How does the permission look like on one of these files that you
have problem copying?
A network trace would also be helpful. Start the trace before you
do the mount to have a complete context, and stop it after trying
to copy a file. Don't do any extra stuff between mounting and copying
so the t
I can't really explain the changes that happen to the file's
ACL using vi over NFS. I'm CC'ing zfs-discuss maybe someone
there can help out.
Afshin
John Keiffer wrote:
Looks like this:
n...@leo-ha2:/$ ls -Vd ha2/f1/
drwxr-xr-x+ 3 enguser root 4 Jul 1 14:51 ha2/f1/
u
David Dyer-Bennet wrote:
> On Sat, February 7, 2009 14:32, Alan.M.Wright wrote:
Also, does this end up taking up extra metadata space compared to not
having to have an ACL entry for each file?
>> No, ZFS only stores ACLs. It doesn't have or store a separate
>> representation of the UNIX
There's not much that CIFS can do as far as user quotas go
without filesystem support. I've CC'ed zfs-discuss, somebody
there might be able to provide you something useful.
Afshin
Ross wrote:
> Not sure if this is the best place to ask about this. I know ZFS doesn't
> have user quotas, but is t
Your terminology is a bit confusing for me, so:
you have 1 pool (zpool create)
you have a FS called public (zfs create?)
what do you mean by "keep on separate zfs's"? You
mean ZFS snapshot?
Thanks,
Afshin
Matt Harrison wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> I've got a poo
Tim,
CIFS server comes up in workgroup mode by default.
In this mode you can use your local users to access CIFS shares.
Here is what you need to do:
Add the following line at the end of /etc/pam.conf
other password required pam_smb_passwd.so.1 nowarn
use passwd(1) with any of local