samba/samba-pubkey.asc
gpg --import samba-pubkey.asc
wget https://download.samba.org/pub/samba/stable/samba-4.15.5.tar.gz
gunzip samba-4.15.5.tar.gz
wget https://download.samba.org/pub/samba/stable/samba-4.15.5.tar.asc
gpg --verify samba-4.15.5.tar.asc
After confirming i’ts fine, unpack it and build it. On Atom N2800 with 4GB RAM and SATA SSD drive it takes around 90 minutes.
tar -xvf samba-4.15.5.tar
cd samba-4.15.5
./configure --sysconfdir=/etc/samba --systemd-install-services --with-systemddir=/lib/systemd/system --with-shared-modules=idmap_ad --enable-debug --enable-selftest --with-systemd --enable-spotlight
make
make install
Create Samba configuration file /etc/samba/smb.conf
. Please adjust path
under TimeMachine Home
to point at the directory where you want to keep backups. In my case it was /zstorage/backups/timemachine which is stored on ZFS.
[global]
## Basic samba configurationserver role = standalone server
passdb backend = tdbsam
obey pam restrictions = yes
security = user
printcap name = /dev/null
load printers = no
socket options = TCP_NODELAY IPTOS_LOWDELAY SO_RCVBUF=524288 SO_SNDBUF=524288
server string = Samba Server %v
map to guest = bad user
dns proxy = no
wide links = yes
follow symlinks = yes
unix extensions = no
acl allow execute always = yes
log file = /var/log/samba/%m.log
max log size = 1000# Special configuration for Apple's Time Machine
fruit:model = MacPro
fruit:advertise_fullsync = true
fruit:aapl = yes
# Define your shares here
[TimeMachine Home]
path = /zstorage/backups/timemachine/%U
valid users = %U
writable = yes
durable handles = yeskernel oplocks = no
kernel share modes = no
posix locking = no
vfs objects = catia fruit streams_xattr
ea support = yes
browseable = yes
read only = No
inherit acls = yes
fruit:time machine = yes
fruit:aapl = yes
spotlight = yes
create mask = 0600
directory mask = 0700
comment = Time Machine
Create logs location and storage subdirectory (matching what you defined in previous step). Change USERNAME to your users name. Please note that this user needs to exist on the system running Samba daemon.
mkdir -p /var/log/samba
mkdir -p /zstorage/backups/timemachine/
mkdir -m 700 /zstorage/backups/timemachine/USERNAME
chown USERNAME /zstorage/backups/timemachine/USERNAME
Update password for the user
/usr/local/samba/bin/smbpasswd -a $USERNAME
Add Samba binaries path to /etc/profile
and re-read the file
echo 'export PATH=/usr/local/samba/bin/:/usr/local/samba/sbin/:$PATH' >> /etc/profile source /etc/profile
Apply a fix to systemd service definition (without it smbd won’t start correctly) and then start the daemon
sed -i 's/Type=notify/Type=simple/g' /lib/systemd/system/smb.service systemctl enable --now smb.service
If you have a firewall running you need to allow port 445 access, for ufw it would be (assuming 192.168.0.0/24 is your LAN)
ufw allow from 192.168.0.0/24 to any port 445
Now you can setup your MacBook to use it the same way as it uses Time Capsule.
I love that each user sees the “same” shared folder (“TimeMachine Home”), but is redirected to their personal home directory and never gets to see the other users’ folders.
I changed some bits and pieces so that it now runs on my 64-bit Raspberry Pi with Ubuntu.
Hey Jona,
Great to hear it works for you. I also use the same setup for my Linux based laptop, where it just puts files over Samba into the same location. Was it hard to apply to Pi? I am asking because seriously considering Raspberry PI for my next NAS setup. You can’t beat that power usage.
Regards,
Michał
A few updates for me to get it running:
Update list: apt install -y libreadline-dev git build-essential libattr1-dev libblkid-dev autoconf python-dev-is-python3 libacl1-dev gdb pkg-config libpopt-dev libldap2-dev dnsutils acl attr libbsd-dev docbook-xsl libcups2-dev libgnutls28-dev tracker libpam0g-dev libavahi-client-dev libavahi-common-dev bison flex avahi-daemon liblmdb-dev libjansson-dev libgpgme-dev libarchive-dev libparse-yapp-perl libicu-dev python3-pyasn1 python3-markdown python3-dnspython libtasn1-bin
pip install dnspython
apt install libtracker-sparql-3.0-dev
did not install samba, because 4.15.9 is already added to the existing /etc/samba/smb.conf
just put
Thank you for this post, I had problems getting TimeMachine to work on my Ubuntu 22.04 with ZFS.