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Full Discussion: cp -p and permissions
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers cp -p and permissions Post 19674 by Kelam_Magnus on Monday 15th of April 2002 12:27:05 PM
Old 04-15-2002
The -p option preserves the orignal ownership of the file and datestamp and group rights.

If you just want to change the file ownership and group as you copy it to the new directory, do this.

cp /tmp/file1 /usr/local/bin; chown root:sys file1
 

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explain_chown_or_die(3) 				     Library Functions Manual					   explain_chown_or_die(3)

NAME
explain_chown_or_die - change ownership of a file and report errors SYNOPSIS
#include <libexplain/chown.h> void explain_chown_or_die(const char *pathname, int owner, int group); DESCRIPTION
The explain_chown_or_die function is used to call the chown(2) system call. On failure an explanation will be printed to stderr, obtained from explain_chown(3), and then the process terminates by calling exit(EXIT_FAILURE). This function is intended to be used in a fashion similar to the following example: explain_chown_or_die(pathname, owner, group); pathname The pathname, exactly as to be passed to the chown(2) system call. owner The owner, exactly as to be passed to the chown(2) system call. group The group, exactly as to be passed to the chown(2) system call. Returns: This function only returns on success. On failure, prints an explanation and exits. SEE ALSO
chown(2) change ownership of a file explain_chown(3) explain chown(2) errors exit(2) terminate the calling process COPYRIGHT
libexplain version 0.52 Copyright (C) 2008 Peter Miller explain_chown_or_die(3)
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