On 02/15/2012 12:37 AM, Anders Johansson wrote:
On Wednesday 15 February 2012 00:08:39 lynn wrote:
Can I ask a few more things on this one?
I'm getting rwx's I've never seen before. Here, two users from the suseusers group have echoed a file to the folder:
hh3:/home/dropbox # ls -la total 24 d-wxrws--x+ 2 root suseusers 4096 Feb 14 23:00 . drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 4096 Feb 14 19:55 .. --w-r----- 1 lynn2 suseusers 2 Feb 14 22:56 h --w-rw---- 1 steve6 suseusers 6 Feb 14 23:06 hello --w-rw---- 1 lynn2 suseusers 30 Feb 14 23:01 hola
Can I assume: 1. setfacl applies only to newly copied or created files Yes.
Hi again. Sorry to bump this but we still can't fully resolve this permissions, ownership access stuff. We have workarounds but can't find a definitive yes/no you can/can't do it answer. I got together with our AD admin to try to make some common ground out of our octal permissions, ownerships and setfacl's and their ntacls. We documented it here: http://linuxcostablanca.blogspot.com/2012/02/samba4-shares.html The ntacl seems to handle stuff differently. A domain user creating a file in a Samba share from windows creates a file which appears as rw r under Linux but is effectively rw rw since all members of the group are able to edit it from both Linux and windows. On Linux, newly created files appear rw rw for the user and behave rw rw for group members on windows but rw r for group members under Linux. Ahhgghh!! There are some bits that windows is setting which seem to be invisible to openSUSE. Could NFS have anything to do with this? Thanks from Lynn and Steve@lcb -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org