No the rwx-rw-r ,octal format would be shown for this place,but other result from ls -l would be same.
Suppose
Octal format would replace drwxr-xr-x.The right side of the output would be same.
Can anyone tell me which is the equivalent command to
'stats' in ksh shell which discribes the file system?
Thanks in advance
Regards,
Im_new (6 Replies)
I'm on hp-unix. I would like a variable to hold the last change date of a file. I looked at the man pages for stat, but I don't see any examples and can't get the syntax right. Can anyone help me? Thank you. (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I want to check whether a file is not updated in last 15 minutes, for this i need to get timestamp of file, (yyyy:mm:dd:hh:mi:ss). I dont have access to STAT command :(.
Please suggest a program or command to do this .
Thanks,
Saravana (1 Reply)
To list file permission/access right in octal format, linux has a command 'stat'. For example, we can use the followin -
stat -c %a `find . -type f
Is there any equivalent command in AIX and HP-UX to give the same result as linux 'stat' command?
Please advice. (3 Replies)
i know this command does not exist in solaris. however, i read somewhere on this forum that basically everything the stat command provides in other oses can be obtained in solaris using the ls command.
i've searched the forum for a while now and i cant find the thread. does anyone know about... (1 Reply)
Die to what all operations, the "Modify" and "Change" values of stat output changes for a file.
I found, during editing a file, Change and Modify alters. When chmod'ing Change alters, while Modify doesnot alters. Is there more situations where these changes? (1 Reply)
Hi Experts,
I am here with very simple request:
#!bin/bash
a=`stat -c %y log1.csv`
echo $a
and this stat command returning value as
2013-08-11 05:42:10.000000000 -0400:
But I want to see in mm/dd/yyyy format?
any help is highly appreciated thank you
---------- Post... (9 Replies)
hello, I wanted to know which is the output of the stat command with a file, for example if I write on the terminal:
stat ./unix.pdf
i get the output:
754974726 6915670 -rwxrwxrwx 1 mbruno106 staff 0 90501 "Aug 13 13:26:02 2013" "Aug 13 13:26:02 2013" "Aug 13 13:26:02 2013" "Aug 13... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Marina2013
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
dpns-setacl
DPNS-SETACL(1) DPNS User Commands DPNS-SETACL(1)NAME
dpns-setacl - set DPNS directory/file access control lists
SYNOPSIS
dpns-setacl [-d] [-m] [-s] acl_entries path...
DESCRIPTION
dpns-setacl sets the Access Control List associated with a DPNS directory/file.
acl_entries is a comma separated list of entries. Each entry has colon separated fields: ACL type, id (uid or gid), permission. Only direc-
tories can have default ACL entries.
The entries look like:
user::perm
user:uid:perm
group::perm
group:gid:perm
mask:perm
other:perm
default:user::perm
default:user:uid:perm
default:group::perm
default:group:gid:perm
default:mask:perm
default:other:perm
The ACL type can be abbreviated to the first letter. The first "user" entry gives the permissions granted to the owner of the file. The
following "user" entries show the permissions granted to specific users, they are sorted in ascending order of uid. The first "group"
entry gives the permissions granted to the group owner of the file. The following "group" entries show the permissions granted to specific
groups, they are sorted in ascending order of gid. The "mask" entry is the maximum permission granted to specific users or groups. It
does not affect the "owner" and "other" permissions. The "mask" entry must be present if there are specific "user" or "group" entries.
"default" entries associated with a directory are inherited as access ACL by the files or sub-directories created in that directory. The
umask is not used. Sub-directories also inherit the default ACL as default ACL. As soon as there is one default ACL entry, the 3 default
ACL base entries (default user, default group, default other) must be present.
The entry processing conforms to the Posix 1003.1e draft standard 17.
The effective user ID of the process must match the owner of the file or the caller must have ADMIN privilege in the Cupv database.
path specifies the DPNS pathname. If path does not start with /, it is prefixed by the content of the DPNS_HOME environment variable.
uid can be given as the username or the corresponding numeric id.
gid can be given as the groupname or the corresponding numeric id.
perm can be expressed as a combination of characters rwx- or as a value between 0 and 7.
OPTIONS -d remove ACL entries. The "perm" field is ignored.
-m modify existing ACL entries or add new entries.
-s set the ACL entries. The complete set of ACL entries is replaced.
EXAMPLES
Let's create a directory:
dpns-mkdir /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d6
and add write permission for user bcouturi:
dpns-setacl -m u:bcouturi:rwx,m:rwx /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d6
Let's create a directory:
dpns-mkdir /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d7
and add default ACLs to it:
dpns-setacl -m d:u::7,d:g::7,d:o:5 /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d7
Let's check the resulting ACLs:
dpns-getacl /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d7
# file: /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d7
# owner: baud
# group: c3
user::rwx
group::r-x #effective:r-x
other::r-x
default:user::rwx
default:group::rwx
default:other::r-x
Let's create a sub-directory and check the resulting ACLs:
dpns-mkdir /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d7/d2
dpns-getacl /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d7/d2
# file: /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d7/d2
# owner: baud
# group: c3
user::rwx
group::rwx #effective:rwx
other::r-x
default:user::rwx
default:group::rwx
default:other::r-x
Let's create a file in the same directory and check the resulting ACLs:
dpns-touch /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d7/f2
dpns-getacl /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d7/f2
# file: /dpm/dteam/test/file.log/d7/f2
# owner: baud
# group: c3
user::rw-
group::rw- #effective:rw-
other::r--
EXIT STATUS
This program returns 0 if the operation was successful or >0 if the operation failed.
SEE ALSO Castor_limits(4), dpns_chmod(3), dpns_chown(3), Cupvlist(1)AUTHOR
LCG Grid Deployment Team
DPNS $Date: 2003/08/26 06:21:13 $ DPNS-SETACL(1)