Allright everyone, I got a good one.
We have a system running solaris 2.5.1 with Samba 1.09.02. We have some people that were just upgraded to Win2k SP2 and they worked fine for about a month. Now, they can create 'New Folder' in their home directory, but cannot rename it. There is an error that says "Cannot rename new folder. Make sure that the disk is not full or write-protected and that the file is not currently in use." The volume is at 66% usage, and just to rule out misreporting, I tried it on another share on a different volume, with the same results. This only seems to affect win2k machines, which I know handle ACL's differently, but worked for a month before now. I also tried pulling up the security properties from a Win2K machine, and the first screen showed no-one has any authority. However, when I go to advanced, it shows everyone has full control. Any ideas on how to get around this without upgrading. This is a validated system getting decommisioned in another 6 months, I really don't want to re-validate it.
thanks
Will Trepanier
We have a system running solaris 2.5.1 with Samba 1.09.02. We have some people that were just upgraded to Win2k SP2 and they worked fine for about a month. Now, they can create 'New Folder' in their home directory, but cannot rename it. There is an error that says "Cannot rename new folder. Make sure that the disk is not full or write-protected and that the file is not currently in use." The volume is at 66% usage, and just to rule out misreporting, I tried it on another share on a different volume, with the same results. This only seems to affect win2k machines, which I know handle ACL's differently, but worked for a month before now. I also tried pulling up the security properties from a Win2K machine, and the first screen showed no-one has any authority. However, when I go to advanced, it shows everyone has full control. Any ideas on how to get around this without upgrading. This is a validated system getting decommisioned in another 6 months, I really don't want to re-validate it.
thanks
Will Trepanier