It looks like permissions don't descend properly from the top-level share in CIFS; I had to set them on the next level down to get the intended results (including on lower levels; they seem to inherit properly from the second level, just not from the top). Is this a known behavior, or am I confused and setting myself up for trouble later?
More broadly, is there anything good about "best practices" for using ACLS with ZFS and CIFS shares? For example, there are so many defined attributes, some of them with the same short-form letter (I think one is for directories and one is for files in that case, but that's not documented that I can find), that I find myself wondering what "standard bundles" of permissions would be useful. Is it generally better to have separate permissions to inherit for files and directories, or can most things you want be accomplished with just one? Back to specifics again -- I was running into a problem where a user on the Solaris box could rename a file or directory, but an XP box authenticating as the same user could not. This was the one that seemed to be solved by setting the permissions again one level down (dunno what happens with new top-level items yet). Is this normal behavior of something that makes sense? It's terribly weird. (In windows, I could right-click and create the "new directory" or whatever, but when I then filled in the name I wanted and hit enter, I got a permission error. I could just leave it named "new directory", though. And I could rename it on the Linux side as the same user that failed to rename it from the Windows side.) -- David Dyer-Bennet, d...@dd-b.net; http://dd-b.net/ Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ Dragaera: http://dragaera.info _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss