![]() ![]() You seem determined to do this despite my warnings not to, so I'll leave it up to you to figure it out. #Mapping synology drive using netdrive 3 how to(I'll let you figure out how to backup the ACL's on your entire filesystem before proceeding, as all publicly released QNAP Firmware versions prior to today (Tue Jan 7 10:37:) do not backup ACL's at all. I would strongly recommend backing up your entire NAS "before" proceeding with this dangerous idea. (You'll note that in Windows, only "Administrator" has the ability to mount root shares C$, D$ etc). This is a bad idea due to high potential for permissions corruption, and compromised security if anyone ever compromises your login credentials to your "root" share, they will be able to view/edit/delete files from the operating system of the NAS. I will provide no further assistance with this dangerous idea. (I've been running Linux for 22 years, and I would not attempt this myself, as the benefits are dubious, and the risks are huge). If you still believe this is worth the risk, then Google " smb.conf". Perhaps not immediately, but ultimately you are likely to end up with a mess on your hands. This a bad idea, and will likely to result in disaster. If you mess up the permissions on the "parent" share recursively, you will damage the permissions of the "child" shares, which will likely result is permission issues that are so broken that you will need to re-install your NAS from scratch. Doing so will ultimately give you "shares" within "shares". Fenster wrote:Great! What settings do I need to change? You'd need to manually create a share to point to whatever directory you want, look at the existing entries in the /etc/config/smb.conf file for examples of working shares.
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