thanks.  I think you are right about setting ntfs so the user can
traverse the folder.  I'm going to do that. 

Sean Martin said the following on 10/6/2009 3:02 PM:
> I haven't played with 2008 DFS yet, so bear with me.
>  
> It looks like you've setup \\%servername%\shares
> <file://%25servername%25/shares> as your DFS Folder Target (share).
> The path to that would be \\domain\shares <file://domain/shares>. In
> your original post, you stated that the folder target (shares) does
> not have any NTFS permissions. I believe that may be where your
> problem lies. The user would need to be able to traverse the directory
> to access the resources within it.
>  
> 1) Yes. I believe using Everyone:Full Control is the accepted
> practice, and using NTFS to assign granular rights.
> 2) Yes, the folder target needs to be shared.
>  
> The user should be able to access \\houston\shares\projects\cd
> <file://houston/shares/projects/cd> once the NTFS permissions are
> setup correctly. 
>  
> - Sean 
>
> On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 8:46 AM, Terri Esham <[email protected]
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
>     First, I'm happy to hear you are recovering and really appreciate
>     your willingness to assist.
>
>     When I setup the directories they were initially shared, however,
>     I replicated them to a new server and, of course, the shared
>     permissions did not replicate.
>
>     Went I went through the DFS wizard, I did create the AD share.
>
>     What help I need. 
>
>     1.  In order for a user to get access over the network to a shared
>     folder using DFS, do you have to have the share permissions set?
>     2.  Is there anyway not to use share permissions to grant access
>     over the network if it is a DFS share or do you still have to set
>     share permissions to everyone full and control rights through the
>     NTFS settings?
>
>     How would I setup the following DFS shares:
>
>     Domain:  Houston
>     AD Share:  Shares
>     DFS Folder name:  Projects with a target folder called Joint Use
>
>     The Joint User directory has the following subfolders:  AB, CD,
>     ED, EF .  The subfolders in Joint Use do have share permissions
>     set, but they do have NTFS permissions set.
>
>     Does the Joint User folder have to be shared with everyone full
>     rights?  Do the subfolders in Joint Use, AB, CD, ED, etc., have to
>     have share permissions set or is the NTFS permissions enough?
>
>     Where would a user who has NTFS permissions to the CD folder under
>     joint use point there network place to?  \\houston\shares\projects\CD?
>
>     Thank you so much.
>
>      
>
>
>
>
>     On DFS server:
>     namespace is test1
>     ad share is called shares
>     folder is called projects with target to  joint use
>
>     In the target "joint use" there are folders called:  AB, CD, ED,
>     GF - These folders do not share share permissions set, but they do
>     have
>
>
>     Daniel Rodriguez said the following on 10/6/2009 10:54 AM:
>>     When you setup the directories did you setup them up to be
>>     shared, initially?
>>
>>     When you went through the wizard to setup the DFS, did you create
>>     the AD Share?
>>
>>     What help are you needing? I am sitting here are home, still
>>     recovering from surgery and would love to have some distraction. :)
>>
>>     On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 9:52 AM, Terri Esham <[email protected]
>>     <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>
>>         I'm trying to setup a Distributed File System for the first
>>         time and am
>>         having a heck of a time getting the permissions setup
>>         correctly.  I'm
>>         setting it up on a Windows 2008 DC running in Windows 2008
>>         mode.  I've
>>         created the namespace, the folder under the namespace and a
>>         target
>>         folder.  When I setup the namespace, I accepted all the
>>         defaults.  The
>>         problem is when I try to access the share by going to
>>         \\domainname\namespacename\namespacefolder, I am prompted for
>>         a username
>>         and password even though I have already authenticated to the
>>         domain.
>>
>>         Do I have to grant special permissions to the namespace
>>         folder and/or
>>         the target folder.  The target folder's share permissions are
>>         everyone
>>         full rights with no NTFS permissions set.  The NTFS
>>         permissions are set
>>         on each folder under the target folder directory.  The
>>         folders under the
>>         target folder directory do not have any share permissions.  
>>          Do I have
>>         to grant NTFS permissions of traverse/read, etc., to the
>>         target folder
>>         in order to traverse through it to get to the other folders?
>>          Must the
>>         folders under the target folder have share permissions set in
>>         addition
>>         to NTFS permissions?
>>
>>         I've had no training in DFS so I'm sure I'm asking some stupid
>>         questions.  However, I really want to set it up right the
>>         first time.
>>         Is there a good book that depicts this or is there a forum
>>         you could
>>         point me to?  Any help will be greatly appreciated.
>>
>>         ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource
>>         hog! ~
>>         ~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~
>>
>>
>>      
>>
>>      
>
>      
>
>      
>
>
>  
>
>  

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~

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