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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Need Help Understanding a Unix Command Post 302092437 by BOFH on Monday 9th of October 2006 09:45:59 PM
Old 10-09-2006
Nope sorry. Bits being turned on are the read bits. If you look at a file (or directory) in unix, you see way on the left the permissions. You'll have 10 positions. The first one generally identifies a file as "directory" and you'll have a 'd' in that position (there are others but most of the time you won't have to deal with them). In the next three positions are the user bits and show what permissions the owner of the file has. Next three are the group bits which shows group permissions and the last three are the world bits which shows what everyone has access to.

Each octet is a simple binary number but is depicted with rwx. Read, Write and Execute. If you know binary, the end position when it's on is '1', the center one is '2' and the left one is '4'. So 777 is the same rwxrwxrwx. 755 is rwxr-xr-x, a more common permissions setting for a script and 644 (rw-r--r--) is more common for a data or text file.

Your first command is something like doing a chmod 444 . and then a chmod 222 logo.gif etc... Unfortunately if you have a file in a subdirectory that has 755 for a specific reason, running those chmod commands will that script (and it's probably a script) from running since the execute bit is now off. That's why you use the a+r and/or a+w switches vs 444 or 222. The scripts and data that have a specific permission for a reason will at least maintain that permission and if it doesn't already have read or write, it's modified to add that permission.

Make sense? I can try to be clearer. You can also go to google and do a search on "man chmod". Lots and lots of man pages on the 'net Smilie

Carl
 

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chmod(1)							   User Commands							  chmod(1)

