6/23/11

Understanding UNIX permissions and chmod

Introduction
This is a topic that has been beaten to death both in books and on-line. For some reason, it seems that it is one of the most common misunderstandings that people have to face when learning how to write and/or configure their first cgi programs. This tutorial aims to clarify the concepts involved. Note that we will be referring to UNIX in a generic sense in this article. Most of what we are going to discuss here applies to all UNIX flavours. (such as Linux, SVR4, BSD etc.) It is also a good idea to type man chmod to check for the specific details on your system, too.
Users
A UNIX system serves many users. Users are an abstraction that denotes a logical entity for assignment of ownership and operation privileges over the system. A user may correspond to a real-world person, but also a type of system operation. So, in my system, I have user 'nick' that corresponds to me, but I also have user 'www' which corresponds to the privileges necessary to operate the local webserver. UNIX doesn't care about what the user means for me. It just knows what belongs to any given user and what each user is allowed to do with any given thing (file, program, device, etc) on the system. UNIX identifies each user by a User ID (UID) and the username (or login) such as 'nick' and 'www' is just an alias to the UID that makes humans more comfortable.

Groups

Users can be organized in groups. A user may belong to one or more groups of users. The concept of groups serves the purpose of assigning sets of privileges for a given resource and sharing them among many users that need to have them. (perhaps because they are all members of a project working team and they all need access to some common project files) So, on my system user 'nick' and user 'www' both belong to the group 'perlfect'. This way, they can have some shared privileges over the files for this site. User 'nick' needs them to edit the site, and user 'www' needs them to manage the webserver that will be publishing the site.

Ownership

Every file in UNIX has an owner user and an owner group. So, for any file in the system, user 'nick' may have one of the following ownership relations:

nick owns the file, i.e. the file's owner is 'nick'.
nick is a member of the group that owns the file, i.e. the file's owner group is 'perlfect'.
nick is neither the owner, nor belonging to the group that owns the file

Permissions

Every file on the system has associated with it a set of permissions. Permissions tell UNIX what can be done with that file and by whom. There are three things you can (or can't) do with a given file:

read it,
write (modify) it and
execute it.

Unix permissions specify which of the above operations can be performed for any ownership relation with respect to the file. In simpler terms, what can the owner do, what can the owner group do, and what can everybody else do with the file. For any given ownership relation, we need three bits to specify access permissions: the first to denote read (r) access, the second to denote (w) access and the third to denote execute (x) access. We have three ownership relations: 'owner', 'group' and 'all' so we need a triplet for each, resulting in nine bits. Each bit can be set or clear. (not set) We mark a set bit by it's corresponding operation letter (r, w or x) and a clear bit by a dash (-) and put them all on a row. An example might be rwxr-xr-x.What this means is that the owner can do anything with the file, but group owners and the rest of the world can only read or execute it. Usually in UNIX there is also another bit that precedes this 9-bit pattern. You do not need to know about it, at least for the time being.

So if you try ls -l on the command prompt you will get something like the following: [nick@thekla src]$ ls -l -rwxr-xr-x 1 nick users 382 Jan 19 11:49 bscoped.pl drwxr-xr-x 3 nick users 1024 Jan 19 11:19 lib/ -rwxr-xr-x 1 nick users 1874 Jan 19 10:23 socktest.pl

The first column here shows the permission bit pattern for each file. The third column shows the owner, and the fourth column shows the owner group. By the time, the information provided by ls -l should be enough for you to figure out what each user of the system can do with any of the files in the directory.

Directories

Another interesting thing to note is that lib/ which is a directory has permissions, too. Permissions take a different meaning for directories. Here's what they mean:

1) read determines if a user can view the directory's contents, i.e. do ls in it.
2)write determines if a user can create new files or delete file in the directory. (Note here that this essentially means that a user with write access toa directory can delete files in the directory even if he/she doesn't have write permissions for the file! So be careful with this.)
3)execute determines if the user can cd into the directory.

chmod


To set/modify a file's permissions you need to use the chmod program. Of course, only the owner of a file may use chmod to alter a file's permissions. chmod has the following syntax: chmod [options] mode file(s)

The 'mode' part specifies the new permissions for the file(s) that follow as arguments. A mode specifies which user's permissions should be changed, and afterwards which access types should be changed. Let's say for example: chmod a-x socktest.pl This means that the execute bit should be cleared (-) for all users. (owner, group and the rest of the world) The permissions start with a letter specifying what users should be affected by the change, this might be any of the following:

u the owner user
g the owner group
o others (neither u, nor g)
a all users


This is followed by a change instruction which consists of a +(set bit) or -(clear bit) and the letter corresponding to the bit that should be changed.

Let's see some examples:
$ ls -l socktest.pl
-rwxr-xr-x 1 nick users 1874 Jan 19 10:23 socktest.pl* $ chmod a-x socktest.pl
$ ls -l socktest.pl -rw-r--r-- 1 nick users 1874 Jan 19 10:23 socktest.pl $ chmod g+w socktest.pl $ ls -l socktest.pl -rw-rw-r-- 1 nick users 1874 Jan 19 10:23 socktest.pl
$ chmod ug+x socktest.pl
$ ls -l socktest.pl -rwxrwxr-- 1 nick users 1874 Jan 19 10:23 socktest.pl*
$ chmod ug-wx socktest.pl $ ls -l socktest.pl -r--r--r-- 1 nick users 1874 Jan 19 10:23 socktest.pl

Strange numbers...

You might have encountered things like chmod 755 somefile and of course you will be wondering what this is. The thing is, that you can change the entire permission pattern of a file in one go using one number like the one in this example. Every mode has a corresponding code number, and as we shall see there is a very simple way to figure out what number corresponds to any mode.

Every one of the three digits on the mode number corresponds to one of the three permission triplets. (u, g and o) Every permission bit in a triplet corresponds to a value: 4 for r, 2 for w, 1 for x. If the permission bit you add this value to the number of the permission triplet. If it is cleared, then you add nothing. (Some of you might notice that in fact, the number for a triplet is the octal value corresponding to the three-bit pattern - if you don't know what an octal value is, it doesn't really matter, just follow the intstructions) So if a file has rwxr-xr-x permissions we do the following calculation:

Triplet for u: rwx => 4 + 2 + 1 = 7
Triplet for g: r-x => 4 + 0 + 1 = 5
Tripler for o: r-x => 4 + 0 + 1 = 5
Which makes : 755

So, 755 is a terse way to say 'I don't mind if other people read or run this file, but only I should be able to modify it' and 777 means 'everyone has full access to this file'

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