The 'permission denied' is probably on the remote system, not yours. You are attempting to write to the root folder, which isn't going to work. Be sure to tell scp exactly where you want the file to end up.
In that light, the 'sudo' is probably superfluous. You don't seem to need special permissions on your local system, and don't get elevated permissions on the remote one anyway.
Also, chmod 777 is not the magic sledgehammer to fix all problems. Try chmod 660, unless you really want to keep a world-writable script executable hanging around.
Hello,
I'm sorry if this sounds like a very simple question, but I'm having some difficulty with it being a complete newbie to UNIx. I use Windows, and always have, but need some UNIX access for work, picking up files from our group space, etc.
Basically, I'm using Cygwin and can SSH into the... (3 Replies)
Hi. I'm sorry if I get on people's nerves asking this, but I don't really understand how to do this and unfortunately don't have the time to work through it step by step in books, etc.
At University, we have a unix server that hosts our files. we each have a login and password to access it. I... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I have about 90 servers that I need to update snmp configs. I am trying to write a script that will echo 4 new lines of text into the snmpd.conf file. I have tested it locally and it works when the server ssh into itself but when I try to run the script to ssh into a remote server it logs... (5 Replies)
Gentleman & Ladies,
Please make me feel like and novice and explain why this is not working?
I am attempting to ssh to a remote server via ssh and keys. I want to inject a file on the remote server with text.
I am not achieving this. I would like to echo/inject the text on the remote... (1 Reply)
how to login with ssh to remote system with out applying the remote root/user password
with rlogin we can ujse .rhosts file
but with ssh howits possible
plz guide (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have an shell script program in a remote linux machine which will do some specific monitoring functionality. Also, have some C executables in that machine.
From a windows machine, I want to run the shell script program (If possible using java).
I tried with SSH for this. but, in... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I'm hoping this is an easy question, but I'm having a weird problem trying to simply copy and paste text from MS Windows (XP) Notepad and then pasting into vi or vim in AIX. When I type "oslevel" I get "5.3.0.0". The problem is that once the text is pasted, there are sections of text... (2 Replies)
Can someone please help me with copying from remote computer to local computer? I have Winscp installed but for some reason i can seem to get into the server using winscp.
I am currently logged on to the server, so its not a case of remote host unavailable. I really am not sure if the syntax... (2 Replies)
Hi,
We all know as we can connect remote system through ssh without entering username and password by copy the public key to remote host using ssh-copy-id. But my query is to i want to restrict the user as do not implement this feature.Whenever he is trying to login, he has to enter his/her... (1 Reply)
I'm trying to setup a small home network environment as a pet project. These are physical machines nothing virtual. Any help or ideas is greatly appreciated.
I can ping between both machines and I have Samba established and can read/write different shares. When I try to SSH from Windows 8.1... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: lombardi4851
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
chmod
CHMOD(1) General Commands Manual CHMOD(1)NAME
chmod - change mode
SYNOPSIS
chmod [ -Rf ] mode file ...
DESCRIPTION
The mode of each named file is changed according to mode, which may be absolute or symbolic. An absolute mode is an octal number con-
structed from the OR of the following modes:
4000 set user ID on execution
2000 set group ID on execution
1000 sticky bit, see chmod(2)
0400 read by owner
0200 write by owner
0100 execute (search in directory) by owner
0070 read, write, execute (search) by group
0007 read, write, execute (search) by others
A symbolic mode has the form:
[who] op permission [op permission] ...
The who part is a combination of the letters u (for user's permissions), g (group) and o (other). The letter a stands for all, or ugo. If
who is omitted, the default is a but the setting of the file creation mask (see umask(2)) is taken into account.
Op can be + to add permission to the file's mode, - to take away permission and = to assign permission absolutely (all other bits will be
reset).
Permission is any combination of the letters r (read), w (write), x (execute), X (set execute only if file is a directory or some other
execute bit is set), s (set owner or group id) and t (save text - sticky). Letters u, g, or o indicate that permission is to be taken from
the current mode. Omitting permission is only useful with = to take away all permissions.
When the -R option is given, chmod recursively descends its directory arguments setting the mode for each file as described above. When
symbolic links are encountered, their mode is not changed and they are not traversed.
If the -f option is given, chmod will not complain if it fails to change the mode on a file.
EXAMPLES
The first example denies write permission to others, the second makes a file executable by all if it is executable by anyone:
chmod o-w file
chmod +X file
Multiple symbolic modes separated by commas may be given. Operations are performed in the order specified. The letter s is only useful
with u or g.
Only the owner of a file (or the super-user) may change its mode.
SEE ALSO ls(1), chmod(2), stat(2), umask(2), chown(8)7th Edition May 22, 1986 CHMOD(1)