Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: privileges
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers privileges Post 88280 by paladaxar on Wednesday 2nd of November 2005 03:49:35 PM
Old 11-02-2005
privileges

I have a website that I am working on and one of the pages allows people to upload pictures to be used on other pages. My question is: is it safe to set the privileges to 777 on the folder that the pictures are saved in? Or would that open up my site to be hacked, bugged, wormed...and everything else that "creative coders" can come up with.

~Josh
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

User Privileges

I have used several Linux Flavors and now I need to know something. I have the ROOT user and then I have my personal user. What I need to do is for my normal user to be able to write files to directories where appearntly, only the root user has privileges. For example, to write files to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: gdboling
1 Replies

2. Programming

root privileges

Hi I have make a program that needs root privleges but any user can try to run it, so what I want it is, when any user tries( other than root ) to run the program, an input prompt would open to enter root password ( if user knows ) and program will run ( otherwise exit ), and after completing... (21 Replies)
Discussion started by: sumsin
21 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Regular account but with more privileges

I have 3 simple and regular accounts the privileges are ordinary They can't execute or write to differed account but can read from each other I will like to turn one of the accounts to be able to copy files to other account But not able to delete any file in other account only copy files ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: umen
2 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

ACL vs privileges

Hello genius..! what do y'all think of these questions...? help appreciated...! Access Control Lists and privileges.... # Why both file ACLs and user permissions/privileges (not to be confused with rights in ACLs) are used in Windows access control (why not just use one of these)? # In... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: heroine
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

root privileges

Hello, As admin with root rights, to execute any command from another user without password-ask, I do : su - <user> -c "<cmd>" But how can I do to give the same rights to another physical user without using root user ? :confused: I've try to create another user "toor" with the same primary... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: madmat
4 Replies

6. AIX

copy a fs with the same privileges

Hi All, I use "cp -R /fs/* /newfs" and I can copy everything except it won't have the files/directories the same privileges. Is there a trick to this without using a software-backup. Thanks in advance, itik (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: itik
3 Replies

7. Web Development

no privileges in phpMyAdmin

Salamo Alikom i had install MySQL 5.1.33 binary version for FreeBSD ,when i logging to phpMyAdmin as root i see no privilege to create database ,how can i solve this problem ? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: SIFE
1 Replies

8. Programming

Grant privileges in Oracle

i have installed oracle 10g and two databases. i enter database1 as sysdba and create a user called user1.i give the privileges as "select on" to user1. i enter sqlplus from the shell prompt. i enter as user1. but when i do "select * from emp" i have a "the table doesn't exist". how can i give... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: symeje
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Privileges like root

My English is no very good. I must make a bash scripting sh create like a backdoor, and when execute the script a user without privileges convert in super user or root, whithout introducing the password. In Spanish: Crear un script que sirva como puerta trasera al sistema, de manera que al... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kitievbr
1 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

X11 privileges

Hi What privileges I need to install X11? Or, in other words, can I install X11 without root privileges? The only user that installed X11 will use it. If it depends on OS version, here is the list of operating systems: Linux Red Hat Enterprise AS/ES 4.0/4.5/5 ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: lleontiev
1 Replies
PCOMPOS(1)						      General Commands Manual							PCOMPOS(1)

NAME
pcompos - composite RADIANCE pictures. SYNOPSIS
pcompos [ -h ][ -x xres ][ -y yres ][ -b r g b ][ -lh h ][ -la ] [ -t min1 ][ +t max1 ][ -l lab ][ =SS ] pic1 x1 y1 .. or pcompos [ -a ncols ][ -s spacing ][ -o x0 y0 ][ options ] pic1 pic2 .. DESCRIPTION
Pcompos arranges and composites RADIANCE pictures and sends the result to the standard output. Each input picture must be accompanied by an anchor point (unless the -a option is used, see below). This anchor point is the usually position of the picture's left lower corner in the final output, but can be changed for individual pictures with an =SS option, where S is one of '-', '+' or '0', indicating the minimum, maximum or center of the image, respectively. (For example, =+- would indicate the anchor is relative to the right lower corner, and =-0 would indicate the anchor is relative to the center of the left edge.) Negative anchor coordinates result in the input being cropped at the origin. By default, the size of the output picture will be just large enough to encompass all the input files. By specifying a smaller dimension using the -x and -y options, input files can be cropped at the upper boundary. Specifying a larger dimension produces a border. The -b option specifies a background color to appear wherever input files do not cover. The default value is black (0 0 0). The -h option may be used to reduce the information header size, which can grow disproportionately after multiple runs of pcompos and/or pcomb(1). If input files overlap, later pictures will overwrite earlier ones. By default, input files are copied unconditionally within the output boundaries. The -t option specifies a lower threshold intensity under which input pixels will not be copied to the output. The +t option specifies an upper threshold. These options are useful for cutting around irregular boundaries in the input. The -l option can be used to specify a label for a specific picture, which will be given a height determined by the -lh option (default 24 pixels) and placed in the upper left corner of the picture. This label is generated by the program psign(1). The -la option instructs pcompos to label each picture automatically by its name. This is particularly useful in conjunction with the -a option for producing a catalog of images (see example below). The -l option may still be used to override the default label for a picture. The -a option can be used to automatically compute anchor points that place successive pictures next to each other in ncols columns. The ordering will place the first picture in the lower left corner, the next just to the right of it, and so on for ncols pictures. Then, the next row up repeats the pattern until all the input pictures have been added to the output. If the pictures are of different size, pcompos will end up leaving some background areas in the output picture. There will also be an unfinished row at the top if the number of pictures is not evenly divided by ncols. The -s N option will cause each image to be separated by at least N pixels. The -o x0 y0 option specifies a nonzero anchor point for the bottom left image. The standard input can be specified with a hyphen ('-'). A command that produces a RADIANCE picture can be given in place of a file by preceeding it with an exclamation point ('!'). EXAMPLE
To put a copyright label at the bottom of a picture: psign Copyright 1987 | pcompos inp.hdr 0 0 +t .5 - 384 64 > out.hdr To make a catalog of images separated by white 10-pixel borders: pcompos -la -a 4 -s 10 -b 1 1 1 dog*.hdr > alldogs.hdr NOTES
Since there is a limit to the number of open files and processes, large collections of images must be created in stages. Even if the sys- tem limit on open files is large, pcompos places an artificial limit of 1024 on the number of open files and/or processes. AUTHOR
Greg Ward SEE ALSO
getinfo(1), pcomb(1), pfilt(1), psign(1), rpict(1) RADIANCE
12/18/97 PCOMPOS(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:54 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy