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Forum Discussion
emilponken
Oct 06, 2015Aspirant
Cannot write or delete to shared folders after windows upgrade
Hi, I'm a newbie to network fiddling an realy just want things to work. I have a ReadyNas Ultra 2 with a couple of shares which I've mapped as a network drive in windows 7. After upgrading first to ...
- Oct 06, 2015
Look on the "advanced options" tab for the share in frontview (click on "shares", then the CIFS icon for specific share. Advanced options is a tab on the upper right).
You will see an checkbox labeled "Set ownership and permission for existing files and folders in this share to the above settings" Make sure the settings are what you want. For a wide-open share, use "nobody" for the owner and "nogroup" for the group. Permissions would be read/write for everything.
Then set the checkbox and click apply. The checkbox immediately clears, and file permissions are adjusted in the background. There will be a pop-up (and a log entry) when it completes.
You can also create a windows credential in the windows credential manager for each NAS (specifying the NAS username/password). For instance, create a single account on the NAS (admin will actually work), and use that same user/password on all PCs. You should certainly create credentials if you are using a microsoft logon.
StephenB
Oct 06, 2015Guru - Experienced User
Look on the "advanced options" tab for the share in frontview (click on "shares", then the CIFS icon for specific share. Advanced options is a tab on the upper right).
You will see an checkbox labeled "Set ownership and permission for existing files and folders in this share to the above settings" Make sure the settings are what you want. For a wide-open share, use "nobody" for the owner and "nogroup" for the group. Permissions would be read/write for everything.
Then set the checkbox and click apply. The checkbox immediately clears, and file permissions are adjusted in the background. There will be a pop-up (and a log entry) when it completes.
You can also create a windows credential in the windows credential manager for each NAS (specifying the NAS username/password). For instance, create a single account on the NAS (admin will actually work), and use that same user/password on all PCs. You should certainly create credentials if you are using a microsoft logon.
- emilponkenOct 06, 2015Aspirant
I swear, if you stood next to me I would kiss you!!!
Thanks a billion!
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