On Sun, Apr 22, 2001 at 03:06:04PM -0700, Adam wrote:
> chmod the file to 777, this will allow anyone write permission to the file
> and thus you will be able to append to the file
file-mode 777 is ugo=rwx. You want 'chmod 666', which is ugo=rw.
read is 4
write is 2
execute is 1
If you want rw
chmod the file to 777, this will allow anyone write permission to the file
and thus you will be able to append to the file
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But when I try using the path to the file I get denied permission ...
How can I use my password then? Or can I bypass that in some way?
""Plutarck"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
9bupqt$b8s$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:9bupqt$b8s$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> When you are using that on your site, what
When you are using that on your site, what basically happens is that you are
trying to open an FTP session with yourself. Not too efficient.
So just kill off the url and use the path to your file.
--
Plutarck
Should be working on something...
...but forgot what it was.
""Joeri Vankelst"" <[EM
OTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, April 22, 2001 7:43 AM
Subject: [PHP] writing to file on server
> Hi,
>
> I've just started working with PHP. I've made a guest book using PHP
> (nothing spectacular) that worked just fine when I tested it op my pc, but
> when I uploaded it, i
Hi,
I've just started working with PHP. I've made a guest book using PHP
(nothing spectacular) that worked just fine when I tested it op my pc, but
when I uploaded it, it stopped working.
My specific problem is that I cannot write to a file that already exists and
contains data. When I try to I g
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