I'm trying (without success) to get help with setting up User Home Folder\Directory permissions on server 2012. What I would like to know is what permission do I need so that each user can access his/her files etc but CANNOT view\access other users home folders.
I have already created folders on the server called "UserProfiles" and "UserData".
I amm moving stuff out of a file Server. I am using DFS for that - the Folders are anyway in a DFS tree, so I can set up a replication temporarily, then drop the old Folder. Works nice, EXCEPT for the Folder containing the users home drives. Which, incidentally, is also the one I can not see all files in due to my permissions.
Small Setup.
Hi,
I need som advice. I have a CentOS machine at home serving mainly as a fileserver. It has a few hard drives for this purpose alone - mounted as /mnt/media0, /mnt/media1, /mnt/media2.
What I'd like is to have all of these drives act as one big "file pile" - but I don't want raid or jbod because I don't want one disk failure to kill the whole "array".
I am currently running Fedora on a network computer, acting as a host to other users who will SSH into my terminal to do their work.
However I realised that they are also able to access my /home folder. How do I go about setting the permissions such that they are not able to access it?
I would like to set up a linux share space in the following way:
I want one user lets call admin to have access to all other users home directories.
I want to be able to create users A,B,C,D,E and have none of them view any other folders except there home folder(and /tmp/ if needed).
I do not want them to be able to view any other files.
I will use this so I can create a user for them they can log
A bit about current setup:
It is windows 2008 R2 AD servers (all of them are 2008R2) and couple locations which set as Sites. Each location has DFS on AD server. Roaming profiles are not used nor configured. Users have their home folder configured as mapped S: drive to DFS shared folder.
I've set up a SSH server which I've let some friends log into, both via SSH and FileZilla. I put a symbolic link to two hard drives in their home directories so that they could access some files.
I have an IIS6 box that is not working due to permissions problems.
I have a folder inetpub and its subfolders, all of which I need to be accessible to anonymous internet users.
I selected it and selected permissions, and the users in the window are not the same as the users in my computer/manage.
Ok so heres the problem.. I've been banging my head over this Linux assignment for a few hours now and just can't figure out a proper solution. Basically we're acting as a system admin for a fictional company, and we have to assign permissions to various directories based on groups.
The Executive Group (exec)
-exec-normal, exec-secure directories