Re: Permissions on Windows 2008

2010-12-10 Thread Andrey Repin
Greetings, Bryan Slatner! By default Cygwin tries to emulate POSIX file permissions: http://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/ntsec.html You can disable this by modifying your /etc/fstab file and adding the appropriate options to cause the target locations for your files to have the necessary

Re: Permissions on Windows 2008

2010-12-10 Thread Jeremy Bopp
On 12/09/2010 03:38 PM, Bryan Slatner wrote: Jeremy Bopp jeremy at bopp.net writes: By default Cygwin tries to emulate POSIX file permissions: http://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/ntsec.html You can disable this by modifying your /etc/fstab file and adding the appropriate options to cause the

Re: Permissions on Windows 2008

2010-12-10 Thread Bryan Slatner
Jeremy Bopp jeremy at bopp.net writes: Take a look at the noacl option. You'll want to apply that to whatever mountpoint contains the target path of your copy operation. If you want to be surgical in the application, create a new mountpoint with this option set and copy your files into

Re: Permissions on Windows 2008

2010-12-09 Thread Bryan Slatner
Thanks, Jeremy, that's exactly what I needed to know. Jeremy Bopp jeremy at bopp.net writes: By default Cygwin tries to emulate POSIX file permissions: http://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/ntsec.html -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ:

Re: Permissions on Windows 2008

2010-12-09 Thread Bryan Slatner
Thanks, Corinna. That was my next question after following Jeremy's advice :) Corinna Vinschen corinna-cygwin at cygwin.com writes: Note that Windows Explorer only erroneously treats such files as shared if they are in your own user folder. If you scp the files into some other folder (like,

Re: Permissions on Windows 2008

2010-12-09 Thread Bryan Slatner
Jeremy Bopp jeremy at bopp.net writes: By default Cygwin tries to emulate POSIX file permissions: http://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/ntsec.html You can disable this by modifying your /etc/fstab file and adding the appropriate options to cause the target locations for your files to have the

Re: Permissions on Windows 2008

2010-12-07 Thread Corinna Vinschen
On Dec 7 05:09, Bryan Slatner wrote: I've just installed Cygwin on a Windows 2008 Standard server with SP2. I'm noticing two strange behaviors with files that I upload via SFTP (or SCP, I'm not actually sure which protocol WinSCP uses by default). First, the ACL list on the uploaded

Re: Permissions on Windows 2008

2010-12-07 Thread Corinna Vinschen
On Dec 7 10:51, Corinna Vinschen wrote: Note that Windows Explorer only erroneously treats such files as shared if they are in your own user folder. Let me rephrase: Note that Windows Explorer only annoys its users by treating such files [etc] If you scp the files into some other folder

Permissions on Windows 2008

2010-12-06 Thread Bryan Slatner
I've just installed Cygwin on a Windows 2008 Standard server with SP2. I'm noticing two strange behaviors with files that I upload via SFTP (or SCP, I'm not actually sure which protocol WinSCP uses by default). First, the ACL list on the uploaded files contains an entry for ServerName\None,

Re: Permissions on Windows 2008

2010-12-06 Thread Jeremy Bopp
On 12/06/2010 11:09 PM, Bryan Slatner wrote: I've just installed Cygwin on a Windows 2008 Standard server with SP2. I'm noticing two strange behaviors with files that I upload via SFTP (or SCP, I'm not actually sure which protocol WinSCP uses by default). First, the ACL list on the