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Full Discussion: permission on file
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers permission on file Post 302248308 by otheus on Friday 17th of October 2008 09:20:25 AM
Old 10-17-2008
You can't. You can create a group containing exactly two members: sourav and shovon. Then chgrp the file source.txt to this group (say, "g1"). Give the permissions you want for group membership, g+rw in this case. Make sure the group or other has permissions to read the directory in sourav. When you do an ls -gFxR sourav, you should see something like this:
Code:
drwxr-xr-x sourav users Today sourav/
-rwxrwx--- sourav g1    Today sourav/source.txt


Last edited by otheus; 10-17-2008 at 10:21 AM.. Reason: removed space
 

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GSHADOW(5)						   File Formats and Conversions 						GSHADOW(5)

NAME
gshadow - shadowed group file DESCRIPTION
/etc/gshadow contains the shadowed information for group accounts. This file must not be readable by regular users if password security is to be maintained. Each line of this file contains the following colon-separated fields: group name It must be a valid group name, which exist on the system. encrypted password Refer to crypt(3) for details on how this string is interpreted. If the password field contains some string that is not a valid result of crypt(3), for instance ! or *, users will not be able to use a unix password to access the group (but group members do not need the password). The password is used when a user who is not a member of the group wants to gain the permissions of this group (see newgrp(1)). This field may be empty, in which case only the group members can gain the group permissions. A password field which starts with an exclamation mark means that the password is locked. The remaining characters on the line represent the password field before the password was locked. This password supersedes any password specified in /etc/group. administrators It must be a comma-separated list of user names. Administrators can change the password or the members of the group. Administrators also have the same permissions as the members (see below). members It must be a comma-separated list of user names. Members can access the group without being prompted for a password. You should use the same list of users as in /etc/group. FILES
/etc/group Group account information. /etc/gshadow Secure group account information. SEE ALSO
gpasswd(5), group(5), grpck(8), grpconv(8), newgrp(1). shadow-utils 4.5 01/25/2018 GSHADOW(5)
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