Samba Robert Eckstein, David Collier-Brown, Peter (Java web server) Kelly 1st

Samba Robert Eckstein, David Collier-Brown, Peter Kelly 1st Edition November 1999 1-56592-449-5, Order Number: 4495 416 pages, $34.95 Buy the hardcopy Table of Contents Chapter 5 Browsing and Advanced Disk Shares 5.3 File Permissions and Attributes on MS-DOS and Unix DOS was never intended to be a multiuser, networked operating system. Unix, on the other hand, was designed that way from the start. Consequently, there are inconsistencies and gaps in coverage between the two filesystems that Samba must not only be aware of, but also provide solutions for. One of the biggest gaps is how Unix and DOS handle permissions with files. Let s take a look at how Unix assigns permissions. All Unix files have read, write, and execute bits for three classifications of users: owner, group, and world. These permissions can be seen at the extreme left-hand side when a ls-al command is issued in a Unix directory. For example: -rwxr–r–1 tom users 2014 Apr 13 14:11 access.conf Windows, on the other hand, has four principal bits that it uses with any file: read-only, system, hidden, and archive. You can view these bits by right-clicking on the file and choosing the Properties menu item. You should see a dialog similar to Figure 5.6.[1] [1] The system checkbox will probably be greyed for your file. Don t worry about that - you should still be able to see when the box is checked and when it isn t. Figure 5.6: DOS and Windows file properties 157
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