On 28 February 2008 14:45, Matthieu CASTET wrote: > But then why does it works if I create dummy user in /etc/passwd.
Because cygwin relies on the contents of /etc/passwd to be accurate. Cygwin cannot in general know what SIDs exist out there in a domain (or even on a local machine), it treats /etc/passwd as a cache to save going out across the network to the domain controller for lookups every time a UID is needed. > For example for root > > $ echo "root:*:0:0:,S-1-5-32-545::" >> /etc/passwd > $ chown root:root /tmp/toto > $ ls -l /tmp/toto > -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 28 14:49 /tmp/toto > > Does it means in this case I create "ACLs with unrecognised SIDs" ? No, because 1-5-32-545 is a real SID, hence recognised. It's a well-known SID that exists on all windows boxes. It is, however, a GID, not a UID: that is the SID of the "Users" group you have set there, so who knows how confused cygwin might be by that. Try a SID that actually doesn't exist, like S-1-5-23-599 for example, and you'll see it doesn't work. cheers, DaveK -- Can't think of a witty .sigline today.... -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/