Thomas M. Skeren III schrieb: > Probably the only way you will get what you want.
No. > I don't think Windows > can understand how a directory on a "drive" can be larger than the > "drive" itself. Yes, it can. We have a DFS Share called "apps" assigned to our AD called "EUROPE". C:\>dir \\europe\apps Volume in Laufwerk \\europe\apps: hat keine Bezeichnung. Volumeseriennummer: EC62-031C Verzeichnis von \\europe\apps 2005-01-04 06:44 <DIR> . 2005-01-04 06:44 <DIR> .. 2004-01-05 03:27 <DIR> Apps [...] 1 Datei(en) 2.284 Bytes 13 Verzeichnis(se), 3.711.651.328 Bytes frei C:\>dir \\europe\apps\Apps Volume in Laufwerk \\europe\apps: hat keine Bezeichnung. Volumeseriennummer: EC62-031C Verzeichnis von \\europe\apps\Apps 2005-02-10 09:22 <DIR> . 2005-02-10 09:22 <DIR> .. 2004-11-19 14:46 <DIR> 3DXWare_3515 [...] 0 Datei(en) 0 Bytes 117 Verzeichnis(se), 366.936.690.688 Bytes frei As you can see, in the "directory" "apps" there's about 3,7 GiB of free space. In the directory "apps\Apps", there's about 366 GiB of free space. When I connect \\EUROPE\apps to R: and do a "dir R:\" command, I also see 3,7 GiB of free space. Doing "dir R:\Apps" shows 366 GiB of free space. So, obviously there has to be a way to determine the free space available in a directory, as you can see in the examples shown above. Anyone out there, who might have an idea about how I can make Samba return the free space available in a given directory instead of in the top level directory of a share? Thanks a lot, Alexander Skwar -- Wonder is the feeling of a philosopher, and philosophy begins in wonder. -- Socrates, quoting Plato [Huh? That's like Johnson quoting Boswell] _ÂÂÂ_ÂÂÂ_ÂÂÂ_ÂÂÂ_ ÃÃÃÃÃÃÃÃÅÅÃÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂâÂÂÂÂÂÃÃÂÂÂâÂÂâ ÂÂ_ÂÂÂ_ÂÂÂ_ÂÂÂ_ -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba