Asking about the permission inherit from the parent directory
Asking about the permission inherit from the parent directory
I am running the web app with tomcat8, I did use umask 007 to set permission for folder which enable the sub files and folder inherit the permission from the parent directory, I was successful which some directories but the directories under the tomcat8/webapps did not inherit the permissions. Could you please suggest me other ways?
For example :
I set the permissions before running script to deploy the web app under tomcat8.
After running the script, it copy some files and directories to the folder1, folder2, backupfolder with the same permission with but it doesnt work with the tomcat8/webapps directory. Could anyone help me? Thank you!
Last edited by vbe; 11-14-2019 at 04:54 AM..
Reason: Typo
Hi, I'm new to unix -solaris.
I've just upgraded a third party software product and am testing
it to see if new files created in a test database directory were being created properly and they aren't. They're owned by the user that created the file, instead of poppa and the group of their files... (2 Replies)
In our file system, the SGID for a directory is set right now. Any new files created in this directory will automatically be assigned the same group from the parent directory.
Is there a way to inherit the file permission from the parent directory as well? The OS is Solaris 2.8.
Example:... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have an issue that's eating my head for few days. I would appreciate if anyone could help me out in this to resolve this.
In Solaris 8 container I am facing the below issue.
As oracle user when I do ls -l in /dboracle mountpoint getting permission denied error messages.
$ ls... (3 Replies)
Hi there,
I want to restrict a users account to only a subdirectory, but it does not seem to be working.
For example
/dir1/dir2/dir3/dir4
user A is only allowed to do things in dir4. the permission is 777.
i've set the permissions to 700 on dir3, dir2, and dir1 to prevent them from... (3 Replies)
Hi folks,
I have an query that is let say i have to search in an xml file an tag that is <abcdef> now this xml file is at /opt/usr/local so one fastest way to achieve this is go to this location by cd /opt/usr/local and then do grep like this... grep -i abcdef but for this I must know the... (4 Replies)
Hi.
My example:
I have a filesystem /log. Everyday, log files are copied to /log. I'd like to set owner and permission for files and directories in /log like that
chown -R log_adm /log/*
chmod -R 544 /log/*It's OK, but just at that time. When a new log file or new directory is created in /log,... (8 Replies)
Asking about the permission inherit from the parent directory
I am running the web app with tomcat8, I did use umask 007 to set permission for folder which enable the sub files and folder inherit the permission from the parent directory, I was successful which some directories but the directories... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: janecaongoc
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
mkdir
MKDIR(1) BSD General Commands Manual MKDIR(1)NAME
mkdir -- make directories
SYNOPSIS
mkdir [-p] [-m mode] directory_name ...
DESCRIPTION
mkdir creates the directories named as operands, in the order specified, using mode rwxrwxrwx (0777) as modified by the current umask(2).
The options are as follows:
-m Set the file permission bits of the final created directory to the specified mode. The mode argument can be in any of the formats
specified to the chmod(1) utility. If a symbolic mode is specified, the operation characters ``+'' and ``-'' are interpreted rela-
tive to an initial mode of ``a=rwx''.
-p Create intermediate directories as required. If this option is not specified, the full path prefix of each operand must already
exist. Intermediate directories are created with permission bits of rwxrwxrwx (0777) as modified by the current umask, plus write
and search permission for the owner. Do not consider it an error if the argument directory already exists.
The user must have write permission in the parent directory.
EXIT STATUS
mkdir exits 0 if successful, and >0 if an error occurred.
SEE ALSO chmod(1), rmdir(1), mkdir(2), umask(2)STANDARDS
The mkdir utility is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2 (``POSIX.2'') compatible.
BSD January 25, 1994 BSD