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On 2012-04-19 21:07, lynn wrote:
On 19/04/12 10:32, Carlos E. R. wrote: IF the filesystems you talk about are Linux native filesystems (ex: ext3) just allow them to mount, then change the permissions (inside). The next time you should get those same permissions. It's NFS. As soon as the automounter is stopped, the mount disappears. The actual folder on the server already has the correct permissions. The
On 19/04/12 21:59, Carlos E. R. wrote: problem is that autofs changes them to 755 when mounted (but not on the unexported folder back on the server at least). Mounting the parent folder which contains /staff yields the correct permissions but defeats the object of autofs since the whole folder is mounted even though only one person is using it.
IF those filesystems are Windows filesystems you have to define the permissions every time, on the command line that mounts them or in fstab. I have no idea how to do that with automount.
That bit of it is fine. Samba 'just does it' :-) Must be missing something easy here. L x -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org