It seems the admins have done that for me. I didn't realize that when I posted.
What remains is the problem of making everything in the directory group-writable automatically. I seem to remember that that's what I kept on forgetting when editing group web pages in the past (I just haven't done it in a while).
Is there a way to set the umask for a particular directory or something? Maybe along the lines of:
But how do I get that excecuted every time I log on to work on group web pages, but not when I log on to work on my personal web page? .bashrc won't work... It would have to be read after I cd to the directory :-/
Hello,
Another newbie here and here is my dilemma. I created an account for me on Solaris 8 and I added myself to the root group. But when I login using that account I am unable to do superuser tasks.. (add users, admintool, etc). What am I missing? Thanks in advance..
Andre (5 Replies)
Hi,
there is one strange situation with directory permissions that I run into every now and then, and now I face it a gain with a webserver.
Situation (example):
drwxrwsr-x 14 user www-data 4096 Jul 28 11:06 .
drwxr-xr-x 2 www-data www-data 4096 Jul 28 11:06 subdir
-rwxr-xr-x 1... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I'm in the process of writing a system (in Java) where a user can register to become a member of a website.
When they register, a collection of directories and files get created by the application.
For example if a user with the name 'fred' registered they would get the following
drwxr-xr-x... (0 Replies)
I was doing a little playing around with permissions on a 5.3 box in the office and wanted to make it so that it does not take root permission to delete a users home directory once they are deactivated or deleted in smit.
the default permissions are 755 with bin as both user and group
I noticed... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I've created a user named fwadmin, group named fwadmin and made the user belong to that group. I created the user and group using the 'User Manager' in Centos.
The user belongs to /etc/fw.Does this also mean that the group fwadmin belongs to /etc/fw. That is what I want.
But when I... (4 Replies)
I am a member of a few different user groups.
I would like to see what the difference is....
Can anyone tell me how to look at permissions side by side ?
We are using :
SunOS xxxxxx 5.10 Generic_127111-09 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-V440
Thanks ! (10 Replies)
Hi,
I am using Solaris 10 OS and Bash shell.Is there any way can we automate User creation and setting passwords through a script or any freeware tool.
Advance thanks for your response. (1 Reply)
I have a user who has had an id change. His old id was xl00 his new id b000999. Both id's are in group bauser. The user now cannot access his old files even though he is in the same group and permissions seem to be ok. See below, first 2 files he can't see, second two are no problem.
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dw82199
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cgconfigparser
CGCONFIGPARSER(8) libcgroup Manual CGCONFIGPARSER(8)NAME
cgconfigparser - setup control group file system
SYNOPSIS
cgconfigparser [-h] [-l <filename>] [-L <directory>] [...]
OPTIONS -h, --help
Displays help.
-l, --load=FILE
Parses the control groups configuration file Sets up the control group file system defined by the configuration file and mounts
mount points defined by the configuration file. The format of the file is described in cgconfig.conf. This option can be used mul-
tiple times and can be mixed with -L option.
-L, --load-directory=DIR
Finds all files in given directory and parses them in alphabetical order like they were specified by -l option. This option can be
used multiple times and can be mixed with -l option.
-a <agid>:<auid>
defines the default owner of the rest of the defined control group's files. These users are allowed to set subsystem parameters and
create subgroups. The default value is the same as has the parent cgroup.
-d, --dperm=mode
sets the default permissions of a control groups directory. The permissions needs to be specified as octal numbers e.g. -d 775.
-f, --fperm=mode
sets the default permissions of the control group files. The permissions needs to be specified as octal numbers e.g. -f 775. The
value is not used as given because the current owner's permissions are used as an umask (so 777 will set group and others permis-
sions to the owners permissions).
-s, --tperm=mode
sets the default permissions of the control group tasks files. The permissions needs to be specified as octal numbers e.g. -f 775.
The value is not used as given because the current owner's permissions are used as an umask (so 777 will set group and others per-
missions to the owners permissions).
-t <tuid>:<tgid>
defines the default owner of tasks file of the defined control group. I.e. this user and members of this group have write access to
the file.
SEE ALSO
cgconfig.conf (5)
Linux 2009-03-16 CGCONFIGPARSER(8)