I think the 'force user' and 'force group' diretives are the right answer for you question. Set this on your samba share and set the user and group you want to maintain the owner and group permissions. On 10/1/07, Todd Cary <todd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > My www directory is owned by "apache" and the group is "todd" and the > permissions are 775. > > My Windows computers use Samba and they log into Linux with "todd". > > Under the www directory there are various directories which may have a > group belonging to a user e.g. "viewpoint". Using this example, there > is a directory under www (acutally called httpd), "viewpoint" that is > owned by "apache" and is a member of the "viewpoint" group. "todd" is > also a member of the "viewpoint" group. > > Now this is the problem I do not know how to correct: if "todd" using > Samba creates a directory in "viewpoint", the owner and group is "todd" > with 755 permissions. Now if the "viewpoint" user tries to write to the > directory, he does not have adequate permissions. > > Maybe I have not setup the owners and groups correctly. maybe there is > something I need to do with how Samba interacts with the server. > > Any suggestions will be appreciated... > > Todd > > -- > Ariste Software > 2200 D Street Ext > Petaluma, CA 94952 > (707) 773-4523 > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos