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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Does UNIX-Chmod in windows exist? Post 83877 by caddyjoe77 on Tuesday 20th of September 2005 12:41:24 PM
Old 09-20-2005
There is no 666 per se in Windows, but have you tried giving the file the following attributes? Read, Write, Execute? Your NT Admins should know how to do this..
 

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mkdir(2)							System Calls Manual							  mkdir(2)

NAME
mkdir - make a directory file SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
The system call creates a new directory file named by path. The file permission bits of the new directory are initialized from mode, and are modified by the process's file mode creation mask. For each bit set in the process's file mode creation mask, the corresponding bit in the new directory's mode is cleared (see umask(2)). The directory's owner ID is set to the process's effective-user-ID. If the set-group-ID bit of the parent directory is set, the direc- tory's group ID is set to the group ID of the parent directory. Otherwise, the directory's group ID is set to the process's effective- group-ID. The set-group-ID bit of the new directory is set to the same value as the set-group-ID bit of the parent directory. Symbolic constants defining the access permission bits are found in the header and are used to construct the argument mode. The value of the argument mode is the bitwise inclusive OR of the values of the desired permissions. Read by owner. Write by owner. Execute (search) by owner. Read by group. Write by group. Execute (search) by group. Read by others (that is, anybody else). Write by others. Execute (search) by others. Access Control Lists - HFS File Systems Only On HFS file systems implementing access control lists, the directory is created with three base ACL entries, corresponding to the file access permission bits (see acl(5)). Access Control Lists - JFS File Systems Only On JFS file systems that support access control lists, optional ACL entries are created corresponding to the parent directory's default ACL entries. Also, the parent directory's default ACL entries are copied as the new directory's default ACL entries (see aclv(5)). RETURN VALUE
returns one of the following values: Successful completion. Failure. An error code is stored in ERRORS
If fails, no directory is created and is set to one of the following values: A component of the path prefix denies search permission. The parent directory of the new directory denies write permission. User's or group's disk quota block or inode limit has been reached for this file system. The named file already exists. path points outside the process's allocated address space. The reliable detection of this error is implementation dependent. An I/O error occurred while writing to the file system. Too many symbolic links are encountered in translating the path name. The maximum number of links to the parent directory, would be exceeded. The length of the specified path name exceeds bytes, or the length of a component of the path name exceeds bytes while is in effect. A component of the path prefix does not exist. Not enough space on the file system. A component of the path prefix is not a directory. The named file resides on a read-only file system. AUTHOR
was developed by the University of California, Berkeley. SEE ALSO
acl(2), chmod(2), setacl(2), stat(2), umask(2), acl(5), aclv(5), limits(5). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
mkdir(2)
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