I know, why IIS when I can Apache? I'm actually running both... Kind of a hybrid network. Anyway, I'm trying to configure IIS to use a Samba share as its www root and I think I'm running into a security issue. See, in IIS, I have to connect as a specific user when I attach a network share as the www root. The share, from Samba's point of view, is read-only and every file in it is world-readable. Now, when a person accesses an IIS server, it accesses the files with the user account IUSR_Computername or something to that effect, seemingly regardless of the account it used to connect to that share. And it seems to be running into a problem with this. So, finally, my question is... Is there a way in the smb.conf file to specify total anonymous read access to a share, or to the server in general? Ideally, no matter what user IIS claims to be, I want Samba to field the request and return the file (read-only, of course). Does this make sense?
David P. Donahue [EMAIL PROTECTED] First Call Computer Solutions A Montana Technology Resource Company -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: http://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba
