[02] WHAT ARE UNIX FILE PERMISSIONS AND HOW DO THEY WORK? UNIX treats directories, paging, memory, hardware devices, nearly everything as a FILE. Files have modes, and here they are explained. NOTE, this is just basic information and not complete. The following should be all you need to know about UNIX FILES. u g o l owner group bytes date file --------------------------------------------------------------- drwxr-xr-x 7 nova users 352 Jul 11 1992 /udd/nova UNIX treats everything (devices, directories, et cetera) as a file. u = user g = group o = other (everyone else) l = links d = directory t = sticky bit p = pipe owner = the user id who owns the file group = the group that owns the file You can use the chown, chmod and chgrp commands to modify files chmod (change mode) allows you to alter the permissions of a file using "u,g,o" .. for instance: chmod ou-rx /udd/nova would make the above file unreadable to other users and users in the "users" group. chmod ou+rwx /udd/nova would give all other users access to your directory (read and write). [[faq:unix|back]] Last Revision: 77c2c9e2413a201b322e21967718a7f7