Hi,
I need to change my umask from 22 to 0022. FreeBSD 5.4 has different way of looking at 22 and 0022. Untill 4.11 stable 022 and 0022 were same. Can anyone help me?
Thanks in advance.
Jimmy (0 Replies)
hi, am new to AIX.
i have an issue. iam asked to change the umask setting on a logon script on a server to prevent writable files. i logged in as the root user and typed in umask and it displays 022, which i believe is 755 for direc and 644 for files.
1) how to I identify where the logon script... (2 Replies)
I was asked to change the daemon umask on my RHEL4 machine.
so, i changed the /etc/init.d/functions file.
Does this take effect right away? I dont think it does, how can i get it to take affect without rebooting? (1 Reply)
dear all,
i'm trying to set the default permission using umask commnd. i'm using bash shell and the permission of the .bash_profile file is
-rwxr-x--- 1 tdmscrdr dba 370 Nov 7 12:21 .bash_profile
but still i'm not able to change the default permissiom.
in the .bash_profile... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have an ftp account which is used for transferring files to a UNIX box.
eventhough the permissions on the source box for the files are 777, when it reaches the destination node via this ftp transfer the permissions is getting changed to -rw-r-----
can someone please help me?
umask... (3 Replies)
How can we set the Sticky bit in the umask itself. Please help me :confused:
I tried to set like umask 1000 but when I run umask, the value of umask is 00 (0 Replies)
Hello everyone,
I want to set my properties of my profile to umask 022 by default. I have an idea that i need to make the change in .profile file. Can you please help me, on how would i be able to set it.
Thanks,
Abhishek S. (4 Replies)
I've got a number of people sending files to me in different directory structures, and users on many different groups who need access to these incoming paths.
My problem is that umask assumes a default of 666 for files. No execute bit, meaning that my users can't even see the incoming folders.... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have set below option in following file /etc/inetd.conf in AIX.
ftp stream tcp6 nowait root /usr/sbin/ftpd ftpd -u 2
But still it created the file with permission (640):
-rw-r----- 1 ftptosas ftpusrg 6091 Jul 28 12:23 diff_061920.txt
Required permission... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mageshpsv01
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
bup-ftp
bup-ftp(1) General Commands Manual bup-ftp(1)NAME
bup-ftp - ftp-like client for navigating bup repositories
SYNOPSIS
bup ftp
DESCRIPTION
bup ftp is a command-line tool for navigating bup repositories. It has commands similar to the Unix ftp(1) command. The file hierarchy is
the same as that shown by bup-fuse(1) and bup-ls(1).
Note: if your system has the python-readline library installed, you can use the <tab> key to complete filenames while navigating your
backup data. This will save you a lot of typing.
COMMANDS
The following commands are available inside bup ftp:
ls [-s] [-a] [path]
print the contents of a directory. If no path argument is given, the current directory's contents are listed. If -a is given, also
include hidden files (files which start with a . character). If -s is given, each file is displayed with its hash from the bup ar-
chive to its left.
cd dirname
change to a different working directory
pwd print the path of the current working directory
cat filenames...
print the contents of one or more files to stdout
get filename localname
download the contents of filename and save it to disk as localname. If localname is omitted, uses filename as the local name.
mget filenames...
download the contents of the given filenames and stores them to disk under the same names. The filenames may contain Unix filename
globs (*, ?, etc.)
help print a list of available commands
quit exit the bup ftp client
EXAMPLE
$ bup ftp
bup> ls
mybackup/ yourbackup/
bup> cd mybackup/
bup> ls
2010-02-05-185507@ 2010-02-05-185508@ latest@
bup> cd latest/
bup> ls
(...etc...)
bup> get myfile
Saving 'myfile'
bup> quit
SEE ALSO bup-fuse(1), bup-ls(1), bup-save(1), bup-restore(1)BUP
Part of the bup(1) suite.
AUTHORS
Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>.
Bup unknown-bup-ftp(1)