Dave Howorth schreef op 11-04-16 23:06:
https://old-en.opensuse.org/How_to_share_directories_between_groups_of_users...
That is pretty awesome. Unusable without a GUI though. I didn't even know that thing existed man!! I have never seen anyone use it (online). I am a slight bit embarrassed. This actually solves my current problem completely. - I can just set "staff" group permissions on whatever tree I want - That doesn't even need to impact default permissions for the regular group - it works regardless of the sticky bit (I mean setgid bit). - it is transparent to everything else, and it allows default group permissions to be applied. That means not only does it give my owner/group permission, it also solves the issue of default permissions in the first place. If my web-application gets in trouble because it cannot change files I manually created, I can recursively give everything g+w and default g+w with just two commands. I don't really like the solution but it works like a breeze. It is like an overriding permission system. It just completely ignores existing permissions and just adds whatever I want to it. Want to give write permissions to the entire filesystem to my user? No issue. One command :p. LOL. It's that LS shows the additional permissions with a + at the end, or you could use this as a hacking tool in case you rooted something and just wanted to give your regular user a way to get back into root if you lost access :P. Like being able to edit the sudoers file or /shadow/passwd :P. AWESOME :P. "Wait, what's that + doing there? HEY!" haha. Thanks man :). -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org