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| | #1 (permalink) |
| In an installer, I'm trying to use icalcs.exe on Vista to fully enable all user access to the folder C:\ProgramData\MyApp and all subfolders & files. Can someone help me out with the perms arguement? Specifically, I can't figure out how to get inheritance to work so that new files and folders inherit the full rights. I thought the command below would work, but it won't even run: C:\Windows\System32\icacls "C:\ProgramData\MyApp\*.*" /T /C /Grant Users OI,CI,MA) | Guest
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| So, now I've got the syntax right so the command at least runs: C:\Windows\System32\icacls "C:\Junk*.*" /T /C /Grant Users OI)(CI)(MA)But it still doesn't seem to be working properly. I need to set the ACL so that even if someone with admin rights creates a file or folder in or under MyApp, users have full rights over it. | Guest
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Sorry to be clutter this thread. I've been working on this for quite some time, and carefully reading anything I can find on the web on icacls, so it's not that I haven't at least tried to do my homework. Below is a command that I *think* should do what I want. I'm having trouble with the OI and CI parameter syntax. Any help? iacls "C:\ProgramData\MyApp*.*" /T /C (OI) (CI) /Grant Users:F | Guest
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| | #4 (permalink) | |
| First, what you are trying to do is probably a bad idea. You should not let low-privileged users write data that is consumed by high-privileged users. Second, MA stands for Maximum Allowed. It is not a flag you can use when specifying permissions. It is a flag you use when to try to open an object and you do not care what permissions you get to the object, nor about security. In that case, as long as you have any permissions at all you get a valid handle back with whatever permissions you have. It is virtually always a bad idea to use MA in an any call. Now, the syntax you want is this: icacls object /grant user flags)(perms)/t traverses the directory. I presume you have a brand new directory or that you at least created everything so it inherits permissions from parents? In that case /t is unnecessary. /c indicates that the command should continue on file error, such as that the file is locked. More than likely you don't need that flag either. The folder specification you state is invalid. C:\ProgramData\MyApp*.* will set permissions on all objects in C:\ProgramData called MyApp*.*, such as MyAppFoo.Bar. It will not work if you have a folder called C:\ProgramData\MyApp. Assuming that folder was just created and all you want to do is add a permission to it, this command would suffice: icacls c:\programdata\myapp /grant Users OI)(CI)MThere is lots more on icacls in the book referenced below. --- Your question may already be answered in Windows Vista Security: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/047...otectyourwi-20 "Tom" wrote: Quote:
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Thanks, Jesper! I think I'm close to having what I need! The problem I'm trying to solve is that I have legacy app that uses an older installer (Wise32) which I'm stuck with for the time being. It must run, like any installer, with admin rights. But, it doesn't know anything about the ACL. It creates a series of folders as admin. I want to change the entire folder tree so that all users have "Full Control" security property set, which I believe will let them do anything with the files/folders that they want. So, I'm not trying to let low-privileded users write data that is consumed by high-privileged users (although I appreciate your cautioning me against that). I just want all users to be able to access files & folders created by an older installer. And, I want the users group "Full Control" security setting to be inherited by any new files or folders created in the folder tree. From my experimentation with the syntax you gave me, I don't think it does quite that. Would you be so kind as to suggest syntax that would set the users group so it has "Full Control" of all files in a tree, and this is inherited by new files? Thanks so much!!! PS That's for the book reference. I've already ordered it from Amazon! | Guest
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| | #6 (permalink) | |
| Yes, the syntax I gave you gives users modify permissions, not full control. They can't change the permissions that way, but they can read, write, create and delete. I set the OI (Object Inherit) and CI (Container Inherit) flags too. That way any object or container that anyone creates gets these permissions too. The only thing I did not do is traverse it down the folder hierarchy in case other containers and objects underneath myapp did not inherit their permissions from the parent. There is no really easy way to do that, but you can handle it by running this command first, before the one I gave you earlier: icacls c:\ProgramData\MyApp /reset /t That will reset the permissions to the default and set the inheritance bit. When you then run the command I gave you it should set the right permissions on the whole hierarchy. Hopefully this will get you there. I still think you should question why you want users to write data to ProgramData instead of their own personal AppData folder, but there may be a good reason there. Oh, and let me know what you think of the book. You can reach me at http://msinfluentials.com/blogs/jesper. --- Your question may already be answered in Windows Vista Security: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/047...otectyourwi-20 "Tom" wrote: Quote:
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