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Full Discussion: Unix Permissions
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Unix Permissions Post 302432757 by Scrutinizer on Saturday 26th of June 2010 04:30:21 PM
Old 06-26-2010
Hi amro1: If acl's would have been set on the directory, this would mean that user oracle would not be able to write to that directory even with permission 777, which contradicts the OP's information..
 

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LFC-MKDIR(1)							 LFC User Commands						      LFC-MKDIR(1)

NAME
lfc-mkdir - make LFC directory in the name server SYNOPSIS
lfc-mkdir [-m mode] [-p] path... DESCRIPTION
lfc-mkdir creates the specified LFC directories in the name server. This requires write permission in the parent directory. The owner ID and group ID of the new directories are set to the requestor's real user ID and group ID, respectively. path specifies the LFC pathname. If path does not start with /, it is prefixed by the content of the LFC_HOME environment variable. The lfc-mkdir command has the following options: -m specifies the mode to be used. Default mode is 777. -p creates all the non-existing parent directories first. The mode set for the created intermediate directories is the logical differ- ence between 0777 and the user umask but at least 0300. EXIT STATUS
This program returns 0 if the operation was successful or >0 if the operation failed. SEE ALSO
Castor_limits(4), lfc_chmod(3), lfc_mkdir(3), lfc_umask(3) AUTHOR
LCG Grid Deployment Team LFC
$Date: 2001/10/04 12:12:54 $ LFC-MKDIR(1)
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