Hi Bruno,
we're using the same principele :) and at the moment everything seems to
be in order. Two groups in AD for every top directory:
directory_RX and directory_RWX
Best regards, Blaž.
Bruno Guerreiro wrote:
Hi,
The main problem was when trying to manage different permissions at
different levels, it became really messy. I just lost too much time managing
almost every directory one by one.
So now I've managed to take a different approach. To every directory there's
only two types of access. One group with rwx and another with rx. This
permissions are set via ACL at first level. On the following levels every
file has 775 permissions.
Very easy to maintain... But the fact that it works for, doesn't mean it
will work for you.
Best Regards,
Bruno guerreiro
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Blaž Primc
Sent: terça-feira, 11 de Abril de 2006 23:32
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Samba] Re: File Permissions
What wrong? How much is many for you?
Best regards, Blaz Primc.
Bruno Guerreiro wrote:
Hi,
You must use ACL's.
Your Kernel+FileSystem must suport it and samba must have been
compiled with acl support.
But just one personnal remark, the path you're trying to walk (many
different permissions at different directory levels) is a
dangerous one.
Trust me.
I've been there, done that, and fortunely fled away from it.
Best Regards,
Bruno Guerreiro
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Dracula
Sent: terça-feira, 11 de Abril de 2006 13:21
To: Samba
Subject: [Samba] File Permissions
Hello
I trying to grasp the file permissions on Linux. I have Samba
installed and functioning properly...
I think I understand perimission in this environment with one
exception:
I need to add more than one group to a file/folder. With
Windows..the
security tab would allow any number of Groups and each group could
have different permissions. (As well with files and
subdirectories).
With Linux Im not "seeing"
this ability to add multiple groups to a file/folder. Is this a
limitation to the Linux environment? We have several
situations where
we allow a user to "List Content" but down into the folder
structure
allow the user to Read some folders and others Read/Write.
Thanks
Regards,
Komal
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