As we all know, file sharing is divided into share permission (share permissions) and NTFS security, then how to determine the final permissions, let us discuss the problem.
Before this, interested friends can first refer to the following article https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc754178.aspx, to carefully read the understanding, especially the comment section, very interesting.
Share permissions can only control remote access, primarily to manage computers with FAT32 file systems or those that do not use the NTFS file system, and NTFS permissions affect both remote and local, and are not independent and end-of-life comprehensive.
For those who are not clear about these two permissions, you can look at the share permissions and the NTFS permissions in turn.
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In general, if your hard disk file system is NTFS, then set the sharing permissions to everyone Full control, in nffs security to do the specific configuration of permissions, the advantage is that you can easily set more security options. If your hard drive is in FAT32 format, then you only need to configure the permissions in the shared permissions.
The following is a concrete example to determine how the two settings affect the final permission, share on behalf of shared permissions,
Share Ntfs |
Read |
Write |
Full Control |
read |
write |
Full Control |
Read |
Write |
Full Control |
You can see that the ultimate permissions are constrained by the minimum permissions.
This article is from the Cloud Power blog, so be sure to keep this source http://466283070.blog.51cto.com/4779530/1631150
Discussion on the permissions of file sharing