For your information. Once you set file/folder permission chmod 777 at upper directory e.g /opt it will inherete the same file/folder permission chmod 777 the rest of directories available in e.g /opt directories tree.
*
Regards,
________________________________
From: Amit Awasthi <amit.awasthi17@gmail.com>
To: General Red Hat Linux discussion list <redhat-list@redhat.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2011 6:25 PM
Subject: Re: Permission inheritance problem
You can give 777 instead of 766...it should work..
Thanks,
Amit
On Fri, Nov 18, 2011 at 11:07 AM, kavya <kavya.g4@gmail.com> wrote:
> *Hi all*,
>
>* * * * * Am working with file permission I have a query,
>
> usually on /mnt normal users will not be having permission to write so I
> gave permission such as
> #chmod 766 /mnt
> #chmod go+t /mnt* * I have enabled a sticky bit on /mnt* for group and
> others, as sticky bit is set, even the files and folders under /mnt can not
> be deleted by others even if they have complete permissions and no sticky
> bit is set for files under /mnt, is there any option to allow users to
> delete only particular files ?????
>
>
>* * * * * * * Thanks,
>
>* * * * * * * * * * Kavya
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Amit Awasthi | IT Department | SmartbuzzInc | Ph:* 978-068-1431 |
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