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Operating Systems Solaris Giving read write permission to user for specific directories and sub directories. Post 303018592 by jim mcnamara on Monday 11th of June 2018 09:07:11 AM
Old 06-11-2018
Hmm. chmod -R and chown -r are recursive and will work down from the directory on the command line on down. Also check out chgrp.

Anyway - with your restrictions you have some choices.

Some example choices:
For a single user you could create a unique group, just for the one person, and assign file permissions allowing that group access.

Create a sudo access privileged account and grant the user access that way ie., temporarily change the user, not the group.

Change ownership or group permissions of the file tree

Use RBAC and grant the user a role. Defining the role for the first time is not trivial, but is probably your best choice.

So, we need a lot more information -- FWIW why no ACL's? they would work easily.

Last edited by jim mcnamara; 06-11-2018 at 10:13 AM..
 

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RM(1)							      General Commands Manual							     RM(1)

NAME
rm, rmdir - remove (unlink) files or directories SYNOPSIS
rm [ -f ] [ -r ] [ -i ] [ - ] file ... rmdir dir ... DESCRIPTION
Rm removes the entries for one or more files from a directory. If an entry was the last link to the file, the file is destroyed. Removal of a file requires write permission in its directory, but neither read nor write permission on the file itself. If a file has no write permission and the standard input is a terminal, its permissions are printed and a line is read from the standard input. If that line begins with `y' the file is deleted, otherwise the file remains. No questions are asked and no errors are reported when the -f (force) option is given. If a designated file is a directory, an error comment is printed unless the optional argument -r has been used. In that case, rm recur- sively deletes the entire contents of the specified directory, and the directory itself. If the -i (interactive) option is in effect, rm asks whether to delete each file, and, under -r, whether to examine each directory. The null option - indicates that all the arguments following it are to be treated as file names. This allows the specification of file names starting with a minus. Rmdir removes entries for the named directories, which must be empty. SEE ALSO
rm(1), unlink(2), rmdir(2) 4th Berkeley Distribution April 29, 1985 RM(1)
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