On 24/1/2000 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
i have nfs shared a directory on one machine and used "cp -a" to copy the
directory to another machine...(to produce an identicle file server) What
puzzles me is that although i was logged on as root... i was still unable
to copy some files.. it saying that
Hi
i have nfs shared a directory on one machine and used "cp -a" to copy the
directory to another machine...(to produce an identicle file server) What
puzzles me is that although i was logged on as root... i was still unable
to copy some files.. it saying that i was not permitted to copy due to l
Paul McAvoy wrote:
> I personally run into problems with samaba when a user will create a dir and I
> want to put/remove files into it and have problems. I then have to telnet
> into my linux box and fix the permissions. Kindof a bummer, but at least the
> unix box is visible from windows.
It is
If you are copying between two unix machines it might be easier to just use
NFS to mount the drives and copy the files over via cpio or something similar.
I think that since samba is based in windos without much in the way of
permissions, all the permissions get lost.
I personally run into problem
hiya
when using samba to copy one directory to another server it loses it
origional permission and owner settings. i guess it's like when copying a
users file to another directory whilst under root... it allocates root as
the owner of that file.
is there any setting in samba to tell it to ke
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