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4. Select the appropriate permission from the pull down menu at the bottom.
6. You can modify the permission of the users or groups in the privileged list by first highlight the
users or groups and then select the appropriate permission from the pull down menu at the bottom of
the share permission item.
7. Click Apply to save the setting.
You can assign the following share permission to a user on NAS server:
No Access (NA) – Account has been denied access to the share.
Read Only (RO)– Account is allowed to read the share.
Change (CH)– Account is allowed to read and write to the share.
Full Control (FC) – Account is allowed to read both read and write and change permission to the file
or folder.
To assign share permission of a share for UNIX/Linux Host:
1. Go to Security→Share menu.
2. Locate the share and click to assign share permission to this share.
3. Click the UNIX/Linux Setting tab.
4. Assign the UID, GID and Permission of this share. It will overwrite the ownership and permission of
the mount point once the share is mounted by the NFS client. If the NIS support is enabled, the UID
and GID pull-down menus will list all NIS users for you to choose.
5. You can allow all hosts to access the share with read/write or read only permission. Then go to
Step 9.
6. Or, you can specify privileged hosts by highlight the host IP from the left hand windows.
7. Select the appropriate permission from the pull down menu at the bottom of the left hand windows.
8. Assign which UID/GID the root account of the UNIX host should be converted into when accessing
the share. This is the ‘root squash’ function.
9. Click the >> button to join the privileged list.
10. You can modify the permission of the hosts in the privileged list by first highlight the privileged
host and then select the appropriate permission from the pull down menu at the bottom of the right
hand windows.
11. Click Apply to save the setting.
12. If you want to remove shares, check the corresponding checkbox located at the end of the row