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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Unmask Post 302241709 by era on Tuesday 30th of September 2008 03:50:48 AM
Old 09-30-2008
Actually the default mode depends on the program which creates the file; often it's 666 minus umask or 644 minus umask. Very rarely does a program attempt to create a file with the executable bit set.
 

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MKFIFO(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						 MKFIFO(1)

NAME
mkfifo -- make fifos SYNOPSIS
mkfifo [-m mode] fifo_name ... DESCRIPTION
mkfifo creates the fifos requested, in the order specified. By default, the resulting fifos have mode 0666 (rw-rw-rw-), limited by the cur- rent umask(2). The options are as follows: -m Set the file permission bits of newly-created fifos to mode, without respect to the current umask. The mode is specified as in chmod(1). In symbolic mode strings, the ``+'' and ``-'' operators are interpreted relative to an assumed initial mode of ``a=rw'' mkfifo requires write permission in the parent directory. mkfifo exits with 0 if successful, and with >0 if an error occurred. LEGACY DESCRIPTION
In legacy mode, the fifo's file permission bits are always limited by the current umask. For more information about legacy mode, see compat(5). SEE ALSO
mkdir(1), rm(1), umask(1), mkfifo(2), umask(2), compat(5), mknod(8) STANDARDS
The mkfifo utility is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2-1992 (``POSIX.2'') compliant. HISTORY
mkfifo command appeared in 4.4BSD. 4.4BSD January 5, 1994 4.4BSD
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