NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.

Forum Discussion

dtt0116's avatar
dtt0116
Aspirant
Feb 02, 2021

Drop Folder (Is it possible)

We have a need to be able to write to a folder on the NAS but to to be able to access it again from the same computer (or any computer except the admin account).  Is there a way to able to write to a folder and then lock the file down so that it cannot be changed?  I believe that is called a drop folder.  We have an analitical instrument that I need to save the original data to a file that cannot be accessed (changed) so that the the original data is secured from changes. 

Thanks,

Dan

9 Replies

Replies have been turned off for this discussion
  • ReadyNAS does not have a built-in way to allow a user to create a file and then not be able to change it later.  You could come close by creating a task that runs on the NAS or a computer on the network with an account that has special permissions that moves the file from where you dropped it and you have write permission to a location where normal users have only read permission.  Just changing the file permissions usually isn't enough to prevent a user with write access to the folder from changing those permissions, though I've not tried it.  It's enough to prevent unintentional changes, because it takes extra steps, but not deliberate ones.

     

    I've not tried disabling admin's file permissions so that root would be the only one who could change or delete them.  But if you know admin's password, you know root's, so I don't really see the point unless you routinely use admin credentials for file operations (which is a bad idea in an environment where you need what you are asking for).

    • dtt0116's avatar
      dtt0116
      Aspirant

      Thanks, that's what I thought.  I am just trying to come up with a workaround so we don't have to go out and buy a new $75,000 machine to replace one that is only 5 years old.  The machine programming does not have a way not to name a file the same thing, and the manufacturer says that the new software wont work (designed not to IMO) with the old hardware.   Sooo... If I set up a backup job and protect the folder that it is backed up to, that would sort of accomplish what I am after, correct?  For a new question, is there a setting (I don't recal seeing one) to set up a backup on a file write/change?

      I uderstand about the permissions.  It has me going in circles trying to get some sort protection with our current set-up. 

       

      • StephenB's avatar
        StephenB
        Guru - Experienced User

        dtt0116 wrote:

          Sooo... If I set up a backup job and protect the folder that it is backed up to, that would sort of accomplish what I am after, correct? 


        I think this depends on your goal.  For example, if this is linked to a legal requirement, then it might not.    Another aspect is whether you are trying to protect the file(s) from modification, from deletion, or both.

         

        But if your goal is simply to archive the file(s), then you can create a second share that is read-only, and use a backup job to back up the file(s) to that share.  The NAS admin would still be able to modify or delete the file(s) - either through the admin web ui, or by mounting the entire data volume on a PC using the NAS admin credentials.  Or through the use of SSH of course.

         

        Another approach is to add a second device into the mix, and have that device back up the file(s) on a schedule.  The NAS admin wouldn't need write access to that second device, so you'd have the ability to recover the originals if the copy on the RN212 was modified.

NETGEAR Academy

Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology! 

Join Us!

ProSupport for Business

Comprehensive support plans for maximum network uptime and business peace of mind.

 

Learn More