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Chapter 22 File Security, Ownership, and Sharing
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If you share files with other users, it's good to be able to tell who
will own each file.
On BSD-based systems, this is even more important because
only the superuser can change file ownership (22.20
, 22.21
)
.
When you create a new file, it belongs to you.
When you append to a file with >>
file
, the owner doesn't change
because UNIX doesn't have to create a new file.
When you rename a file with mv
, the ownership doesn't change.
Exception: if you use mv
to move a file to
another filesystem (1.22
)
,
the moved file will belong to you - because, to move across filesystems,
mv
actually has to copy the file and delete the original.
When you copy a file,
the copy belongs to you because you created it (22.11
)
.
When you edit a file:
With an editor like
vi
(30.2
)
,
the file keeps its original
owner because a new file is never created.
An editor like
Emacs (32.1
)
,
which makes a backup copy, can be different.
The backup copy could belong to you or to the original owner.
If you replace the edited file with its backup, the file's ownership
might have changed:
% emacs filea
...Edit a lot, then decide you don't want your changes
...
% mv filea~ filea
If you aren't sure, use
ls -l
(22.2
)
.
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