On 3/21/99 9:44 AM, Palle Girgensohn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:

>Rick Zeman wrote:
>> 
>> On 3/21/99 9:17 AM, Eddie Irvine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
>> 
>> >Hi, Rick.
>> >
>> >I think you need to look at setting the "sticky bit" on any
>> >"global" directory - that is, any directory that is mounted
>> >by everyone - I assume you mean a directory called "/mac".
>> >man chmod.
>> 
>> Correct.  I actually just added another filesystem with /mac being the
>> mountpoint with perms of 667. man chmod doesn't mention anything about a
>> sticky bit. 
>
>Aren't you running Unix? Sorry, but what dialect of Un*x does not
>mention sticky bits in chmod(1)? Sounds funny... try chmod(2), perhaps?
>Here's excerpts from one of my chmod(1)s:

RedHat 5.2.  Info was in chmod(2), not in (1).  

[...]
>
>I use sticky bits a lot to share stuff between a group of users.
>Usually, i use the sticky group bit ( chmod g+s ) and add all users to
>that unix group, and somehow force an umask of 002. The umask stuff
>cannot be modified with netatalk, but it seems to use 002 by default, so
>that's OK. It would be great to have a config for this in netatalk,
>though... I use it with samba on the same volume.

Say I have a group called macusers with the mac users as the only 
members.  I do a chmod g+s macusers -R to apply that to the heirarchy.  
Right now, all of the files are owned by me (user rzeman) since I copied 
them in.
If I go to a differnet workstation, using a different login...I can still 
delete the files that I'm an owner of--as another user.  Gack.  I don't 
understand this.



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