Re: Folder Structure - Best practice???
On Jul 24, 3:56 pm, "Lanwench [MVP - Exchange]"
<lanwe...@heybuddy.donotsendme.unsolicitedmailatyahoo.com> wrote:
> John <round...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Can anyone share how they've setup their corporate folder structures?
> > I'm looking for ideas on how to simplify and reduce administrative
> > overhead. Userfolders, Departmental folders, shared areas, etc.
> > thanks in advance.
>
> It's hard to say, given that companies have different needs. Some companies
> want to all users to share/access everything - some want departments and
> groups to have only their own folder.
>
> As far as simplified administration is concerned, it's got more to do with
> your AD group structure than the file/folder hierarchy on your server,
> really. Do stuff with groups (not users) and keep things simple. You can
> nest AD security groups within other groups, remember.
>
> Here's an example ....
>
> 1. Home directories (\\server\home$\%username%)
> 2. Management folder (\\server\management$)
> 3. Accounting folder (\\server\accounting$)
> 4. General shared data folder (\\server\shared$)
> 5. Software images,drivers, etc (\\server\distrib$)
>
> On the server, that might look like
>
> E:\Data
> |--Home
> |--Management
> |--Accounting
> |--Shared
> |--Distrib
>
> Share security = everyone, full control
>
> Folder-level security is via AD groups.
> I disable inheritence on the E:\DATA folder so everything's customized per
> folder.
> Administrators & system have full rights to everything.
> I don't use Domain Users for anything; I create Companyname Users for
> general permissions, and Companyname Management, Companyname Accounting, as
> security groups...and the most any of those ever get is Modify (and for the
> distrib folder, read&execute only).
>
> Your mileage may vary, but the above has worked for me, for years.
>
> The only general piece of advice I can give is, don't set up shares/folders
> that have different security requirements on their subfolders. E.g., don't
> get into the business of denying access to S:\Subfolder1 and S:\Subfolder2
> if the whole company has access to the S/parent drive. It can quickly become
> a nightmare.
Great reply... thanks for your time!