[RESOLVED] File permissions and the network
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Thread: [RESOLVED] File permissions and the network

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2001
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    Chicago
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    Resolved [RESOLVED] File permissions and the network

    Hi All,
    I'm pretty solid with hardware but I have a file permissions issue that's killing me.

    I have a soho network with macs and PCs, and a Buffalo Terastation NAS. I have files in a subdirectory of the only share. But I can no longer access the subdirectory. Even logged in as admin, on any system.

    OS X 10.6.8
    "The folder xxx can't be opened because you don't have permission to see its contents."
    Windows 7
    explorer says the folder is empty. Working in the folder I get "Destination Folder Access Denied You need permission to perform this action"

    Of course I try to change permissions in the security tab in W7. I get "Error Applying Security - An error occurred while applying security information to: xxx
    Access is denied."

    So I tried the Take Ownership registry change, right click on the folder, then try to make the changes, and I get the same Access denied message.


    I went into the web admin interface for the NAS and removed all access permissions and I STILL have these problems.

    Is there something I'm doing wrong? Is there something else I can do? I have a second copy of this data but the file permission issue propagated there too.
    ___________________________________________

    I'm a cinematographer and director of photography in Milwaukee.
    I use Windows, OSX, and 40 TB of storage to tell stories with my
    Sony FS7 | Panasonic GH4 | 5D mark III
    Find me on Google + | Facebook | Twitter

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2001
    Location
    Chicago
    Posts
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    I've spent a few hours with tech support and it sounds like a Linux issue. Anyone have any experience with the command prompt and think they can help walk a n00b through it?
    ___________________________________________

    I'm a cinematographer and director of photography in Milwaukee.
    I use Windows, OSX, and 40 TB of storage to tell stories with my
    Sony FS7 | Panasonic GH4 | 5D mark III
    Find me on Google + | Facebook | Twitter

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2000
    Location
    The left coast, USA
    Posts
    1,397
    Quote Originally Posted by ProfessorU View Post
    I've spent a few hours with tech support and it sounds like a Linux issue. Anyone have any experience with the command prompt and think they can help walk a n00b through it?
    Can you get to the command prompt and login as root?
    THIS will walk you through changing permissions with Linux.
    Keyboard error or no keyboard present

    Press f1 to continue

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2001
    Location
    Chicago
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    1,107

    Resolved

    Buffalo is very strict with not allowing end-users root-level access, they don't support command prompt anything, and I couldn't find a way to hack in for this particular model.
    I eventually did a complete backup using the web interface to a connected USB drive formatted in NTFS. The corrupted permissions were not copied across the filesystems, so I could access them just fine. Data recovered.
    ___________________________________________

    I'm a cinematographer and director of photography in Milwaukee.
    I use Windows, OSX, and 40 TB of storage to tell stories with my
    Sony FS7 | Panasonic GH4 | 5D mark III
    Find me on Google + | Facebook | Twitter

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2000
    Location
    Friern Barnet, London, England
    Posts
    46,565
    I'm glad you got it sorted out, thanks for posting back with the answer

    I've recently got a QNAP. It's a fine NAS, but surprisingly complex to administer. I'm slowly getting there though
    Nick.

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