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Date:      Fri, 09 May 2003 12:07:51 -0500
From:      Chris Pressey <cpressey@catseye.mb.ca>
To:        Paul Lathrop <plathrop@mqtweb.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Simple / Stupid File Permissions Question
Message-ID:  <20030509120751.5d591b61.cpressey@catseye.mb.ca>
In-Reply-To: <C9881019-823C-11D7-9266-000393BF3DE2@mqtweb.com>
References:  <C9881019-823C-11D7-9266-000393BF3DE2@mqtweb.com>

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On Fri, 9 May 2003 12:39:22 -0400
Paul Lathrop <plathrop@mqtweb.com> wrote:

> I have a simple/stupid question regarding permissions.
> 
> What I would like is the following: I have a directory called
> group_dir that I would like all members of a group to be able to work
> in. However, I find that whenever someone creates a file in that
> directory, it is not set group writable. I know the user's umask
> setting affects this, but I don't want to change that - then ALL their
> files would come out group writable. Basically, I want all files in
> group_dir to be readable and writable by group members by default,
> including newly created files. Is there a way to do this? I thought up
> a kludge to use cron to periodically run chmod -R... but that is so
> ugly I don't really want to do it that way.
> 
> Thanks for your assistance,
> 
> Paul D. Lathrop

Hello,

Not a solution, but a suggesion for a better kludge might be to use
/usr/ports/sysutils/wait_on to watch the directory for changes.

Unfortunately, I don't think wait_on can watch for changes at any depth
in a directory hierarchy, only at the top level.  (I'd love to be proven
wrong, though.)  That limits its usefulness, but if you don't care
about subdirectories, it might be workable.

-Chris



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