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Full Discussion: Group permission not working
Operating Systems AIX Group permission not working Post 50648 by bbauerle on Wednesday 28th of April 2004 01:45:19 PM
Old 04-28-2004
Group permission not working

Please forgive me, but I am not a Unix expert. I'm supporting SAP r/3 and we are trying to run an external command from SAP to read a file at the unix level. When we perform the more command on the following two files, we are succesful in reading the bws file, but unsucessful in reading the bws1 file.

The user running the more command is sidadm. sidadm is defined in both the sapdata and siddata group. Any idea why we cannot read the second file?

-rw-r----- 1 txfer sapdata 9 Apr 23 20:16 bws
-rw-r----- 1 txfer siddata 9 Apr 23 20:21 bws1

If we change the owner of bws1 to sidadm, we can read the file. If we change the group to sapdata, we can read the file. Is it possible for a group to have 'corrupt' data in it?
 

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CHOWN(2)							System Calls Manual							  CHOWN(2)

NAME
chown - change owner and group of a file SYNOPSIS
int chown(const char *path, int owner, int group) DESCRIPTION
The file that is named by path has its owner and group changed as specified. Only the super-user may change the owner of the file, because if users were able to give files away, they could defeat file-space accounting procedures. The owner of the file may change the group to a group of which he is a member. On some systems, chown clears the set-user-id and set-group-id bits on the file to prevent accidental creation of set-user-id and set- group-id programs. RETURN VALUE
Zero is returned if the operation was successful; -1 is returned if an error occurs, with a more specific error code being placed in the global variable errno. ERRORS
Chown will fail and the file will be unchanged if: [ENOTDIR] A component of the path prefix is not a directory. [ENAMETOOLONG] The path name exceeds PATH_MAX characters. [ENOENT] The named file does not exist. [EACCES] Search permission is denied for a component of the path prefix. [ELOOP] Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating the pathname. (Minix-vmd) [EPERM] The effective user ID is not the super-user. [EROFS] The named file resides on a read-only file system. [EFAULT] Path points outside the process's allocated address space. [EIO] An I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to the file system. SEE ALSO
chown(8), chgrp(1), chmod(2). 4th Berkeley Distribution May 22, 1986 CHOWN(2)
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