[01:26] <patdk-lap> sure
[01:26] <patdk-lap> you have to use acl's
[01:26] <patdk-lap> and have the linux server bound to AD
[01:26] <patdk-lap> when you use acl, it will ignore the unix permissions
[01:26] <patdk-lap> so that whole 770 wont matter
[01:27] <patdk-lap> make sure acl is enabled on your filesystem
[01:27] <patdk-lap> and enabled in samba
[01:31] <ShadowLabs> The systems is bound to AD. Ive tried setting the acl but root seems to overwrite and put the files as executable when writing 
[01:32] <patdk-lap> I think that has to do with the acl
[01:32] <patdk-lap> I do remember they look funny
[01:32] <patdk-lap> I haven't had a server setup like this since 2016, it worked fine for a decade for a large company
[01:33] <patdk-lap> lots of shared, and multiuser access permissions and management from windows
[01:37] <ShadowLabs> I’ll have to double check I guess. Just not sure since getfacl shows correct groups 
[01:38] <patdk-lap> if I remember right when acl is active it does show like +rwxrwxrwx or something like that
[01:38] <patdk-lap> whre the + means acls are active
[01:44] <ShadowLabs> Ohh good to know. I’ll double check but I haven’t seen that before 
[01:48] <patdk-lap> it might very by filesystem too
[01:48] <patdk-lap> I was using ext4 and zfs at the time (zfs on solaris)
[01:51] <ShadowLabs> I’m using zfs on truenas FreeBSD and btfrs for my Ubuntu servers 
[17:39] <mybalzitch> april 25th, what a wait.