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Forum Discussion
HomeNASUser2020
Jan 25, 2020Aspirant
readynas NVX Windows folder permissions setup and configuration
I have a readynas 4210 and i have created a main share and given it guest permissions I have 4 typical users in my house that i want to be able to access this share 2 kids 2 parents I want ...
- Jan 26, 2020
What StephenB is basically pointing out is that the ReadyNAS does not create shares within shares. Shares are at top level, and can have permissions set. Below them are simple folders (directories) that inherit their permissions from the share.
One thing he did not mention is that no share, other than the automatic home share, can have the same name as a user, even with automatic home shares disabled. And changing upper/lower case doesn't get around this. Using StephenB 's recommended set-up, you aren't violating that (folders can have a user's name). But if you decide to try something else, just be aware of this limitation. For example, if you need to keep the kids from messing with each other's stuff, you'll need shares for each of them with different permissions, and you'll need a different name for the shares than their login names.
StephenB
Jan 25, 2020Guru - Experienced User
HomeNASUser2020 wrote:
do I need keep the guest permissions for both shares?
No, and you definitely don't want guest access enabled for the Parent shares.
Sandshark
Jan 26, 2020Sensei - Experienced User
What StephenB is basically pointing out is that the ReadyNAS does not create shares within shares. Shares are at top level, and can have permissions set. Below them are simple folders (directories) that inherit their permissions from the share.
One thing he did not mention is that no share, other than the automatic home share, can have the same name as a user, even with automatic home shares disabled. And changing upper/lower case doesn't get around this. Using StephenB 's recommended set-up, you aren't violating that (folders can have a user's name). But if you decide to try something else, just be aware of this limitation. For example, if you need to keep the kids from messing with each other's stuff, you'll need shares for each of them with different permissions, and you'll need a different name for the shares than their login names.
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