Menu="Disk Share Flash" Title="SMB Security Settings" Tag="windows" Cond="(($var['shareSMBEnabled']!='no') && (isset($name)?array_key_exists($name,$sec):0))" --- :help15 > *Read settings from* is used to preset the SMB security settings of the current selected share with the settings of an existing share. > > Select the desired share name and press **Read** to copy the SMB security settings from the selected source. > > *Write settings to* is used to copy the SMB security settings of the current selected share to one or more other existing shares. > > Select the desired destinations and press **Write** to copy the SMB security settings to the selected shares. :end
_(Read settings from)_
_(Write settings to)_
_(Share name)_: : _(Export)_: : :help16 > This setting determines whether the share is visible and/or accessible. The 'Yes (hidden)' setting > will *hide* the share from *browsing* but is still accessible if you know the share name. :end _(Export)_: : :help17 > This setting determines whether the share is visible and/or accessible. The 'Yes (hidden)' setting > will *hide* the share from *browsing* but is still accessible if you know the share name. :end _(Time Machine volume size limit)_: : MB :help18 > This limits the reported volume size, preventing Time Machine from using the entire real disk space > for backup. For example, setting this value to "1024" would limit the reported disk space to 1GB. :end _(Case-sensitive names)_: : :help201 > Controls whether filenames are case-sensitive. > > The default setting of **auto** allows clients that support case sensitive filenames (Linux CIFSVFS) > to tell the Samba server on a per-packet basis that they wish to access the file system in a case-sensitive manner (to support UNIX > case sensitive semantics). No Windows system supports case-sensitive filenames so setting this option to **auto** is the same as > setting it to No for them; however, the case of filenames passed by a Windows client will be preserved. This setting can result > in reduced peformance with very large directories because Samba must do a filename search and match on passed names. > > A setting of **Yes** means that files are created with the case that the client passes, and only accessible using this same case. > This will speed very large directory access, but some Windows applications may not function properly with this setting. For > example, if "MyFile" is created but a Windows app attempts to open "MYFILE" (which is permitted in Windows), it will not be found. > > A value of **Forced lower** is special: the case of all incoming client filenames, not just new filenames, will be set to lower-case. > In other words, no matter what mixed case name is created on the Windows side, it will be stored and accessed in all lower-case. This > ensures all Windows apps will properly find any file regardless of case, but case will not be preserved in folder listings. > Note this setting should only be configured for new shares. :end _(Security)_: : :help19 > Summary of security modes: > > **Public** All users including guests have full read/write access. > > **Secure** All users including guests have read access, you select which of your users > have write access. > > **Private** No guest access at all, you select which of your users have read/write or > read-only access. :end   :
_(SMB)_ _(User Access)_
_(Guests have **read-only** access)_.
:help20 > *Read settings from* is used to preset the SMB User Access settings of the current selected share with the settings of an existing share. > > Select the desired share name and press **Read** to copy the SMB security settings from the selected source. > > *Write settings to* is used to copy the SMB User Access settings of the current share to one or more other existing shares. > > Select the desired destinations and press **Write** to copy the SMB User access settings to the selected shares. :end
_(Read settings from)_
_(Write settings to)_
  :
_(SMB)_ _(User Access)_
_(Guests have **no** access)_.
:help21 > *Read settings from* is used to preset the SMB User Access settings of the current selected share with the settings of an existing share. > > Select the desired share name and press **Read** to copy the SMB security settings from the selected source. > > *Write settings to* is used to copy the SMB User Access settings of the current share to one or more other existing shares. > > Select the desired destinations and press **Write** to copy the SMB User access settings to the selected shares. :end
_(Read settings from)_
_(Write settings to)_
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