Hi Forums,
It seems to me that I can't use "su" command. When I type "su", I get the following message:
/sbin/su - Permission denied
Am I missing any thing?
By the way I am using IRIX6.5 on a SGI computer. Many thanks in advance for your help.
Cheers, Siavoush (12 Replies)
Ok heres the situation
I've been studying Solaris 8 for about 6 months now and some things click in my head but others don't.
One of the things that don't click are file permissions.
For example I login at work and I use the ls -l command to get a long listing of the files w/ the permissions.... (2 Replies)
Is it possible to set owner to a group? I need to have a group own a process, because there will be 3 diffrent persons that will start and stop this process. They can not use the same users cause och back logging. we need to know who end when a certian user start/stops processes. (1 Reply)
Hi,
When I listed one directory in Sun, it showed that :
-rwsr-xr-x 1 root bsmbin 78004 Oct 21 2004 bsmprsm
I don't know meaning of the character "s" in "rws" above. I have searched in Sun admin documents but no result. Would you please explain it ? :)
Thank you so much. (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I created testuser. by following command.
/usr/sbin/adduser -n test -d /disk05/collections/GET/testdata/
and then set its password by following command.
passwd testuser
When I login to system by testuser, it enters everything is ok.
The problem is how to set permission to this... (3 Replies)
Pictures by worthamtx - Photobucket
The URL is graphic view my present concern. Old partition working great sdb1
both appear on nautilus, both deliver icons to desk top. Based on the label handling of gparted results I tried following with success
sudo mkdir /media/disk/data
sudo chown... (1 Reply)
I dont understand why permission changes are being such a pain in the bum even after I manually changed them through properties....Anyone know what to do here because even thoguh in properties the permissions make me local admin over in the Cygwin its not working..
... (5 Replies)
I am using korn shell
When I type in Telnet on cmd line, I get message
"cannot execute"
How can I get permission to execute command ? In which dir is telnet located ? I looked in /usr/bin dir. but its not there
Thanks (1 Reply)
Trying to get date into the txt file.
It says
Permission denied.
echo $(date +%I:%M:%S_%D) >> /tmp/systemd_suspend_test_err.txt
exec 2>> /tmp/systemd_suspend_test_err.txt
if ; then
# Do the thing you want before suspend here
echo "we are suspending $(date +%I:%M:%S_%D)."
elif ;... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: drew77
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT V7
chmod
CHMOD(1) General Commands Manual CHMOD(1)NAME
chmod - change mode
SYNOPSIS
chmod mode file ...
DESCRIPTION
The mode of each named file is changed according to mode, which may be absolute or symbolic. An absolute mode is an octal number con-
structed from the OR of the following modes:
4000 set user ID on execution
2000 set group ID on execution
1000 sticky bit, see chmod(2)
0400 read by owner
0200 write by owner
0100 execute (search in directory) by owner
0070 read, write, execute (search) by group
0007 read, write, execute (search) by others
A symbolic mode has the form:
[who] op permission [op permission] ...
The who part is a combination of the letters u (for user's permissions), g (group) and o (other). The letter a stands for ugo. If who is
omitted, the default is a but the setting of the file creation mask (see umask(2)) is taken into account.
Op can be + to add permission to the file's mode, - to take away permission and = to assign permission absolutely (all other bits will be
reset).
Permission is any combination of the letters r (read), w (write), x (execute), s (set owner or group id) and t (save text - sticky). Let-
ters u, g or o indicate that permission is to be taken from the current mode. Omitting permission is only useful with = to take away all
permissions.
The first example denies write permission to others, the second makes a file executable:
chmod o-w file
chmod +x file
Multiple symbolic modes separated by commas may be given. Operations are performed in the order specified. The letter s is only useful
with u or g.
Only the owner of a file (or the super-user) may change its mode.
SEE ALSO ls(1), chmod(2), chown (1), stat(2), umask(2)CHMOD(1)