NicerDicer 3 Posted Saturday at 10:49 PM Posted Saturday at 10:49 PM I have a library "Series" with the directories "Shows" and "Shows.Incoming", both containing subdirectories like "Show name". Access to the Incoming directory is explicitly removed for regular users (unchecked). I put new files into "Shows.Incoming/Show name/" to check them without regular users seeing them, before later moving them over. That worked fine until recently, when files there started being accessible for regular users regardless of that removed access to anything under "Shows.Incoming".
NicerDicer 3 Posted Saturday at 11:32 PM Author Posted Saturday at 11:32 PM Addition: This doesn't happen with "Show name" directories that are only in "Shows.Incoming" and not in "Shows", just with files in "Show name" directories that exist in "Shows.Incoming" AND "Shows".
Luke 42294 Posted yesterday at 04:04 AM Posted yesterday at 04:04 AM Hi, and its' only in one place right?
NicerDicer 3 Posted yesterday at 02:59 PM Author Posted yesterday at 02:59 PM I don't know if I understand you correctly, so here's an example: Shows/ Show name 1/ Episode A1 Episode A2 Shows.Incoming/ Show name 1/ Episode A3 Show name 2/ Episode B1 In the library, user X has the access check mark set for "Shows" and "Shows.Incoming", and correctly sees all four episode files. In the library, user Y only has access set for "Shows" but inside "Show name 1" sees A1, A2 and incorrectly A3, but correctly doesn't see "Show name 2" at all, and therefore also not B1.
NicerDicer 3 Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago @NeminemYes that's active, it's an important puzzle piece in the workflow described above. This grouping is the desired behaviour, but it should not lead to bypassing accessibility checks for entries.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now