Quoting Brian Gregorcy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
barsalou wrote:
Quoting James Peach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
2008/9/29 Brian Gregorcy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
I know this doesn't help but we are seeing the same problem, I
opened a bug
with apple but so far have not heard anything back. I also sent
this email
to this list awhile back and did not get a response, the copy of
the email I
sent is below.
You might be seeing the SMB unix extensions in action. In 10.5, the OS
X SMB filesystem was taught to understand some SMB protocol extensions
designed for unix system. what *might* be happening here is that the
client is resetting the permissions after Samba applies the
configuration mode masks.
You should be able to verify this by packet sniffing or setting "unix
extensions = no" on the server.
James, If I chose to sniff the connection, what exactly would I be
looking for?
This didn't work for me. I still see the same problem when
creating folders using the finder.
Keystrokes:
apple-K
Control-click -> New folder
This shows up on the server with 755 permissions....I have it set for 770.
I actually ran into another issue on a different mac (10.5.4), with
unix extensions = no the user can browse the file system (via finder)
but cannot open any of the files. They all appear as unknown file
types, commenting out the above command and all is well.
--Brian
My first reaction to this is that the resource files aren't getting
created or the user no longer has permissions...but I'm still learning.
So either way you set 'unix extensions' it causes one or the other
problem? Can you please clarify?
Mike B.
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