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Full Discussion: Access Control
Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Access Control Post 40861 by davidg on Wednesday 24th of September 2003 11:32:45 AM
Old 09-24-2003
Hi,

There is :

root Userid 0
non-root Userid 1 <> 100
users Userid > 100

In fact only root will have more permissions. The rest is what you specify inside the application or with file ownership. I think you need to learn the unix basics starting at examine an "ls -l" and then understanding what is says.

Regs David
 

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SYSTEMD-CGLS(1) 						   systemd-cgls 						   SYSTEMD-CGLS(1)

NAME
systemd-cgls - Recursively show control group contents SYNOPSIS
systemd-cgls [OPTIONS...] [CGROUP...] DESCRIPTION
systemd-cgls recursively shows the contents of the selected Linux control group hierarchy in a tree. If arguments are specified, shows all member processes of the specified control groups plus all their subgroups and their members. The control groups may either be specified by their full file paths or are assumed in the systemd control group hierarchy. If no argument is specified and the current working directory is beneath the control group mount point /sys/fs/cgroup, shows the contents of the control group the working directory refers to. Otherwise, the full systemd control group hierarchy is shown. By default, empty control groups are not shown. OPTIONS
The following options are understood: -h, --help Prints a short help text and exits. --version Prints a short version string and exits. --no-pager Do not pipe output into a pager. --all Do not hide empty control groups in the output. -l, --full Do not ellipsize process tree members. -k Include kernel threads in output. -m MACHINE, --machine=MACHINE Limit control groups shown to the part corresponding to the container MACHINE. EXIT STATUS
On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise. SEE ALSO
systemd(1), systemctl(1), systemd-cgtop(1), systemd-nspawn(1), ps(1) systemd 208 SYSTEMD-CGLS(1)
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