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A samba question. At work we have: A Linux (libranet) file server running samba. Windows calls it //FILES A bunch of windows desktops. Each user has a linux username, password, and samba password that match their windows accounts In addition there are some areas accessed in common -- marketing, data, that sort of thing. This has all worked flawlessly for a couple years. Recently, I added a linux machine ("dataserver") for heavier data analysis. (The following works well: run cygwin on the desktop windows box, start X, ssh to dataserver, "startkde" -- just like being there.) Dateserver wants to mount the common samba shares, in a way that permits multiple users to access them. I had been mounting them just for me via smbmount //FILES/shorne /shorne -o username=shorne%password smbmount //FILES/data /data -o username=shorne%password executed on "dataserver" but now we have a second (and third) user, and they can't access these areas. Even though they can via windows. So dataserver is acting as a gatekeeper here. I want dataserver to permit completely open access to these files -- the access control will happen on FILES. The puzzling thing is that even as root on dataserver, I can't change the access control on these files with chmod. Maybe this is right, and goes back to my not including enough muttered syllables in the smbmount spells above. I want dataserver to mount the files exposed via FILES and samba without invoking any access control at all. How do I do that? (I expect "777" comes into it somewhere...) Thanks, Steve
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