For those of you running Gentoo Linux: Be sure you compile your kernel from xfs-sources and not gentoo-sources. Now that I've recompiled from the xfs-sources package, Problem #1 has gone away. One lingering problem: I can't remove 'Take Ownership' or 'Read' permissions away from the Everyone and 'Domain Users' group on files that I create via NT Explorer. Who should the UNIX owner of the fileshare be? (Ie, in my case, who should be the owner of /mnt/share/backup?) And what permissions should that root folder be set with? -----Original Message----- From: Sorisio,Chris Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2002 3:59 PM To: 'samba@lists.samba.org' Subject: XFS / ACL / CUPS Issues Hola folks, I've been attempting to put together a test server to see how well Samba 2.2.5 plays with NT domains. I'm running Gentoo Linux 1.2 on a Compaq ProLiant 3000, and my test fileshare is on an XFS partition. The server has successfully joined our test domain and is able to list accounts/groups properly via getent. I am also able to log on to the server using an NT account. Problem #1: NT ACL permission changes do not stick to files. I can create a file within the test share, and it shows as owned by the proper NT account/group. However, if I try to modify those settings via Windows NT Explorer, the changes do not stick. It will allow me to 'go through the motions', but the next time I check the file permissions, they have reverted back to their original settings. Problem #2: I'm having a heck of a time getting Windows NT clients to print to Samba/CUPS-shared printers. I have the printer installed on the Windows NT client along with the proper drivers, but any print jobs or test pages sent to that printer vanish. Nothing in the logs, nothing in the spools, etc. Thanks for taking the time to read through this. I'll greatly appreciate any help offered. Chris -------------- next part -------------- HTML attachment scrubbed and removed