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Full Discussion: sftp script file movement
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting sftp script file movement Post 302573010 by Corona688 on Saturday 12th of November 2011 10:45:36 AM
Old 11-12-2011
There is no "right permissions". What permissions you need depend entirely on what you want to do.

On a directory, 'x' permission allows people to cd into it, 'r' allows people to ls in it, and 'w' allows people to create or delete files. Read permission is 4, write permission is 2, execute permission is 1. Decide what permissions you want, add them up, and you get a number between 0 and 7 inclusive.

Do it three times. The last number applies to random passers by, the middle one applies to people in the group owning the dir, and the first applies to the actual user who owns the dir. Don't think about who you want to restrict -- think about who you need to allow, and grant nothing else.

Having done that, you have three digits, like 740. That gives full permissions to the owner, read and ls permission to the group, and nothing at all to anyone else.

For a temp folder or test folder, you'd also want to use the sticky bit, chmod u+s, on the directory itself. This changes how directory permissions work so that files can only be deleted by their owners, having simple write-permissions to the directory itself becomes no longer sufficient.
 

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STRMODE(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						STRMODE(3)

NAME
strmode -- convert inode status information into a symbolic string LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <string.h> void strmode(int mode, char *bp); DESCRIPTION
The strmode() function converts a file mode (the type and permission information associated with an inode, see stat(2)) into a symbolic string which is stored in the location referenced by bp. This stored string is eleven characters in length plus a trailing NUL. The first character is the inode type, and will be one of the following: - regular file b block special c character special d directory l symbolic link p fifo s socket w whiteout ? unknown inode type The next nine characters encode three sets of permissions, in three characters each. The first three characters are the permissions for the owner of the file, the second three for the group the file belongs to, and the third for the ``other'', or default, set of users. Permission checking is done as specifically as possible. If read permission is denied to the owner of a file in the first set of permis- sions, the owner of the file will not be able to read the file. This is true even if the owner is in the file's group and the group permis- sions allow reading or the ``other'' permissions allow reading. If the first character of the three character set is an ``r'', the file is readable for that set of users; if a dash ``-'', it is not read- able. If the second character of the three character set is a ``w'', the file is writable for that set of users; if a dash ``-'', it is not writable. The third character is the first of the following characters that apply: S If the character is part of the owner permissions and the file is not executable or the directory is not searchable by the owner, and the set-user-id bit is set. S If the character is part of the group permissions and the file is not executable or the directory is not searchable by the group, and the set-group-id bit is set. T If the character is part of the other permissions and the file is not executable or the directory is not searchable by others, and the ``sticky'' (S_ISVTX) bit is set. s If the character is part of the owner permissions and the file is executable or the directory searchable by the owner, and the set- user-id bit is set. s If the character is part of the group permissions and the file is executable or the directory searchable by the group, and the set- group-id bit is set. t If the character is part of the other permissions and the file is executable or the directory searchable by others, and the ``sticky'' (S_ISVTX) bit is set. x The file is executable or the directory is searchable. - None of the above apply. The last character will always be a space. SEE ALSO
chmod(1), find(1), stat(2), getmode(3), setmode(3) HISTORY
The strmode() function first appeared in 4.4BSD. BSD
July 28, 1994 BSD
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