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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Automate setting of group permissions Post 302515123 by mregine on Tuesday 19th of April 2011 06:11:18 AM
Old 04-19-2011
Automate setting of group permissions

What would be a practical way of making sure files I upload to/edit in a particular directory on a server always have the correct group permissions?

I'm forgetful, so I try to automate things like chgrp'ing the files when I'm done. I could write a script to be run by cron. Is that the only way, or are there any options/variables I can use with ssh and scp so that files created by my user automatically have the right group and permissions?

Note: Files should belong to a certain group if they are located in a certain directory, but elsewhere on the server, they should belong to my primary group.

(The story: This is a web server on which I have my personal homepage and on which there are also areas which need to be editable by the whole department. The admins have created a group for that, www-ourdept. How do I avoid forgetting to chgrp/chown the stuff after I'm done? Apart from using a post-it as reminder on the monitor of my PC, of course.)
 

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DH_FIXPERMS(1)							     Debhelper							    DH_FIXPERMS(1)

NAME
dh_fixperms - fix permissions of files in package build directories SYNOPSIS
dh_fixperms [debhelperoptions] [-Xitem] DESCRIPTION
dh_fixperms is a debhelper program that is responsible for setting the permissions of files and directories in package build directories to a sane state -- a state that complies with Debian policy. dh_fixperms makes all files in usr/share/doc in the package build directory (excluding files in the examples/ directory) be mode 644. It also changes the permissions of all man pages to mode 644. It removes group and other write permission from all files. It removes execute permissions from any libraries, headers, Perl modules, or desktop files that have it set. It makes all files in the standard bin and sbin directories, usr/games/ and etc/init.d executable (since v4). Finally, it removes the setuid and setgid bits from all files in the package. When the Rules-Requires-Root field has the (effective) value of binary-targets, dh_fixperms will also reset the ownership of all paths to "root:root". OPTIONS
-Xitem, --exclude item Exclude files that contain item anywhere in their filename from having their permissions changed. You may use this option multiple times to build up a list of things to exclude. SEE ALSO
debhelper(7) This program is a part of debhelper. AUTHOR
Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org> 11.1.6ubuntu2 2018-05-10 DH_FIXPERMS(1)
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