![]() ![]() ![]() The old Server tool had a good permissions tool that managed ACLs.but that ship has sailed. ![]() Or one can go CLI, but that can be a steep (and dangerous) learning curve to a noobie. To easily see and test, you might try the free trial of Tinkertool System, which is perhaps the only good GUI tool to see and modify Mac ACLs. It could be an (invisible) ACL, which the Finder neither shows nor controls. Or.if it is not an SMB file locking issue: It may behave differently than folders inside a specific users home directory. In past OSes it had special permissions by default. You might try testing shared files from the Users/ Shared folder too. It would make sense to still do any/all tweaks from the server to reduce variables. With their own version of SMB.hard to say, but you are at their mercy.īack in the dark days of OS X server, one could only modify permissions successfully on the server, not from the client(s). I have seen stuff like this on and off all the way back to the early days of 10.2. Have not seen this, but does smell of Apple's long history of wonky file sharing. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |