If you're on a platform that supports the syntax, a minute change will make it run much faster by putting as many arguments into chmod at once as it safely allows:
Ok, listen.........I was using FTP Works to remove and add some files to a domain server. I messed with chmod button and made it so that no-one could access or their browsers could execute files and 2 or three certain directories. If anyone knows how to use this command and will give me a heads up... (2 Replies)
I am working on a new UNIX box that has been delivered to us, and noticed that the /home directory has 555 permissions on it (dr-xr-xr-x). Any attempt to create write permissions fails on this directory (such as chmod 777), responding only with a message;
chmod: WARNING: can't change home
... (3 Replies)
Hey everyone, I was wondering if there was a quicker way to chmod a lot of files than doing what im currently doing.
At the moment, im doing chmod 777 *filename* - but I have a lot of files, sub-directories, sub-files etc etc. And at the moment I see I have to chmod every single file... (3 Replies)
i am unable to write to some .php files in the following directory:
drwxr-xr-x 3 headroom max 448 Jun 6 2004 Docs
i already tried this:
chmod +777 Docs
chmod: changing permissions of `Docs': Operation not permitted
thanks for your help! (2 Replies)
I was attempting to change permissions on a directory, used a 'chmod -rwrwrw DirectoryName' command, and hit enter. Now, that directory shows that it's empty! How could this be? Any Ideas?
Thanks (1 Reply)
This is Solaris 10, by the way.
I am aware of ACLs or something like that in Solaris 10 where you can change who can access directories and such that goes beyond the standard permisisons (chmod and rwxrwxrwx).
Although I thought when these were being used, the permissions listing would show a... (12 Replies)
Hi I tried to use chmod in unix to change my file's permission.
chmod 701 hello.cgi
And it did change my desired file's permission. Yet, the name of the file is changed to hello.cgi* . And therefore I cannot compile it after that. So, I just wondering why there is an extra '*' in the file's... (2 Replies)
does anyone know how to exclude a directory with chown or chmod?
im trying to do something like this
chown $username:$username $directory/*
chown $username:$username $directory/.*
chown $username:$username $directory
and
find $directory/* -type f -exec... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vanessafan99
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
rmdirp
mkdirp(3G)mkdirp(3G)NAME
mkdirp(), rmdirp() - create, remove directories in a path
SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION
creates all the missing directories in the given path with the given mode (see chmod(2) for the values of mode.) The protection part of
the mode argument is modified by the process's file creation mask (see umask(2)).
rmdirp removes directories in path d. This removal starts at the end of the path and moves back toward the root as far as possible. If an
error occurs, the remaining path is stored in d1. returns a 0 only if it is able to remove every directory in the path.
To use these interfaces, link in the libgen library by specifying For example:
RETURN VALUE
If a needed directory cannot be created, returns -1 and sets to one of the error numbers. If all the directories are created, or existed
to begin with, it returns zero.
EXAMPLES WARNINGS
uses to allocate temporary space for the string.
returns if a "" or "" is in the path. It returns if an attempt is made to remove the current directory. If an error occurs other than one
of these two errors, returns
SEE ALSO chmod(2), mkdir(2), rmdir(2), umask(2), thread_safety(5).
mkdirp(3G)