Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Granting user permission for public_html Post 302462888 by vbe on Friday 15th of October 2010 08:55:42 AM
Old 10-15-2010
On what OS are you?
I would not create users on a box just so they can access by http...

What http server are you using?
For instance, apache has htpasswd utility to create accounts to access http server ( and so there is no need to have unix accounts created...)
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

find a file or directory under public_html

Hi there, I have a quick question about the UNIX command find, if you can help me I will appreciate it... I am trying tho find a file which is under my 'public_html' directory. As I know, I am making the command > find ~ -name filename(or directory name) to find the file or directory... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: milhan
4 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Granting User Access

I have two users, user1 and defaultuser. Whenever i logon to my unix session from a remote machine i log into defaultuser. Inside this "defaultuser" i have some setup files that i need to run from the other user that i have created myself i.e. "user1". The problem is even granting the ownership of... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: awaismalik82
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

help with user permission

hi everyone. iīve been burning my head for a week now with this problem and i couldnīt find a solution. iīve been looking for an answer in this forum but nothing either. so i decided to ask. the thing is, i want to create a users with permission to kill just a group of users. i know how to write... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: lucasmarin
6 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

chmod for public_html ?

Hello! My web host has the public_html permission on my account set to 750. 1. Does this setting permit the world to use my submission forms (contained within contact.html and purchase_order.html)? 2. The "0" entry looks like it blocks the public from conducting all activity on my site.... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Texan
6 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

User permission

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)
Discussion started by: mr_bold
3 Replies

6. AIX

Granting folder access

Hello, I need to allow a user the ability to create files in a directory that is owned by another user/group. How can I do this? Thank you. AIX version: 5.3.0.0 ~David (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: dkranes
4 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

granting permission to file/directory to a specific user

hello, I would like to grant full access to a directory which is owned by root and the web application that created it. I have though of adding the permission to the whole world, but for security reason I would like to grant it to one more user. I have tried this 'chmod -U newUser+wrx... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: run123
2 Replies

8. Web Development

$_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] directs to /var/www not ~/public_html

Hi all, Exactly like my title says. I am learning PHP and MySQL and I used to use /var/www/ to host (contain or store) my files (.htm/.php) for testing. I could configure, finally, apache2 to use ~/public_html instead. Now I when I tried to use $_SERVER it still directs (I used echo to show... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: faizlo
7 Replies

9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Granting access to specific user on a 700 file

Hello, I have a a directory dir1 with permissions 700 (yes wantedly) and is owned by user1:group1 rwx------ user1 group1 dir1I need to give permissions to user2 (belongs to group2) on dir1 and its files, so I granted the permissions using setfacl ; instead of adding the user to groups and... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: karumudi7
3 Replies
MAKEKDEDOC(1)						     KDOC Documentation System						     MAKEKDEDOC(1)

NAME
makekdedoc -- Generates HTML documentation for KDE libraries using KDOC. SYNOPSIS
makekdedoc [--rule-file=<rulefile>] [--libdir=<libdir>] [--outputdir=<outputdir>] [--url=<url>] [--srcdir=<kdelibs src dir>] [--kdoc=<path to kdoc>] [<library>...] makekdedoc --help DESCRIPTION
This is a perl script that uses KDOC to generate documentation for kdelibs. A "rule" file is used to figure out the libraries to document, the order in which to document them and the libraries with which each one will be cross-referenced (eg kdeui uses -lkdecore). See "FILES" for more info. NOTE: The script assumes that you have already generated a Qt cross-reference using qt2kdoc[1]. OPTIONS
Defaults for each option are in square brackets. library... Specify the libraries to document. By default, all libraries defined by the rule file are documented. --outputdir <path>, -d <path> The directory where the output will be written. [`cwd`/srcdoc] --url <url>, -u <url> The base URL by which the generated docs will be accessed. For example, if your web server is configured to use $HOME/public_html for your home page, you could set the outputdir to $HOME/public_html/srcdoc and the url to http://myhost/~mylogin/srcdoc. [output dir] --rule-file <path>, -r <path> The path to the rule file to use for generating the documentation. [<srcdir>/kdoc.rules] --libdir <path>, -L <path> The directory in which the KDOC cross-reference files are stored. [$KDOCLIBS if set, otherwise $HOME/.kdoc] --kdoc <path>, -k <path> The path to the kdoc program. [kdoc] --kdocopt <options>, -p <options> Extra options to be passed to kdoc. --srcdir <path>, -b <path> The path to the kdelibs source, eg "$HOME/baseline/kdelibs". [`cwd`] --help, -h Quit with a usage message. EXAMPLES
makekdedoc --srcdir $HOME/baseline/kdelibs --outputdir $HOME/public_html/src/kdelibs/ --url "http://www.ph.unimelb.edu.au/~ssk/src/kdelibs" FILES
Rule file This file lists the directories in the source directory to document. It also lists the files to document from each directory, and the libraries with which to cross-reference the generated documentation. Here is a small example that documents two libraries and links the second to the first. # makekdedoc rule file doc_MODULES = eenie meenie # rules for eenie eenie_FILES = *.h eenie_LIBS = -lqt # rules for meenie meenie_FILES = a.h b.h meenie_LIBS = -leenie -lqt In this example, all files in "eenie/*.h" will be documented then two files from "meenie/" will be documented, in the order declared in "doc_MODULES". SEE ALSO
See kdoc[1] and qt2kdoc[1]. VERSION
makekdedoc $Revision: 1.2 $ AUTHOR
The script and this documentation were written by Sirtaj Singh Kang <taj@kde.org> in April 1999. 2.0a54 2000-10-10 MAKEKDEDOC(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:20 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy