WillieLoMain
Technical User
Many in my office have access to shared files on the file server.
I think I have figured out that the 2 tabs - SHARING and SECURITY - work as follows.
Permissions under the SHARING tab controll the acces when fies are manipulated ACROSS THE NETWORK.
Security permission control how users may manipulate files when sitting locally at the machine (or I guess in a TS Session)
Have I got this much right?? If not what am I missing?
If so I will say that - no one has acces to the server to sit at it and work locally on it - except for me of course.
Also, there is no one who hs TS access except for myself.
Therefore, everyone will access files across the LAN.
The next question then is - SPECIFICALLY - how do I set thhe shared permissions so that users can access the files they need - change , edit manipulate etc these files BUT NOT BE ABLE TO DELETE THEM.
My primary concern here is that, since deletions across the LAN are unrecoverable, I do not want someone to inadvertently make a deletion.
Thanx in advance and sorry for the long post.
I think I have figured out that the 2 tabs - SHARING and SECURITY - work as follows.
Permissions under the SHARING tab controll the acces when fies are manipulated ACROSS THE NETWORK.
Security permission control how users may manipulate files when sitting locally at the machine (or I guess in a TS Session)
Have I got this much right?? If not what am I missing?
If so I will say that - no one has acces to the server to sit at it and work locally on it - except for me of course.
Also, there is no one who hs TS access except for myself.
Therefore, everyone will access files across the LAN.
The next question then is - SPECIFICALLY - how do I set thhe shared permissions so that users can access the files they need - change , edit manipulate etc these files BUT NOT BE ABLE TO DELETE THEM.
My primary concern here is that, since deletions across the LAN are unrecoverable, I do not want someone to inadvertently make a deletion.
Thanx in advance and sorry for the long post.