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Schoolguy Guest
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Posted: Fri Apr 21, 2006 6:06 pm Post subject: Folder/File Permissions |
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Hello Everyone,
I work in 4 Elementary schools. We are running Windows Server 2003 with
98SE, 2000 and XP Pro workstations. We have a shared folder on each school
server, called "Grade" where the students save all of their work. We want to
prevent the students from moving, renaming and deleting the folders, but at
the same time enable them to save their files and changes to files in that
folder. I have tried many combinations with the security permissions on the
folder, but it seems to always come up as all or none. I.E. if I uncheck
"create folders/append data" they can not even save new files in the folder,
etc. Are there any option?
Thanks
GP |
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IntelliAdmin Guest
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Posted: Fri Apr 21, 2006 7:10 pm Post subject: Re: Folder/File Permissions |
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You want to look at the security tab of the folder in question - as
opposed to using the share tab to limit access. Once in there click on
advanced, and then edit the student's username our group. You can pick
and choose the pemissions you want to give them - these are much more
detailed that the standard list. Here is a list of them
Traverse Folder/ Execute File
List Folder /Read Data
Read Attributes
Read Extended Attributes
Create Files / Write Data
Create Folders/ Append Data
Write Attributes
Write Extended Attributes
Delete Subfolders and Files
Delete
Read Permissions
Change Permissions
Take Ownership
Let us know if that helps,
Steve
Windows Admin Tools
http://www.intelliadmin.com |
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Schoolguy Guest
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Posted: Fri Apr 21, 2006 8:12 pm Post subject: Re: Folder/File Permissions |
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Thank you for your quick response!
Actually I did try to adjust these in detail and no matter what I did, it
was all or nothing.
"IntelliAdmin" wrote:
| Quote: | You want to look at the security tab of the folder in question - as
opposed to using the share tab to limit access. Once in there click on
advanced, and then edit the student's username our group. You can pick
and choose the pemissions you want to give them - these are much more
detailed that the standard list. Here is a list of them
Traverse Folder/ Execute File
List Folder /Read Data
Read Attributes
Read Extended Attributes
Create Files / Write Data
Create Folders/ Append Data
Write Attributes
Write Extended Attributes
Delete Subfolders and Files
Delete
Read Permissions
Change Permissions
Take Ownership
Let us know if that helps,
Steve
Windows Admin Tools
http://www.intelliadmin.com
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Scott Lowe Guest
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Posted: Fri Apr 21, 2006 9:02 pm Post subject: Re: Folder/File Permissions |
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On 2006-04-21 12:12:01 -0400, Schoolguy
<Schoolguy@discussions.microsoft.com> said:
| Quote: | Thank you for your quick response!
Actually I did try to adjust these in detail and no matter what I did,
it was all or nothing.
"IntelliAdmin" wrote:
You want to look at the security tab of the folder in question - as
opposed to using the share tab to limit access. Once in there click on
advanced, and then edit the student's username our group. You can pick
and choose the pemissions you want to give them - these are much more
detailed that the standard list. Here is a list of them
Traverse Folder/ Execute File
List Folder /Read Data
Read Attributes
Read Extended Attributes
Create Files / Write Data
Create Folders/ Append Data
Write Attributes
Write Extended Attributes
Delete Subfolders and Files
Delete
Read Permissions
Change Permissions
Take Ownership
Let us know if that helps,
Steve
Windows Admin Tools
http://www.intelliadmin.com
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FWIW, when you adjust the Advanced Security Settings as described
above, the "standard" security settings dialog box then checks only the
"Special" permission, and all other permissions are unchecked--this
leads to the appearance of no permissions but is not actually the case.
Also, in the Advanced Security Settings dialog box, you can use the
"Apply Onto" drop-down box to control inheritance of ACLs. This would
allow you to, for example, apply one set of permissions to files and a
different set of permissions to folders (or to the parent folder
itself). This may come in handy as well.
HTH.
--
Regards,
Scott Lowe
ePlus Technology, Inc. |
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