What you're doing with X is a very bad idea. The value of $yourfolder will be subject to field splitting and pathname expansion after the unquoted expansion of $X. This could cause testing of an unintended pathname, or a syntax error in the resulting test/[ command.
Regards,
Alister
True.
Would be better..
@ mikerousse: Whats not working?
EDIT: Yes that is a good idea.
Why not make the output at the same time you're checking the file?
Or, append it (the message [file not available etc], not the info [read = xy]) to an output variable and print that at the end?
Can anyone help explain the "s" in the below permissions example. I was reading about the "sticky bit" (t) but I am a little confused.
On file "test"
wolf% chmod 4777 test
wolf% ls -l
total 4
drwx------ 2 john staff 512 Mar 19 21:34 nsmail
-rwsrwxrwx 1 john staff ... (2 Replies)
Hi everyone, I'm looking for some information concerning Unix permissions. I am new to Unix and am doing research for a graduate class. Given the permissions below, can anyone give me five unique exploits that would be available to a hacker/cracker given this configuaration?
-rw-rw-rw- 1... (1 Reply)
I saved a perl code in xemacs. I used an xterminal to execute it but unix said that I don't have permission. I saved the files in my home directory. How do I change the permission. This is hat unix said:
-ksh: ./names.pl: cannot execute (5 Replies)
Hey,
We've got quite a strange problem on our hands here. We are running an HP 9000/800 B.11.00.
I've just created a new group in /etc/group which i called, let's say newgroup . Then I added 4 users to the group, namely user1, user2, user3, user4 . The command grpchk shows no strange things... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am a Unix Admin. I have to give the permissions to a user for creating new file in a directory in HP-Ux 11.11 system since he cannot able to create a new file in the directory.
Thanks in advance.
Mike (3 Replies)
My /tmp is set with the following permissions (777) and a 't' at the end.
My umask is set to 022.
When I create a directory under /tmp (tmp/xx) it gets created as 755
as expected.
Yet when I create a file within that directory (/tmp/xx/yy) the permissions
are not 755 they are 644.
... (1 Reply)
Hi, I am creating a ksh script to search for a string of text inside files within a directory tree. Some of these file are going to be read/execute only. I know to use chmod to change the permissions of the file, but I want to preserve the original permissions after writing to the file. How can I... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have noticed that on my Linux box there is a nice feature which make it impossible for specified member (owner, group or other) to have an given access if a member from which we would expect it more don't have that access.
So it is impossible to read file by all if others have set read... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: DavidMax
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
rmf
rmf(1) General Commands Manual rmf(1)NAME
rmf - remove folder (only available within the message handling system, mh)
SYNOPSIS
rmf [+folder] [-help] [-[no]interactive]
OPTIONS
Prints a list of the valid options to this command. Asks for confirmation before deleting a folder. By default, rmf deletes a folder and
its messages without asking for confirmation. If you specify the -interactive option, rmf asks if you are sure before deleting the folder.
You are advised to use this option, since when rmf deletes a folder its contents are lost irretrievably.
DESCRIPTION
The rmf command removes all of the messages within the current folder, and then removes the folder itself. If there are any files within
the folder which are not part of MH, they are not removed, and an error message is displayed.
You can specify a folder other than the current folder by using the +folder argument. If you do not specify a folder, and rmf cannot find
the current folder,rmf asks you whether you want to delete +inbox instead.
If the current folder is removed, it makes +inbox current.
Note that the rmf command irreversibly deletes messages that do not have other links, so use it with caution.
If the folder being removed is a sub-folder, the parent folder becomes the new current folder, and rmf tells you that this has happened.
This provides an easy mechanism for selecting a set of messages, operating on the list, then removing the list and returning to the current
folder from which the list was extracted.
Using rmf to delete a read-only folder deletes the private sequence and current message information from the file, without affecting the
folder itself. If you have sub-folders within a folder, you must delete all the sub-folders before you can delete the folder itself.
PROFILE COMPONENTS
Path: To determine the user's Mail directory
EXAMPLES
This example shows how rmf asks for confirmation when the -interactive option is used: % rmf -interactive +test Remove folder "test"? y
FILES
The user profile.
SEE ALSO rmm(1)rmf(1)