In DSM 5.0 or later version, the access permissions of shared folders are based. Read/Write: The user or group can access and make changes to the files.
Hello, I'm trying to setup shares via NFS on my Windows Server 2012 machine. I have installed NFS server, and added a share with All Machines with Read / Write and Root Access allowed and auth with Krb5. I have sucessfully connected a debian 7 client to the domain, and can log in as an active directory user. When trying to mount with the following I get a security error, when the underlying NTFS permissions give Everyone read.
Sudo mount chaos:/Downloads test -o minorversion=1 mount.nfs: access denied by server while mounting chaos:/Downloads Have I missed something? Or do I need to connect to the share differently? Thanks for the suggestion. However giving ownership is not really an option, there are no 'ownership' properties to set specific to the NFS settings and doing so on NTFS side will get quite messy as I understand it. It could be that I need to match the groups on the debian client to ad groups? Now, Im not really linux expert and therefore I have to trust guy on the blog but see this: Let me quote part of it ' The trickiest part are the NTFS permissions.
![Nfs Nfs](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125528234/153029989.png)
Let’s say you want to give the user ubuntu access to a file. In that case you will probably add ubuntu to the users of that file and add permissions. But on the linux side this will change nothing. This is because Linux is only aware of three entities, the owner, the owner’s group and all. So when you give permissions this applies:' To me a simple solution seems to be to create group and add all users which may need the access to the folder, and then on NFS specify read / read-write access. Thanks for the suggestion.
However giving ownership is not really an option, there are no 'ownership' properties to set specific to the NFS settings and doing so on NTFS side will get quite messy as I understand it. It could be that I need to match the groups on the debian client to ad groups? Now, Im not really linux expert and therefore I have to trust guy on the blog but see this: Let me quote part of it ' The trickiest part are the NTFS permissions. Let’s say you want to give the user ubuntu access to a file. In that case you will probably add ubuntu to the users of that file and add permissions. But on the linux side this will change nothing.
This is because Linux is only aware of three entities, the owner, the owner’s group and all. So when you give permissions this applies:' To me a simple solution seems to be to create group and add all users which may need the access to the folder, and then on NFS specify read / read-write access.