> Then use chown():
>
>chown LIST
>Changes the owner (and group) of a list of files. [...]
Thanks, Brian and Ron. That was fast!
peace, || Uttaranchal: Electricity from 7th century water mills:
--{kr.pA} || http://tinyurl.com/yufep
--
What difference doe
> "KS" == Kripa Sundar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
KS> I want to do a chgrp() without invoking a child process.
KS> I had assumed that chgrp() is a C function with a perl
KS> equivalent, just the same as chown() and chmod() are.
KS> But I am clearly mistaken.
unfortunately so.
KS>
On Nov 24, 2004, at 1:15 AM, Kripa Sundar wrote:
I want to do a chgrp() without invoking a child process.
perldoc -f chown says:
chown LIST
Changes the owner (and group) of a list of files. The
first
two elements of the list must be the numeric uid and
gid, in
On Wed, Nov 24, 2004 at 01:15:35AM -0500, Kripa Sundar wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I want to do a chgrp() without invoking a child process.
Then use chown():
chown LIST
Changes the owner (and group) of a list of files. The first
two elements of the list must be
Hello all,
I want to do a chgrp() without invoking a child process.
I had assumed that chgrp() is a C function with a perl
equivalent, just the same as chown() and chmod() are.
But I am clearly mistaken.
--\/BEGIN-\/--
% man -l chgrp
chgrp
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