Thank you .  This works.
Steve

On 8/10/06, John Villalovos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 8/10/06, Steve Maguire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I tried the suggestion below and still have the same problem.
>
> I am a beginning linux user and am very suprised that changing the
> permissions and owners doesn't change the accessibility of this restore to
> the standard users.  Again, root can see the entire restored /music
> directory (including all subdirectories0, but other users get a "permission
> denied" message when they try to change to a subdirectory of /music.
>
> As root, I changed the ownership of the subdirectory /music/Music to
> steveadmin:music, then changed permissions with chmod 664 -R /music.
>
> The only change I made on the localhost.pl was to change the restore command
> to use ".=" as was suggested.

Directories have to have the 'x' execute permission on them for people
to change into them.

So really what you would want to do is:

# find /music -type d -print0 | xargs -0 chmod -v 0755

This will make sure that all directories have their permissions set to
0755 which means that the "other" permission field will be readable
and executable.

John



--
Thanks,
Steve
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