![]() ![]() ![]() I’m interested to hear if people think the tree view for the results works, as every other permissions reporting app I have seen tends to just use a table format (i.e each permission entry is on its own row, so you have several rows for each directory). ![]() Please bear in mind that these screenshots are from extremely early in the development cycle – the final product may look quite different and there are plenty of things that still need work.ĮDIT: You can now find updated screenshots here This application will be useful in a number of different situations, from producing full reports of the permissions on your entire file server directory structure, to checking to see where a specific user/group is used in permissions entries and what they have access to (which will be easy thanks to the built in filtering options) It will be user friendly, modern, and easy to use – as well as being powerful and feature rich of course. In case you didn’t work it out from the name of the application, NTFS Permissions Reporter is an application that lets you query and report on the NTFS permissions assigned to directories on your file servers. I get quite a few emails asking when I’m going to be releasing the NTFS permissions reporting tool that I have had listed under the “Future Projects” section of my software page for some time… well, I finally started spending some time on this over the last few days and thought I would post a few screenshots and some basic details of what the application will be able to do.ĮDIT: The second BETA version can now be downloaded here: ![]()
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