Hi Tom.

The most easiest way is to create two shares, but you can also set with setfacl the rights. Then you don't have to use the readlist and writelist in samba.conf. With this tool you can set rights for every share / folder in this share, or one folder in a share.

If you want to learn more about setfacl: google is one of your best friends.

Greetz Bart
----- Original Message ----- From: "Tom Skeren" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, January 12, 2005 10:50 PM
Subject: Re: [Samba] Multiple Permissions within a share for the same userid



Michael Lueck wrote:

Simply what I would like to create is the following

Default, the share is read only
The share has a write list, for admins allowed to update the share

Now for the twist...
Read Only Users have ability to write to one dir within the share

Any simple way to configure this, or is two shares easier?

Two shares are the easiest way to do this, IMHO. TMS III

Here is the share as it stands today...

[blablabla]
   comment = Bla Bla Bla
   browseable = no
   path = /shares/blablabla
   guest ok = no
   read only = yes
   write list = mradmin

And lets say I would like to allow /shares/blablabla/app/logs to be a user writable directory tree.



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