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Full Discussion: Access Control List
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Access Control List Post 302104061 by mpang_ on Tuesday 23rd of January 2007 07:14:00 AM
Old 01-23-2007
Access Control List

Hey all, I have a directory (own by user: b; group: grpB) which I want a user (user: a; group: grpA) to be able to read and execute from, I wonder if I should add user a to this particular directory's ACL or that I would add group grpB to user a's subgroup?

I would like to know the difference or exact when to use which option on this situation? I am quite confused by these concept.

Thanks in advance!
 

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newgrp(1)						      General Commands Manual							 newgrp(1)

NAME
newgrp - change effective group ID sg - execute command with different group ID SYNOPSIS
newgrp [-l] [group] sg group -c command DESCRIPTION
The newgrp command changes the user's real and effetive group ID by replacing the current shell with a new shell. A new shell is launched even if an error occours. A password is requested if the group has a password and the user is not listed in the group file as being a member of that group. The pass- word can be changed with the gpasswd(1) command. If the new effective group ID is not in the supplementary group list, newgrp will add the new group ID to the supplementary list, too. With no operands and options, newgrp changes the user's group IDs (real and effective) back to the group specified in password and group file. The sg command works like the newgrp command, except that it executes the given command with /bin/sh and upon exit the group ID of the cur- rent shell is not changed. OPTIONS
-l, --login reinitialize the environment as if the user logged in. --help Print a help list. -u, --usage Print a short usage message. -v, --version Print program version. SEE ALSO
gpasswd(1), group(5), passwd(1), passwd(5), su(1) AUTHOR
Thorsten Kukuk <kukuk@suse.de> pwdutils April 2004 newgrp(1)
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