--- Mar 9/3/10, Wes Barris ha scritto: > Marco Atzeri wrote: > > --- Mar 9/3/10, Wes Barris ha scritto: > > > >> Wes Barris wrote: > >>> I use Cygwin 1.7 on my XP desktop system at > >> work. I like having the > >>> same home directory on this Windows XP system > as I do > >> on our Unix > >>> server. The Windows XP system is a > member of a > >> domain. The Unix > >>> server is not. The Unix server is > running Samba > >> and is configured > >>> with a workgroup name. My home directory > on the > >> Unix server is > >>> mounted as a mapped network drive on the > Windows XP > >> system. > >>> Everything in the above setup is working > >>> properly from the Unix server side and from > the > >> Windows side when > >>> working with Windows Explorer. I can > create and > >> delete files via > >>> Windows Explorer and they show up on the Unix > side > >> with proper > >>> ownership and permissions (as controlled by > >> Samba). Conversely, > >>> I can create and delete files under Unix and > access > >> these files > >>> from Windows Explorer. > >>> > >>> The problem is when I look at my mapped > network home > >> directory > >>> with Cygwin, my home directory files are owned > by > >> nobody ('????????') > >>> and have a group of nobody. I am > guessing that > >> this is because my > >>> Windows SID in /etc/passwd is the SID of my > domain > >> user and since > >>> the Samba server is not part of this domain > the files > >> look like they > >>> are from an unknown user. > >>> > >>> In our Samba server there is a file (usermap) > that > >> maps unix usernames > >>> to windows usernames. This appears to be > working > >> when working with > >>> Windows Explorer. Why doesn't this work > with > >> Cygwin? What is the > >>> way to fix this? Do I somehow need to > map my > >> unix username to a > >>> windows SID? Do I need to turn off > ntsec? > > > > you need to map the WINDOWS SID to the UNIX username > > > > so you need to add on /etc/passwd and etc/group > > the right references. > > > > see: > > http://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/using-utils.html#mkpasswd > > http://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/ntsec.html > > I've read both of those pages many times. They don't > appear > to apply to my situation. What mkpasswd option(s) > would you > suggest? --local doesn't help map the Windows SID to > the UNIX > username, --domain doesn't do it.
Web, if mkpasswd can not help you to identify the SID, than you can try Setacl http://setacl.sourceforge.net/ using as: $ SetACL.exe -on $(cygpath -aw YOUR_FILE) -ot file -actn list -lst "f:sddl;w:o,g,s,d" will provide the full list of SID and ACL of the file or directory. The answer is a bit cryptic but it is very detailed. After that you can create,by hand, the right reference in your /etc/passwd and /etc/group > > >> Do I need to change > >>> the mount options for /cygdrive? > >> Should I assume from the lack of any response that > there is > >> no fix > >> for this? > >> > >> -- Wes Barris > > > > I should say no > > Marco > > -- Wes Barris Marco -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple