If I understand you correctly, you want to change the permissions on
your local files.

Type an exclamation mark to issue the command to your local system:

!chmod 0770 myDirPath

That is how I'd do it on a *nix system; I have little experience using
cygwin but I gather it's the same.


On 9/30/07, michal.720 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> I'm just playing with lftp on Windows using cygwin. The path
> /cygdrive/c/ is a shortcut to C:\
>
> I use this command to synchronize my project with remote server.
>
> lftp -c '
>   open sftp://user:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/path/to/dir/
>   lcd /cygdrive/c/path/to/dir/;
>   mirror -R --no-perms
> ';
>
> In this case (if there's --no-perms) files are 0644, directories are 0755.
>
>
>
> If I use this command (without --no-perms) files and dirs are 0700:
>
> lftp -c '
>   open sftp://user:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/path/to/dir/
>   lcd /cygdrive/c/path/to/dir/;
>   mirror -R
> ';
>
>
> Is there a way how to chown all files to let say 0660 and all dirs to
> 0770? I know there's a chmod command but I don't know how to use it for
> dir os files only.
>
>
> Thanks.
> Michal
>


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