![]() Since List is lower than Read permissions the files do not get displayed. But ABE requires the user to have at least Read permissions. I didnt think it would work this way, because the List permission is actually "List Folder Contents". "Actually, I have just done some testing and found with ABE that if you give LIST access to a folder then the user can see the folders and subfolders but cannot see the files! Perfect! if a user can see a folder (and therefore access it) then they can see the files in that folder. "Yes, you'll need to enable access based enumeration " ![]() Whereas MS NTFS still shows the items but you get an Access Denied message if you dont have permission)." (A reason I like the way Novell Netware did things – it didnt show files or folders that you didnt have access to. (even if special permission is set to apply to just "folders and subfolders"). The closest way I know to do this is to use the "List" permission, but that will still show file names. a way to allow a user to browse a folder structure without being able to see the filenames. Here is part of a thread I read somewhere else that claims it works: Below is an extract of the thread that lies in another website:ĭoes anyone know of a way to set an NTFS permission on a folder with subfolders that will show the names of folders but hides the files inside of them? I can't help but thinking the other way is possible. I appreciate the tip, I'll do it and move on. ![]() That seems reasonable, it's a good workaround. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |