On Wednesday 30 April 2008, NN_il_Confusionario wrote: > On Tue, Apr 29, 2008 at 10:48:40PM +0200, Chris wrote: > > On Tuesday 29 April 2008, NN_il_Confusionario wrote: > > > Or try NFS instead of cifs > > > > I want others (windows) to be able to read the data - that's what I have > > a NAS for. > > you could use NFS when mounting from linux and the Microsoft protocol > when using the NAS from windows (however, note that Microsoft's SFU are > downloadable at no cost and support NSF as client and as server, from > 2000 onwards).
a quick look at the share functions of the NAS only revealed "windows share", "Apple", FTP and Backup as options. NSF may be hidden somewhere else. I did not know that Windows can access NSF, might have a look at that. > > But if the cause of the problem with timestamps is the filesystem on the > disk of the NAS, then it is possible that no full solution really exists > (unless you hack the NAS; wikipedia seem to imply that something like > debian can be installed on your device). I need to look into this further but I can tell you that simply pulling a file or directory over in Konquerer (just did that) transfers the time stamp of the files and the directories just fine and dandy!!! This is not a filesysystem problem! > > -- > Chi usa software non libero avvelena anche te. Digli di smettere. > Informatica=arsenico: minime dosi in rari casi patologici, altrimenti > letale. Informatica=bomba: intelligente solo per gli stupidi che ci > credono. -- C. Hurschler -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]