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Home/ Questions/Q 7619999
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 31, 20262026-05-31T03:49:54+00:00 2026-05-31T03:49:54+00:00

(This may be better suited to ServerFault – if so please migrate it!) We

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(This may be better suited to ServerFault – if so please migrate it!)

We recently upgraded servers from Windows 2003 to Windows 2008. We have now been getting reports that certain PDF files which are dynamically generated are giving “access is denied” messages. I’ve verified that the folder has “Full Control” to the user group that is being utilized, yet it seems that intermittently files are created without inheriting the parent permissions.

For instance, the parent folder is called Paperwork. The “Users” group is set up to have full control to all files and subfolders within that directory. This works 95% of the time. Once in a while, though, a file will be created and when I view the security permission for that file, the “Users” group does not have Full Control access.

Is there something programmatic that needs to be changed for Windows Server 2008, or is this a configuration issue on the server itself?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-31T03:49:55+00:00Added an answer on May 31, 2026 at 3:49 am

    take a look at this

    enter image description here

    try this :

     private DirectorySecurity GetDirectorySecurity(string owner)
        {
            const string LOG_SOURCE = "GetDirectorySecurity";
            DirectorySecurity ds = new DirectorySecurity();
    
            System.Security.Principal.NTAccount ownerAccount =
                new System.Security.Principal.NTAccount(owner);
    
            ds.SetOwner(ownerAccount);
    
            ds.AddAccessRule(
                new FileSystemAccessRule(owner,
                FileSystemRights.FullControl,
                InheritanceFlags.ObjectInherit, 
                PropagationFlags.InheritOnly,
                AccessControlType.Allow));
    
            //AdminUsers is a List<string> that contains a list from configuration
            //  That represents the admins who should be allowed
            foreach (string adminUser in AdminUsers)
            {
                ds.AddAccessRule(
                    new FileSystemAccessRule(adminUser,
                    FileSystemRights.FullControl,
                    InheritanceFlags.ObjectInherit,
                    PropagationFlags.InheritOnly,
                    AccessControlType.Allow));
            }
            return ds;
        }
    

    ref :
    File permissions do not inherit directory permissions

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