In <200002241840.NAA32351@foobar.resnet.gatech.edu> buddy@dookie.net (buddy@dookie.net) wrote:
>> On Thu, 24 Feb 2000, Harald Kirsch wrote:
>>
> <snip>
>>
>> Script started on Thu Feb 24 09:07:10 2000
>> $ pwd
>> /tmp
>> $ mkdir foo
>> $ mkdir foo/bat
>> $ ls
>> foo typescript
>> $ ls foo/*
>> $ cd foo
>> $ ls
>> bat
>> $ cd ..
>> $ ls
>> foo typescript
>> $ chmod 0 foo
>> $ ls
>> foo typescript
>> $ cd foo
>> bash: foo: Permission denied
>> $ ls foo/*
>> ls: foo/*: Permission denied
> Remember, directory permissions are NOT recursive. In this example,
> cd foo/bat
> will still work.
Of course it will not.
> you need to chmod -R if that's what you want to do :)
It depends from what you REALLY want to do :-) If you want to cd in foo/bat
you need eXecute permissions for foo and bat. If you want ls foo/bat then
Read permissions for bat are mandatory but foo can have only eXecute
permissions. 0 means "no permissions at all".
-
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Feb 29 2000 - 21:00:11 EST