-In Linux, the share is created with the acl "Everyone:F" by default, meaning that everyone have read access. This however isn't the full truth: Any access control on the underlaying filesystem supersedes this.
+In Linux, the share is created with the ACL (Access Control List) "Everyone:F" ("F" stands for "full permissions", ie. read and write permissions) and no guest access (which means samba must be able to authenticate a real user, system passwd/shadow, ldap or smbpasswd based) by default. This means that any additional access control (dissalow specific user specific access etc) must be done on the underlaying filesystem.
+.sp
+.in +2
+Example to mount a SMB filesystem shared through ZFS (share/tmp):
+.mk
+Note that a user and his/her password \fBmust\fR be given!
+.sp
+.in +2
+smbmount //127.0.0.1/share_tmp /mnt/tmp -o user=workgroup/turbo,password=obrut,uid=1000
+.in -2
+.in -2