TOPIC This article provides troubleshooting information for AppleShare IP 6.3. DISCUSSION
About sharing and share points A shared item is a document, folder, or disk that can be accessed by users who connect to the file server. You determine which users can access the item and how they can use it. A share point is a folder, hard disk, or CD-ROM disc that contains shared items. Items in a share point by default have the same access privileges as the share point, but you can give them different access privileges if you wish. You cannot have a share point within a share point. See the illustration: Figure 1 , Share point folder diagram
Figure 2 , Access privileges illustration
How access privileges appear to users: How access privileges appear to a user depends on the version of operating system software on the user's computer. Windows file sharing users can set folder properties, but not privileges. Users of AppleShare Client software or Mac OS 8.0 or later can set access privileges for folders they own using the Sharing command in the Finder's File menu. When users of earlier versions of system software set privileges, the file server translates them as follows:
About user categories You assign access privileges separately to three user categories: Owner The administrator (owner of the computer running AppleShare IP) by default owns all volumes and folders and has Read & Write access to all shared items on the computer running AppleShare IP. A user who creates a new folder on the file server is its default owner. The folder inherits the privileges of the enclosing folder (unless the administrator changes the privileges settings). The owner of an item is the only user who can change its access privileges. User/Group One user or one group can be assigned special access privileges for a shared item. Everyone All users who can log on to the file server: registered users, guests, anonymous FTP users, and Web visitors. If a user is included in more than one category, the following rules apply: Owner privileges override User/Group privileges. User/Group privileges override Everyone privileges. For example, when a user is both the owner of a shared item and a member of the group assigned to it, the user has owner access. |
Document Information | |
Product Area: | Apple Software; Communications-Networking |
Category: | AppleShare |
Sub Category: | AppleShare for Mac OS |
Keywords: | kasip |
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