Tuan,

First, please try not to post htmlized e-mails to the list. Some e-mail clients add all kinds of extra html tags, reduce the size of the font such that it is unreadable, or change the color to a grayish color, making it much more difficult to read.

Finally with samba, the easiest way to get a "common network share" (ie, a network share accessed and writable by multiple users), you can do as follows:

First enable the smbusers file around line 78 in your /etc/smb.conf file

# Unix users can map to different SMB User names
username map = /etc/smbusers

Finally, your share listing within your smb.conf file should look something like:

[name_of_share]
browseable = yes
path = /path/to/share
public = yes
guest only = no
writable = yes
only user = no
available = yes
comment = What share is for
force user = owner_of_share
force group = owner_of_share

This should work.

Michael

--
Michael Viron
Registered Linux User #81978
Senior Systems & Administration Consultant
Web Spinners, University of West Florida

At 11:18 AM 06/17/2001 -0700, Tuan Duc Tran wrote:
>>>>
Hi all, I have a computer which uses Linux Mandrake 8.0. Because I want this computer become files server for windows users, so I setup Samba on it. I created a share folder named T and now I am having problem with Read/Write permission. I want all users can read and edit (or delete) files which created by other users but I can't. When I open file which created by other user, I get Read Only File. This file become Readable/write able when I log in the same user name (who created the file). Could anyone please give me some help. Thank you very much. Tuan



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