AJJ36
asked on
Permission Question
How can you disutinguish between NTFS permissions and share permissions.
If you can get to a shared folder but not open it does that mean you have shared permission to see it but not NTFS permissions to examine what is inside?
If you can get to a shared folder but not open it does that mean you have shared permission to see it but not NTFS permissions to examine what is inside?
ASKER
Thanks...I am studying for a test and need to know the differences between the two types of permissions. Is it fair to say that the share opens the file up and the NTFS is what determines who can do what to that file. Just trying to think of an easy way to think of it.
Would that analogy be correct?
Would that analogy be correct?
ASKER CERTIFIED SOLUTION
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I think that the asker has requested to re-open this question instead of the one as mentioned in the link below.
https://www.experts-exchange.com/questions/26858653/Automated-Request-for-Attention-Q-26854696.html
https://www.experts-exchange.com/questions/26858653/Automated-Request-for-Attention-Q-26854696.html
Starting with Windows Server 2003 Microsoft removed the everyone permission on the File System, so if you want to se a shared directory you must have both permission, in the Share and in the File System.
Sergio