force create mode not enforced on newly created files
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
samba |
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
|||
samba (Ubuntu) |
New
|
Undecided
|
Unassigned | ||
Bug Description
Samba version used:
4.3.9+dfsg-
Steps to reproduce:
1. Configure a samba share with inherited permissions:
[share1]
path = /srv/share1
browseable = yes
read only = no
guest ok = no
create mask = 0770
force create mode = 0660
directory mask = 2770
force directory mode = 2770
2. Create a directory under the share:
cd /srv/share1; mkdir modes && chmod 2770 modes
3. Connect with a Windows client and create some files and directories in the new directory:
New text document.txt*
test.txt
New folder*
test
Entries marked with * have their default names (picked by Windows) untouched.
What is expected?
All files and directories have permissions set according to share configuration.
What happens?
└── [drwxrws---] ./modes
├── [-rwxr-----] ./modes/New text document.txt
├── [drwxrws---] ./modes/New folder
├── [drwxrws---] ./modes/test
└── [-rwxrw----] ./modes/test.txt
Despite force create mode the "New text document.txt" does not have group-write permission, while another file with custom name has the permissions set as desired.
When I rename "New text document.txt" to anything else the permissions are fixed immediately:
└── [-rwxrw----] ./modes/test2.txt
This was not observable with Samba 4.1.6.
tags: | added: regression-release |