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Forum Discussion

PatrickH's avatar
PatrickH
Aspirant
Feb 26, 2016

What is the Differenece between Network Access and File Access when using SMB

The Subject tells it all. I would like a brief explination as to what affect the Network Access and the File Access have inside an SMB system. I do not understand the differenece between the two of them.

 

Also, In the ReadyNAS how do the local security accounts work. Does the group trump user? ie. if I have a user with no access rights to a folder and they are in group A and group A has rights to that folder do they then Have rights to that folder?

 

 

 

 

6 Replies

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  • siigna's avatar
    siigna
    NETGEAR Employee Retired

    Network Access is connection based.  If your user or host doesn't match up with what's allowed in Network Access you won't have access.

    File Access controls the permissions of files within the share.

     

    File permissions are traditional UNIX permissions, effective permissions are ordered by user, group, then others.

    • ie. if I have a user with no access rights to a folder and they are in group A and group A has rights to that folder do they then Have rights to that folder?

    In this situation the user would have no rights to the folder.  Other members of group A would have rights.  Regardless of others rights (you didn't mention them), the user would have no rights.

     

    ACLs are also available.  They take precedence over traditional permissions.

    • StephenB's avatar
      StephenB
      Guru - Experienced User

      siigna wrote:

       

       File permissions are traditional UNIX permissions, effective permissions are ordered by user, group, then others.

      • ie. if I have a user with no access rights to a folder and they are in group A and group A has rights to that folder do they then Have rights to that folder?

      In this situation the user would have no rights to the folder.  Other members of group A would have rights.  Regardless of others rights (you didn't mention them), the user would have no rights.

       


      Meaning that any user rights you specify trump the group rights, not the other way around.

       

      File permissions + network access both need to allow access, otherwise it is denied.

       

      In most cases its easier to set the files to allow full access by anyone, and manage access through network security.

      • PatrickH's avatar
        PatrickH
        Aspirant

        So what use is the File Access if the only person with direct access to the files is the admin through the web interface?

         

        Also, How do you remove a user from a access list so that they can default to a group permission?

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