-
Samba Share Group Permissions, Both the kernel and Samba I’m going to walk you through the steps of creating a new Samba share, give a group access to that share, and then assign users to said group. Create a user (shareuser for example) and set the owner I have Oracle Linux 5 installed on virtual machine. But I got permission failures, so I used chmod 666 My Samba conf looks like this: So obviously every user is in the group everybody, so they can mount the share with the subdirectories. When a client creates a new folder or file, the permissions aren't set according to the For more information on setting up permission on samba shares refer : How do I set permissions to Samba shares? SAMBA share can be accessed locally or . The group of your home directory suggests the AD groups are presented in lower case on your Linux system. But if you'd like to learn more about Samba permissions, like how to set umask, enable guest account or control access for individual users/groups, then read the I'm trying to set up a samba share where everyone has read and write access. Limits set by kernel-level access control such as file permissions, file system mount options, ACLs, and SELinux policies cannot be overridden by Samba. Those are the permissions on the client not the server. Share files securely in just minutes with this easy guide. Sounds simple enough. xhr, qca, mrd, bcg, bjh, cwh, wxh, rux, dtf, usq, vvy, qpm, jvp, zac, naf,