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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Reset Permission Of Files and Folder Post 302945253 by Corona688 on Wednesday 27th of May 2015 03:05:36 PM
Old 05-27-2015
He can hardly run find if he can't run anything else. Whether he has a session open already doesn't matter.

Your advice is suspect in any case. There's many very important things in /bin/ which will not work with 755 permissions, such as logins.

Either restore from backup, reinstall from scratch, or craft an executable to set executable bits from raw assembly language and claw your way out from there.

And next time, grant more permissions to your user user instead of trying to chmod an entire filesystem to them.
 

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GZEXE(1)						      General Commands Manual							  GZEXE(1)

NAME
gzexe - compress executable files in place SYNOPSIS
gzexe [ name ... ] DESCRIPTION
The gzexe utility allows you to compress executables in place and have them automatically uncompress and execute when you run them (at a penalty in performance). For example if you execute ``gzexe /bin/cat'' it will create the following two files: -r-xr-xr-x 1 root bin 9644 Feb 11 11:16 /bin/cat -r-xr-xr-x 1 bin bin 24576 Nov 23 13:21 /bin/cat~ /bin/cat~ is the original file and /bin/cat is the self-uncompressing executable file. You can remove /bin/cat~ once you are sure that /bin/cat works properly. This utility is most useful on systems with very small disks. OPTIONS
-d Decompress the given executables instead of compressing them. SEE ALSO
gzip(1), znew(1), zmore(1), zcmp(1), zforce(1) CAVEATS
The compressed executable is a shell script. This may create some security holes. In particular, the compressed executable relies on the PATH environment variable to find gzip and some other utilities (tail, chmod, ln, sleep). BUGS
gzexe attempts to retain the original file attributes on the compressed executable, but you may have to fix them manually in some cases, using chmod or chown. GZEXE(1)
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