I've just made major changes to the groups on my Windows Server 2003, some being added and some removed. Now I'm getting reports here and there of files with orphaned security rights. It seems some scattered files were given settings that did not apply to their locations in the folder hierarchy. Naturally, I'd like to find and fix those exceptions before they get reported one by one for the next few months or years. Is there an easy way to scan the security rights settings across multiple files to see which files are the exceptions?
Right now I have to right-click on each file, click on Properties, click the Security tab and select each group or user object to see each setting. Obviously, I can't do for a couple million times to find a few hundred exceptions.
Surely I'm not the first to wish for this so there must be a program or some VB script to scan a folder and subdirectories to report security rights settings that are not inherited or vary within a folder. Even a long list is far better than manually checking zillions of files.
dbMark
Right now I have to right-click on each file, click on Properties, click the Security tab and select each group or user object to see each setting. Obviously, I can't do for a couple million times to find a few hundred exceptions.
Surely I'm not the first to wish for this so there must be a program or some VB script to scan a folder and subdirectories to report security rights settings that are not inherited or vary within a folder. Even a long list is far better than manually checking zillions of files.
dbMark