Xeno Campanoli wrote:
phyrster wrote:
Hi Debianers,
Hmm. Does that make us all Debianaire?
After an installation of Realplayer in /usr, I noticed that file
permissions
under this dir is changed. Particulary, users can't read into
/usr/bin and I
suspect that /usr/sbin is affected as well.
I've got 755 setting for these directories, so you change these back
to that with
chmod 755 /usr/*bin,
but be careful, as if you have added another directory (unlikely) like
/usr/xbin, it will affect that too, so more safe is:
chmod 755 /usr/bin
chmod 755 /usr/bin
The meaning for each digit is for user, group, and other,
respectively, where the 4 bit is for read, the 2 is for write, and the
1 is for executable permissions. Hence group and other can read these
directories in these cases, as well as execute from them. You
probably want at least execute privileges in these directories, and
read doesn't likely hurt as it's the same software as on hundreds of
other machines around the world, but setting 711 would make group and
other be execute only.
Could anyone tell me what is the default permissions of these three
directories in Sarge: /usr /usr/bin /usr/sbin. And preferably the
command
that sets permissions. chmod command is a bit scaring as I am still
learning
the most efficient parameters/options to run this command for such
task.
I've got 755 for /usr too.
Thank you.
Glad to make a contribution.
xc
bxuef
--
Xeno Campanoli, [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.eskimo.com/~xeno
The Internet: I'd rather have Al invent it than have George take it over.
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