Le 28/11/2011 09:27, Fajar Priyanto a écrit : > On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 4:22 PM, Guitart Francesc > <francesc.guitart@xxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> if all the user processes are running as the same user ID, how do you >>> expect the file system to know what user is supposed to have access to >>> which share? what you're asking for is physically impossible. once >>> user "A" logged on as unix user X opens his user 'ShareA', *all* >>> processes running as unix user "X" will have access to it. if you >>> thought it worked differently on Debian, you were wrong. >>> >> >> Sorry, maybe I haven't been clear. What I can do with Debian is to >> forget the SMB password every time I get connect to NAS, in such a way >> several network users can use the same local account. While, if I >> understand correctly, you are talking on the assumption of one NFS >> connection. > > I don't get it. > 1. Why use shared account? Good question. This is a server that was already running when I started working here. I don't know the software that has installed and prefer not to touch a lot. That's the only reason I have for to continue using one local user account shared by several people. > 2. If you are using the same account, how can you prevent user from > accessing each other's folder? > /data/userA > /data/userB > The above ownership and permission won't do any good. I use the same local account to log into the machine. It is when I try to connect to the NAS that I use different user accounts. After I log out and continue to be able to access the resources of all users who have connected to the NAS above. In contrast, with Debian, I get connected to NAS asking me the password, after I get disconnect and when I try to reconnect I have to tape the password again. -- Francesc Guitart _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos