Displaying
all 6 articles
Permissions
When Explorer is installed for multi-user access, it is important to set the permissions on the installed files and directories so users cannot modify the installed files or create new subdirectories there. These permission changes must be done
[configuration data permissions writable ]
permission to access some of the locations (such as a domain policy) where it is being set. In this case you must get someone with the appropriate permissions to examine the policy information in the individual areas manually.
Checking the policy
Unix permissions set on the file. Teamprise cannot distinguish a "read-only" file from a "writable" file when this happens. This causes problems during check out and check in.
Workarounds
Run Teamprise client suite programs as a non-root user.
[mode permissions readonly read-only unix root administrator admin uid 0 ]
permissions.) Mac OS X software routinely sets the user immutable flag when setting files read-only. While Teamprise clients frequently set files read-only, clients do not set the user immutable bit by default to support legacy applications which do not understand
Feature Description
Teamprise users on Unix platforms may wish to store some Unix filesystem attributes with the files they check in to Team Foundation Server source control. For instance, you may wish designate a file in source control be made
[.tpattributes tpattributes executable execute symbolic link permissions mode chmod regular expression end-of-line EOL line endings symlink]
permissions in Team Foundation Server is fairly complicated, so if possible try your credentials from a known working Team Foundation Server client to ensure they are correct.
3. Check your system meets the requirements. For authentication to succeed you must