Windows Server 2003 for Dummies

When users access files on a Windows Server 2003, they usually do so across the network, especially if you restrict who's allowed to log on to the server and limit physical access to the machine. Therefore, most users who access files on a Windows Server 2003 do so through a network share , which is a directory on a Windows Server 2003 that you've shared to the network for public access.

Shares are also objects for Windows 2003, so permissions do apply. The list of applicable permissions consists of the following three entries, which are managed in the same Allow/Deny method as the direct NTFS object permissions:

No Special Access exists for shares. Table 16-1 summarizes the basic permissions for shares.

 
Table 16-1: Share Permissions and Basic Permissions

File

Read

Write

Execute

Delete

Change


Read

X

 

X

   

Change

X

X

X

X

 

Full Control

X

X

X

X

X

Tip 

If you want to expose the contents of a FAT partition on a Windows Server 2003 to network users, doing so through a share automatically gives you some degree of access control, which is yet another advantage to using a network!

KEY CONCEPT 

To create a share, right-click a directory in My Computer or Windows 2003 Explorer, and then choose Sharing and Security. The Properties window for that directory appears with the Sharing tab selected, as shown in Figure 16-2.

Figure 16-2: The Sharing tab provides easy access to a share's name , user limits, permissions, and caching settings.

The following elements of this window relate to creating and managing shares:

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