On Monday 08 May 2017 12:50:44 Jose Maria Terry Jimenez wrote:
Did you tried something like:
create mask = 0764
and
directory mode = 0775
For folders
In the share setup?
No, but I do now.
Under which user/group are the files created? (i mean, once created, in the shared folder in Linux, what the user and group are?
Also something like:
force group = smbusers (or anything else you want)
Also added
May help (add the users to that group)
Best,
I have done some testing and found that I have got to the point where I can create a 'New Text Document', edit it in notepad and save the changes.
I can now also create a new blank spreadsheet, save it, load it, edit and save the changes.
However, if I open an existing spreadsheet it still comes up as read only. Doing a 'ls -l' on the original file shows a '+' on the end of the file permissions. Other files have a '.' on the end. The newly created files have a normal file permission.
I've had a quick Google and found that the '+' indicates a ACL has been applied. I have no idea how this happened as until now I wasn't even aware of them.
Is there an easy way to remove the ACL from all of the files in these directory trees?