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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Generate list of directories that a user has access to Post 302793163 by DGPickett on Thursday 11th of April 2013 08:03:42 PM
Old 04-11-2013
You may want to catalog the permissions found on the system and then you can test a user against one file per permission set: bits, id, group, dir, flat file or other inode.

As root you can impersonate any user and runs a script checking permissions. Or, you can write something that filters the permissions for a user out. Some users may have multiple groups, of course.

The system may have files that they could access except that currently they have no permissions on the path. Are they a concern?
 

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FINDTAGS(1p)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					      FINDTAGS(1p)

NAME
findtags - find tags in Interchange catalogs and directories SYNOPSIS
findtags -a -d lib/UI findtags -a -d lib/UI -t -u findtags -a -u -t DESCRIPTION
Find tags in Interchange catalogs and directories -- intended to develop a list for TagInclude. WARNING: This is not 100%, for developing tag names from Variable definitions and other sources can fool it. If you include all directories, make sure you don't include documentation files or the usertags themselves. With the standard distribution, this should find just about all tags needed: findtags -a -d lib/UI To develop a TagInclude statement which excludes unused tags, try: findtags -a -d lib/UI -t -u If you don't want to use the UI, then do: findtags -a -u -t OPTIONS
-a Look in all catalogs. -c CAT Only look in catalog CAT. -d DIR1 DIR2 .... Look in given directories. -f FILE Use alternate interchange.cfg file FILE. -h Display help. -n Don't report system tags. -t Output suitable for TagInclude directive. -u Report unseen tags. -v Slightly verbose, report directories scanned. -x DIR1 DIR2 .... Exclude given directories from scanning. Default is session and tmp. perl v5.14.2 2012-01-23 FINDTAGS(1p)
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