NAME
chmod - change the permissions mode of a file SYNOPSIS
chmod [-fR] absolute-mode file... chmod [-fR] symbolic-mode-list file... DESCRIPTION
The chmod utility changes or assigns the mode of a file. The mode of a file specifies its permissions and other attributes. The mode may be absolute or symbolic. Absolute mode An absolute mode specification has the following format: chmod [options] absolute-mode file . . . where absolute-mode is specified using octal numbers nnnn defined as follows: n a number from 0 to 7. An absolute mode is constructed from the OR of any of the following modes: 4000 Set user ID on execution. 20#0 Set group ID on execution if # is 7, 5, 3, or 1. Enable mandatory locking if # is 6, 4, 2, or 0. For directories, files are created with BSD semantics for propagation of the group ID. With this option, files and subdi- rectories created in the directory inherit the group ID of the directory, rather than of the current process. For direc- tories, the set-gid bit may only be set or cleared by using symbolic mode. 1000 Turn on sticky bit. See chmod(2). 0400 Allow read by owner. 0200 Allow write by owner. 0100 Allow execute (search in directory) by owner. 0700 Allow read, write, and execute (search) by owner. 0040 Allow read by group. 0020 Allow write by group. 0010 Allow execute (search in directory) by group. 0070 Allow read, write, and execute (search) by group. 0004 Allow read by others. 0002 Allow write by others. 0001 Allow execute (search in directory) by others. 0007 Allow read, write, and execute (search) by others. For directories, the setgid bit cannot be set (or cleared) in absolute mode; it must be set (or cleared) in symbolic mode using g+s (or g- s). Symbolic mode A symbolic mode specification has the following format: chmod [options] symbolic-mode-list file . . . where symbolic-mode-list is a comma-separated list (with no intervening whitespace) of symbolic mode expressions of the form: [who] operator [permissions] Operations are performed in the order given. Multiple permissions letters following a single operator cause the corresponding operations to be performed simultaneously. who zero or more of the characters u, g, o, and a specifying whose permissions are to be changed or assigned: u user's permissions g group's permissions o others' permissions a all permissions (user, group, and other) If who is omitted, it defaults to a, but the setting of the file mode creation mask (see umask in sh(1) or csh(1) for more information) is taken into account. When who is omitted, chmod will not override the restrictions of your user mask. operator either +, -, or =, signifying how permissions are to be changed: + Add permissions. If permissions is omitted, nothing is added. If who is omitted, add the file mode bits represented by permissions, except for the those with corresponding bits in the file mode creation mask. If who is present, add the file mode bits represented by the permissions. - Take away permissions. If permissions is omitted, do nothing. If who is omitted, clear the file mode bits represented by permissions, except for those with corresponding bits in the file mode creation mask. If who is present, clear the file mode bits represented by permissions. = Assign permissions absolutely. If who is omitted, clear all file mode bits; if who is present, clear the file mode bits represented by who. If permissions is omitted, do nothing else. If who is omitted, add the file mode bits represented by permissions, except for the those with corresponding bits in the file mode creation mask. If who is present, add the file mode bits represented by permissions. Unlike other symbolic operations, = has an absolute effect in that it resets all other bits represented by who. Omitting permissions is useful only with = to take away all permissions. permission any compatible combination of the following letters: l mandatory locking r read permission s user or group set-ID t sticky bit w write permission x execute permission X execute permission if the file is a directory or if there is execute permission for one of the other user classes u,g,o indicate that permission is to be taken from the current user, group or other mode respectively. Permissions to a file may vary depending on your user identification number (UID) or group identification number (GID). Permissions are described in three sequences each having three characters: User Group Other rwx rwx rwx This example (user, group, and others all have permission to read, write, and execute a given file) demonstrates two cate- gories for granting permissions: the access class and the permissions themselves. The letter s is only meaningful with u or g, and t only works with u. Mandatory file and record locking (l) refers to a file's ability to have its reading or writing permissions locked while a program is accessing that file. In a directory which has the set-group-ID bit set (reflected as either -----s--- or -----l--- in the output of 'ls -ld'), files and subdirectories are created with the group-ID of the parent directory--not that of current process. It is not possible to permit group execution and enable a file to be locked on execution at the same time. In addition, it is not possible to turn on the set-group-ID bit and enable a file to be locked on execution at the same time. The following examples, therefore, are invalid and elicit error messages: chmod g+x,+l file chmod g+s,+l file Only the owner of a file or directory (or the super-user) may change that file's or directory's mode. Only the super-user may set the sticky bit on a non-directory file. If you are not super-user, chmod will mask the sticky-bit but will not return an error. In order to turn on a file's set-group-ID bit, your own group ID must correspond to the file's and group execution must be set. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -f Force. chmod will not complain if it fails to change the mode of a file. -R Recursively descends through directory arguments, setting the mode for each file as described above. When symbolic links are encountered, the mode of the target file is changed, but no recursion takes place. OPERANDS
The following operands are supported: absolute-mode Represents the change to be made to the file mode bits of each file named by one of the file operands. See Absolute Mode symbolic-mode-liand Symbolic Mode above in the DESCRIPTION section for more information. file A path name of a file whose file mode bits are to be modified. USAGE
See largefile(5) for the description of the behavior of chmod when encountering files greater than or equal to 2 Gbyte ( 2**31 bytes). EXAMPLES
Example 1: Denying execute permission to everyone example% chmod a-x file Example 2: Allowing only read permission to everyone example% chmod 444 file Example 3: Making a file readable and writable by the group and others example% chmod go+rw file example% chmod 066 file Example 4: Causing a file to be locked during access example% chmod +l file Example 5: Allowing everyone to read, write, and execute the file and turn on the set group-ID example% chmod a=rwx,g+s file example% chmod 2777 file ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
See environ(5) for descriptions of the following environment variables that affect the execution of chmod: LANG, LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, LC_MES- SAGES, and NLSPATH. EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 Successful completion. >0 An error occurred. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |CSI |enabled | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Standard | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
getfacl(1), ls(1), setfacl(1), chmod(2), attributes(5), environ(5), largefile(5), standards(5) NOTES
Absolute changes do not work for the set-group-ID bit of a directory. You must use g+s or g-s. chmod permits you to produce useless modes so long as they are not illegal (for instance, making a text file executable). chmod does not check the file type to see if mandatory locking is meaningful. If the filesystem is mounted with the nosuid option, setuid execution is not allowed. If you use chmod to change the file group owner permissions on a file with ACL entries, both the file group owner permissions and the ACL mask are changed to the new permissions. Be aware that the new ACL mask permissions may change the effective permissions for additional users and groups who have ACL entries on the file. Use the getfacl(1) command to make sure the appropriate permissions are set for all ACL entries. SunOS 5.10 4 Dec 2000 chmod(1)
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