Thanks for your reply.
Just checked and it looks like cases match where necessary. I'm guessing if they didn't match I wouldn't be able to mount or see the directory at all.
From doing a bit of googling I understand the NanoNAS forces all connections to be as NAS-User with group as NAS-User - or at least that's who the user/group is set to on the http readable output from the NAS.
I'm guessing (again from doing a bit of poking around Linux forums) that I'm mounting the drive to the squeezeplug and getting some kind of permissions clash with what the squeezeplug thinks I can do, and what the NAS thinks I can do.
It may be something to do with my smb.conf on the squeezeplug and my fstab entry that mounts the directory.
Sadly my Linux knowledge is tiny.
I'm tried using variations of the following in fstab:
Code:
//192.168.2.3/Disk-0/Test /music smbfs username=admin,password=nas,uid=98,gid=98,fmask=0777 0 0
//192.168.2.3/Disk-0/Test /music cifs noperm,umask=0777,fmask=0777 0 0
And whilst they all seem to mount Disk-0/Test (on the NAS) to /music (on the squeezeplug) and allow me to see the contents, running ls -l on /music and subdirectories show the owner/group as root.
I am really confused, especially as I have only the faintest grasp of permissions having never really had to deal with them in this way before.
Is there any more information I can provide to help resolve this?
Thanks!
Raymonkey