realShadowhunter at gmx.net
2019-May-17 18:28 UTC
[Samba] Moving home directories to another location leads to NT_STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED listing
I might not quite understand what you try to say. I am loggin in as user2. The home directory in /etc/passwd is changed to /mnt/volume1/homes/user2. That was automatically adjusted after the usermod command I mentioned earlier. To my understanding, once these items are changed and the user logs in he should have full access to the share. One thing I want to ask. You mention to change the homedir in Samba. Where? How would that look like? Maybe that is my missing piece.>Well it probably wouldn't, unless you are connecting as 'user1' or >'user2', they are the only users that will be allowed access. I would >have expected some thing like this: > >[homes] > comment = Home Directories > browseable = no > read only = no > create mask = 0700 > directory mask = 0700 > valid users = %S > >You would also have to set the users homedir in /etc/passwd and Samba. > >Rowland
Rowland penny
2019-May-17 18:47 UTC
[Samba] Moving home directories to another location leads to NT_STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED listing
On 17/05/2019 19:28, realShadowhunter--- via samba wrote:> I might not quite understand what you try to say. I am loggin in as user2. The home directory in /etc/passwd is changed to /mnt/volume1/homes/user2. That was automatically adjusted after the usermod command I mentioned earlier. To my understanding, once these items are changed and the user logs in he should have full access to the share. > > One thing I want to ask. You mention to change the homedir in Samba. Where? How would that look like? Maybe that is my missing piece. > > >> Well it probably wouldn't, unless you are connecting as 'user1' or >> 'user2', they are the only users that will be allowed access. I would >> have expected some thing like this: >> >> [homes] >> comment = Home Directories >> browseable = no >> read only = no >> create mask = 0700 >> directory mask = 0700 >> valid users = %S >> >> You would also have to set the users homedir in /etc/passwd and Samba. >> >> Rowland >man pdbedit Rowland
Seemingly Similar Threads
- Moving home directories to another location leads to NT_STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED listing
- Moving home directories to another location leads to NT_STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED listing
- Moving home directories to another location leads to NT_STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED listing
- Moving home directories to another location leads to NT_STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED listing
- certain users can't map home directories