On 6/4/07, Oleg Kobchenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
There is also a slight chance that not setting Execute
permission is controled by the zip program settings.

I'd classify this as a fairly significant chance.

At the cygwin prompt, type:
  umask

umask of 0000 means no permission changes.
Any 2s mean turn off execut permmission for that
person or group.  (From right to left is public,
group and user permission -- but I don't really know
what "group" means on windows -- probably the
right most two digits mean the same thing --
"everyone").

You can change umask by passing a simiilar
number to it on the command line.  Many cygwin
users probably have something like umask 022 in
/etc/profile (so it takes effect every time they start
a new shell).

--
Raul
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