There are two ways to influence newly created directory and file
permissions. The default is to use the mask/mode options. You can see
your current settings with
testparm -sv | grep mask ( also grep for "mode" and "force").
Or you can use the different "inherit" options instead.
testparm -sv | grep inherit
Whichever way you choose, learn what these options do, and you should be
able to set a combination that works for you.
Dale
On 11/01/2011 9:42 AM, lejeczek wrote:
apologies for being vague,
to me it seems that everything depends on what's parent looks like,
and goals are:
have a file within a 750 folder that would be 770, meaning a client
can write to the file
have samba/win clients acknowledge folder of 750 within a folder of
770, meaning that if a winuser creates a folder(750) within a
folder(770) samba respects it and other user should have no write
permission to this newly created user's folder
at this moment my samba lets users delete a folder with group (to
which both users belong) permissions equals to rX, I'd have to make a
folder 700 in order to protect it from deletion by non-owners
and the smb.conf is pretty basic
what am I missing???
On 11/01/2011 01:25 PM, lejeczek wrote:
dear everybody
samba is 3.5.11-79.fc14
is this weird or my logic fails, I was hoping that if a file has unix
770 then Win clients should be able to write to it even if parent
folder is 750
also if a folder is 770 and a Win client creates a new folder in it,
its unix permissions get set to 755, and yet! another(different) Win
user can just delete this newly created folder.
with what settings one can achieve above goals?
many thanks for all help
Pawel
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