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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting users who have un-sanctioned(forbidden) files in their home directory. Post 302521644 by catalint on Thursday 12th of May 2011 01:51:56 AM
Old 05-12-2011
But if the file was copied in the home directory by a user or by another program and its rights are very restrictive.
As I read "each file belongs to a specific user and group. Access to the files is controlled by user, group, and what is called other. The term, other, is used to refer to someone who is not the user (owner) of the file, nor is the person a member of the group the file belongs to. When talking about setting permissions for "other" users to use, it is commonly referred to as setting the world execute, read, or write bit since anyone in the world will be able to perform the operation if the permission is set in the other category. "

let's say that the user john belong to temp group and
in /export/home/john we have a file script.sh
-rw------- 1 root root 14233 Apr 24 10:32 script.sh

=> user john has NO rights to read/execute/modify script.sh file because the owner of the file is root and group also is root.

That's what I mean and the question is: is this possible to find out these kind of files for each user from /export/home?

Thanks.

regards,
catalin
 

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CHMOD(1)						      General Commands Manual							  CHMOD(1)

NAME
chmod - change mode SYNOPSIS
chmod mode file ... DESCRIPTION
The mode of each named file is changed according to mode, which may be an octal number or a symbolic change to the existing mode. A mode is an octal number constructed from the OR of the following modes. 0400 read by owner 0200 write by owner 0100 execute (search in directory) by owner 0070 read, write, execute (search) by group 0007 read, write, execute (search) by others A symbolic mode has the form: [who] op permission The who part is a combination of the letters u (for user's permissions), g (group) and o (other). The letter a stands for ugo. If who is omitted, the default is a. Op can be + to add permission to the file's mode, - to take away permission, and = to assign permission absolutely (all other bits will be reset). Permission is any combination of the letters r (read), w (write), x (execute), a (append only), and l (exclusive access). Only the owner of a file or the group leader of its group may change the file's mode. SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/chmod.c SEE ALSO
ls(1), stat(2), stat(5) CHMOD(1)
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