I'm talking about possibly thousands of files and mostly binaries. I am working on using <cfexecute> and the cp command to get around this.
Shawn -----Original Message----- From: Margaret Fisk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, July 11, 2002 3:07 PM To: CF-Talk Subject: RE: <cffile> copy problem It will only get you the text of the file and probably lose some formatting, but you could read it and then output a new file using the file contents couldn't you? -----Original Message----- From: Shawn McKee [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, July 11, 2002 1:08 PM To: CF-Talk Subject: RE: <cffile> copy problem No joy, still won't copy a file that I don't have write permissions for. Shawn -----Original Message----- From: Chris Norloff [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, July 11, 2002 8:49 AM To: Shawn McKee Subject: RE: <cffile> copy problem Yeah, the attributes parameter looks like a Windows-only thing. ---------- Original Message ---------------------------------- From: Shawn McKee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Thu, 11 Jul 2002 08:40:44 -0500 >This actually comes from the custom tag local_to_local. In looking at it I >am wondering if it is the combination of the attributes and the mode in the >same tag. I am betting I added the mode and left the attributes. > ><cffile action="COPY" source="#Dir#/#Name#" >destination="#attributes.DestDir#/#NewFile#" attributes="normal" mode="664"> > >Shawn > > >-----Original Message----- >From: Chris Norloff [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] >Sent: Thursday, July 11, 2002 8:35 AM >To: Shawn McKee >Subject: RE: <cffile> copy problem > > >Ah, yes, I agree - your CF is running as userid cfadm. Sounds like Linux >itself is happy with what you've got. > >Do you have a mode parameter in your cffile statement? > >Here's one I use: > ><cffile >action="append" >file="myfilename" >mode="644" >addnewline="Yes" >output="blah blah blah"> > >---------- Original Message ---------------------------------- >From: Shawn McKee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Date: Thu, 11 Jul 2002 08:16:54 -0500 > >>I'll check that but when it does successfully copy the files the end up as >>owned by cfadm not by nobody thus my assumption that it was running as >>cfadm. >> >>Shawn >> >> >>-----Original Message----- >>From: Chris Norloff [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] >>Sent: Thursday, July 11, 2002 7:59 AM >>To: CF-Talk; [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>Subject: Re: <cffile> copy problem >> >> >>CF (on Solaris, anyway) runs as userid nobody. So the permissions have to >>be right for "nobody" for cffile to work. >> >>Chris Norloff >> >> >>---------- Original Message ---------------------------------- >>from: Shawn McKee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>date: Wed, 10 Jul 2002 19:00:20 -0500 >> >>>I am trying to copy a file on a Linux system that has read permissions at >>>the group level (644 specifically). I can log into the box and su to >cfadm >>>and make the copy just fine. If I try and do it with the <cffile> tag I >>get >>>a permission denied. If I change the file permissions to read, write at >>the >>>group level (774) all is OK. The write permission at group should not >>>impact my ability to read and copy the file. >>> >>>Any ideas? >>> >>>Shawn McKee >>>Manager, Web Development >>>NewsStand, Inc. >>>8620 Burnet Rd., Suite 100 >>>Austin, TX 78757 USA >>>512-334-5100 >>>Read newspapers and magazines from around the world in a whole new way. >>>NewsStand delivers them to your PC without paper and without delay! >>>Try: http://www.newsstand.com?NSEMC=EMNSI000001 >>> >>> >>> >>> ______________________________________________________________________ Get the mailserver that powers this list at http://www.coolfusion.com FAQ: http://www.thenetprofits.co.uk/coldfusion/faq Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/ Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/index.cfm?sidebar=lists

