On Mon, Apr 20, 2009 at 12:17 PM, Alex Smith (K4RNT) <[email protected]
> wrote:

> *Very* weird. I thought owner could change permissions even if he
> accidentally did that to himself...
>
> Hmmm. Guess it depends on the OS or the filesystem.
>
> You got me. Wish I could help you.
>
>
> On Mon, Apr 20, 2009 at 11:15 AM, Andrew Farnsworth <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> Hey everyone,
>>   We had a minor problem here at work and I thought I would bounce this
>> off the list.  By accident, a user changed permissions to 077 rather than
>> 777 on a temporary directory in /tmp giving the following results.
>>
>> d---rwxrwx 2 abc111 gabcd     4096 Apr 20 12:08 dstpatch
>>
>> Now that user cannot change the permissions, cannot delete the directory,
>> cannot read or write the directory.  As a member of the group "gabcd" and
>> since the world has rwx permissions on this directory, why can she not
>> change the permissions and / or access the directory at all?  I am a member
>> of the group and can create files in the directory or delete files out of
>> the directory but I cannot rename or delete the directory itself and cannot
>> change permissions on it.  Outside of the root user doing a chmod (and this
>> includes using sudo), is there any way to resolve this issue?
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Andy
>>
>
Just to be complete:

Linux <server name removed to protect the innocent> 2.6.18-92.1.22.el5 #1
SMP Fri Dec 5 09:29:46 EST 2008 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux

RHEL incase anyone doesn't recognize it.

Andy

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