With the basics working, it is time to get to the part that caused me a little headache. This is the Password you set in the dpkg-reconfigure step. A certificate error will pop up, you can accept this certificate.Ĥ. Select Add New and enter the details of your server and use superuser as user:ģ. Open Mumble and select Server –>ConnectĢ. Now its time to start the mumble Server and test it with a client:ġ. You also need to set the Superuser password with following command: dpkg-reconfigure mumble-server There is a bunch of other settings in the configuration, that allow you to customize your Server and quite a bit more, but you don’t have to touch them. When a connection is established, Mumble will check the server side and client side bandwidth settings and use the lower one of the two. This change does not effect clients with a low bandwidth Internet connection. I did not test if this value can be set higher, but I saw this described as the maximum value on several sites. Since my Server has a pretty decent Internet connection, I choose to set it to the maximum for option. You might want to change the maximum allowed bandwidth per user. But these particular passwords will not be needed often, so there is really no reason not to use long randomly generated Passwords here: icesecretread=Password1Ģ. It is generally a good idea to have passwords on sensitive services. If that is not something you are ok with, you could set a Server password in addition to the suggested configuration changes here.ġ. However the Active Directory Authentication runs as its own Service and should that be down, anybody would be able to connect. If you configure it the way I did, only people in a specific Active Directory Group will be able to connect to the Server. I Installed the Mumble Server package from the Debian repository onto that:Īfter the Installation is complete, you can configure the basics of the Mumble Server in its configuration file: nano /etc/mumble-server.ini I started with a new Debian Wheezy OpenVZ machine. And since there wasn’t exactly a great deal of documentation on the subject, I figured that I should write a short How To. Setting up a Mumble server is fairly simple, but I had a few problems to get it to play nice with my Active Directory.
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