Eve Atley wrote:
First question...
We have people SSHing into our Linux box from overseas (India to US, company
access only). But files that are uploaded from these people become read-only
to anyone else accessing them. We *require* that they be readable/writable
by this side of the pond (US). How
Question 2:
Try the following:
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I use this to fix permissions on a Samba box - you will have to modify or drop the
chown line t
On Fri, 10 Dec 2004, Jim Nelson wrote:
> Eve Atley wrote:
> > First question...
> > We have people SSHing into our Linux box from overseas (India to US, company
> > access only). But files that are uploaded from these people become read-only
> > to anyone else accessing them. We *require* that the
On Thu, 9 Dec 2004, Eve Atley wrote:
> First question...
> We have people SSHing into our Linux box from overseas (India to US, company
> access only). But files that are uploaded from these people become read-only
> to anyone else accessing them. We *require* that they be readable/writable
> by
Eve Atley wrote:
First question...
We have people SSHing into our Linux box from overseas (India to US, company
access only). But files that are uploaded from these people become read-only
to anyone else accessing them. We *require* that they be readable/writable
by this side of the pond (US). How
Ray Olszewski a écrit :
>
> So you want an uploaded file to be mode 777, writable (and executable,
> if you really mean 777, not 666) by any user on the system? OK. Change
> the account's umask, in ./.profile, or ./.bashrc, or whatever
> user-specific file is appropriate to your setup.
I would al
At 04:11 PM 12/9/2004 -0500, Eve Atley wrote:
First question...
We have people SSHing into our Linux box from overseas (India to US, company
access only). But files that are uploaded from these people become read-only
to anyone else accessing them. We *require* that they be readable/writable
by thi
At 12/9/2004 04:11 PM -0500, Eve Atley wrote:
Second question...
How can I recursively set all files/directories to 777?
Chmod -R 777 *.* ... Didn't seem to hit everything.
"Linux is not Windows." Lots of filenames on Linux (and other Unix-ish
systems) don't have a period in them.
If you *really
First question...
We have people SSHing into our Linux box from overseas (India to US, company
access only). But files that are uploaded from these people become read-only
to anyone else accessing them. We *require* that they be readable/writable
by this side of the pond (US). How can I set this t