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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Gather File permission during scripting on unix as numbers. Post 302227931 by james.witte on Friday 22nd of August 2008 08:59:35 AM
Old 08-22-2008
from what I read, ajilesh is wanting to see what the permissions are in a non-volatile way. I don't know how you do this in csh, but in ksh you can do this:

if [[ -x /usr/lib/sendmail ]] this is true if the user doing the condition, can execute /usr/lib/sendmail
if [[ -r /usr/lib/sendmail ]] this is true if the user doing the condition, can read /usr/lib/sendmail
if [[ -w /usr/lib/sendmail ]] this is true if the user doing the condition, can write /usr/lib/sendmail

but this only checks the permissions of the user performing the, in this case, if/then/else has those permissions. I do not know of any way to convert rwxrw-rw- to the octal 755 to then confirm you have the correct permissions on said file or directory. I have run into this same problem in my own scripting because the file I was checking on needed to be 766 and I was trying to track down when the permissions got changed so I could figure out what was changing the permissions, the only option I found was to ls -l <file> then pipe that into a grep on "rwxrw\-rw\-" to confirm (yes, \- is necessary to ensure it doesn't try to treat -rw as an option some how) it had the correct permissions.

while using chmod is a good suggestion, chmod sets the permissions without regard to the previous state.
 

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SMRSH(8)						      System Manager's Manual							  SMRSH(8)

NAME
smrsh - restricted shell for sendmail SYNOPSIS
smrsh -c command DESCRIPTION
The smrsh program is intended as a replacement for sh for use in the ``prog'' mailer in sendmail(8) configuration files. It sharply limits the commands that can be run using the ``|program'' syntax of sendmail in order to improve the over all security of your system. Briefly, even if a ``bad guy'' can get sendmail to run a program without going through an alias or forward file, smrsh limits the set of programs that he or she can execute. Briefly, smrsh limits programs to be in a single directory, by default /usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/ allowing the system administrator to choose the set of acceptable commands, and to the shell builtin commands ``exec'', ``exit'', and ``echo''. It also rejects any commands with the characters ``', `<', `>', `;', `$', `(', `)', ` ' (carriage return), or ` ' (newline) on the command line to prevent ``end run'' attacks. It allows ``||'' and ``&&'' to enable commands like: ``"|exec /usr/local/bin/filter || exit 75"'' Initial pathnames on programs are stripped, so forwarding to ``/usr/bin/vacation'', ``/usr/bin/vacation'', ``/home/server/mydir/bin/vaca- tion'', and ``vacation'' all actually forward to `/usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/vacation''. System administrators should be conservative about populating the /usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/ directory. For example, a reasonable additions is vacation(1), and the like. No matter how brow-beaten you may be, never include any shell or shell-like program (such as perl(1)) in the /usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/ directory. Note that this does not restrict the use of shell or perl scripts in the /usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/ directory (using the ``#!'' syntax); it simply disallows execution of arbitrary programs. Also, including mail filtering programs such as procmail(1) is a very bad idea. procmail(1) allows users to run arbitrary programs in their procmailrc(5). COMPILATION
Compilation should be trivial on most systems. You may need to use -DSMRSH_PATH="path" to adjust the default search path (defaults to ``/bin:/usr/bin'') and/or -DSMRSH_CMDDIR="dir" to change the default program directory (defaults to ``/usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/''). FILES
/usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/ - default directory for restricted programs on SuSE Linux SEE ALSO
sendmail(8) $Date: 2004/08/06 03:55:35 $ SMRSH(8)
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