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chown(2)

creat(2)

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chmod(1)



          CHMOD(2)             INTERACTIVE UNIX System             CHMOD(2)



          NAME
               chmod - change mode of file

          SYNOPSIS
               int chmod (path, mode)
               char *path;
               int mode;

          DESCRIPTION
               The Path argument points to a path name naming a file.  The
               chmod system call sets the access permission portion of the
               named file's mode according to the bit pattern contained in
               mode.

               Access permission bits are interpreted as follows:

                    04000
                         Set user ID on execution.

                    020#0
                         Set group ID on execution if # is 7, 5, 3, or 1
                         Enable mandatory file/record locking if # is 6, 4,
                         2, or 0

                    01000
                         Save text image after execution.

                    00400
                         Read by owner.

                    00200
                         Write by owner.

                    00100
                         Execute (search if a directory) by owner.

                    00070
                         Read, write, execute  (search) by group.

                    00007
                         Read, write, execute  (search) by others.

               The effective user ID of the process must match the owner of
               the file or be super-user to change the mode of a file.

               If the effective user ID of the process is not super-user
               and the file is not a directory, mode bit 01000 (save text
               image on execution) is cleared.

               If the effective user ID of the process is not super-user
               and the effective group ID of the process does not match the
               group ID of the file, mode bit 02000 (set group ID on execu-
               tion) is cleared.


          Rev. C Software Development Set                            Page 1





          CHMOD(2)             INTERACTIVE UNIX System             CHMOD(2)



               If a 410 executable file has the sticky bit (mode bit 01000)
               set, the operating system will not delete the program text
               from the swap area when the last user process terminates.
               If a 413 executable file has the sticky bit set, the operat-
               ing system will not delete the program text from memory when
               the last user process terminates.  In either case, if the
               sticky bit is set, the text will already be available
               (either in a swap area or in memory) when the next user of
               the file executes it, thus making execution faster.

               Overall, if a directory is writable and has the sticky bit
               set, files within that directory can only be removed if one
               or more of the following is true [see unlink(2)]:

                    the user owns the file
                    the user owns the directory
                    the file is writable to the user
                    the user is the super-user

               If the mode bit 02000 (set group ID on execution) is set and
               the mode bit 00010 (execute or search by group) is not set,
               mandatory file/record locking will exist on a regular file.
               This may effect future calls to open(2), creat(2), read(2),
               and write(2) on this file.

               chmod will fail and the file mode will be unchanged if one
               or more of the following is true:

               [ENOTDIR]      A component of the path prefix is not a
                              directory.

               [ENOENT]       The named file does not exist.

               [EACCES]       Search permission is denied on a component of
                              the path prefix.

               [EPERM]        The effective user ID does not match the
                              owner of the file and the effective user ID
                              is not super-user.

               [EROFS]        The named file resides on a read-only file
                              system.

               [EFAULT]       Path points outside the allocated address
                              space of the process.

               [EINTR]        A signal was caught during the chmod system
                              call.

               [ENOLINK]      Path points to a remote machine and the link
                              to that machine is no longer active.

               [EMULTIHOP]    Components of path require hopping to


          Rev. C Software Development Set                            Page 2





          CHMOD(2)             INTERACTIVE UNIX System             CHMOD(2)



                              multiple remote machines.

          SEE ALSO
               chown(2), creat(2), fcntl(2), mknod(2), open(2), read(2),
               write(2).

               chmod(1) in the INTERACTIVE UNIX System User's/System
               Administrator's Reference Manual.

          DIAGNOSTICS
               Upon successful completion, a value of 0 is returned.  Oth-
               erwise, a value of -1 is returned and errno is set to indi-
               cate the error.










































          Rev. C Software Development Set                            Page 3



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