![]() ![]() This time I talk about advanced Samba permissions and how to manage them though Windows Explorer (I do ramble on again in this video, sorry.). I've finally got around to making a second video. I've tried to keep it as short as possible). (Also apologies, I may talk a lot in this video. It's not a perfect video, it's not intended to be, it's just my personal way on how to achieve the goal. I'm happy to take feedback and criticism. Hopefully some of you will find this useful, while others may not, simply because you're already doing things right and don't need help on this topic. Today, I've created a video demonstrating how to set-up a Samba share which can be accessed by multiple users, allowing each user to read/write to the dataset. This is a topic that keeps coming up, new users get confused with a multitude of different options when configuring a Samba (CIFS) share in FreeNAS. Mod note: This is now an official XenForo discussion thread, so you can just use the tabs above to navigate to the Resource proper. This thread can be used to discuss the videos. If successful, you will be able to read and write files to the FreeNAS server like a normal internal drive in the system.UPDATE! The contents of this how-to has been moved to the resources section of this forum. \\the IP address of your FreeNAS server\testshareĪ pop up will appear to ask your credentials, which are your FreeNAS account’s username and password. You will see the option to “Map network drive”.Ĭhoose the drive letter and type in the location of your SMB share in the box. Open File Explorer and expand the top menu. It works quickly (probably significantly faster than executing 'find -exec setfacl').
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