** Description changed:

  Binary package hint: nautilus
  
  Release: 8.10
  
  I'am not sure that nautilus is only one package implied. My nautilus
  version is 1:2.24.1-0ubuntu1
  
  Description of problem :
  
  I have 2 users : user-a and user-b (with respective first group: groups 
group-a and group-b)
  they are both in third group named common-group.
  
  Their own HomeDirectory are : (ls -l /home/user*)
  drwxrwx--- 5 user-a group-a  4096 2009-04-20 14:00 user-a
  drwxrwx--- 5 user-b group-b  4096 2009-04-20 14:02 user-b
  and umask 007
  
  The common directory : (ls -l /home/common*)
  drwxrws--- 2 root common-group 4096 2009-04-20 14:03 common-directory
  (chmod 2770)
  
  So, when I copy or move some files or directories from the
  HomeDirectories with CLI (cp or mv), setgid bit is preserved and owner
  group too.
  
  But if I copy-paste or drag'n drop from nautilus, directories or files
  moved/copied keep old owner group and old permissions (without setgid
  bit).
  
- This Problem is same for a deported or local filesystem (nfs / two local
- partition of a same hard drive / two directories of a same parititon / a
+ This Problem is same for a deported or local filesystem (nfs / to local
+ partition of a same hard drive / to directories of a same parititon / a
  local parititon and an usb key).
  
  Exemple:
  
  ~$ ls -l /home/*
  /home/common-directory/:
  total 0
  
  /home/user-a/:
  total 4
  drwxrwx--- 2 user-a group-a 4096 2009-04-21 17:07 user-a.dir
  -rw-rw---- 1 user-a group-a    0 2009-04-21 17:08 user-a.file
  
  /home/user-b/:
  total 4
  drwxrwx--- 2 user-b group-b 4096 2009-04-21 17:07 user-b.dir
  -rw-rw---- 1 user-b group-b    0 2009-04-21 17:07 user-b.file
  ~$ su user-a
  user-a: ~$ umask
  0007
  user-a: ~$ cp -rv * ../common-directory/
  `user-a.dir' -> `../common-directory/user-a.dir'
  `user-a.file' -> `../common-directory/user-a.file'
  user-a: ~$ ls -l ../common-directory/
  total 4
  drwxrws--- 2 user-a common-group 4096 2009-04-21 17:15 user-a.dir
  -rw-rw---- 1 user-a common-group    0 2009-04-21 17:15 user-a.file
  
  
  So when I'm log in gnome with User "user-b" and I copy paste through nautilus 
the files in my home directory, the result is bellow :
  
  user-a: ~$ ls -l ../common-directory/
  total 8
  drwxrws--- 2 user-a common-group 4096 2009-04-21 17:15 user-a.dir
  -rw-rw---- 1 user-a common-group    0 2009-04-21 17:15 user-a.file
  drwxrwx--- 2 user-b common-group 4096 2009-04-21 17:24 user-b.dir
  -rw-rw---- 1 user-b group-b         0 2009-04-21 17:24 user-b.file
  
  Then, owner group isn't good for file copied from nautilus interface and
  setgid bit isn't present for direcory...
  
  NB: I tried to use gvfs-copy command. Result is good for file (good owner 
group, good permissions) but with directory, error message is :
  "Impossible to copy a repertory recursively"
  
  Thanks in advance for fix :)

** Description changed:

  Binary package hint: nautilus
  
  Release: 8.10
  
  I'am not sure that nautilus is only one package implied. My nautilus
  version is 1:2.24.1-0ubuntu1
  
  Description of problem :
  
  I have 2 users : user-a and user-b (with respective first group: groups 
group-a and group-b)
  they are both in third group named common-group.
  
  Their own HomeDirectory are : (ls -l /home/user*)
  drwxrwx--- 5 user-a group-a  4096 2009-04-20 14:00 user-a
  drwxrwx--- 5 user-b group-b  4096 2009-04-20 14:02 user-b
  and umask 007
  
  The common directory : (ls -l /home/common*)
  drwxrws--- 2 root common-group 4096 2009-04-20 14:03 common-directory
  (chmod 2770)
  
  So, when I copy or move some files or directories from the
  HomeDirectories with CLI (cp or mv), setgid bit is preserved and owner
  group too.
  
  But if I copy-paste or drag'n drop from nautilus, directories or files
  moved/copied keep old owner group and old permissions (without setgid
  bit).
  
- This Problem is same for a deported or local filesystem (nfs / to local
- partition of a same hard drive / to directories of a same parititon / a
+ This Problem is same for a deported or local filesystem (nfs / two local
+ partition of a same hard drive / two directories of a same parititon / a
  local parititon and an usb key).
  
  Exemple:
  
  ~$ ls -l /home/*
  /home/common-directory/:
  total 0
  
  /home/user-a/:
  total 4
  drwxrwx--- 2 user-a group-a 4096 2009-04-21 17:07 user-a.dir
  -rw-rw---- 1 user-a group-a    0 2009-04-21 17:08 user-a.file
  
  /home/user-b/:
  total 4
  drwxrwx--- 2 user-b group-b 4096 2009-04-21 17:07 user-b.dir
  -rw-rw---- 1 user-b group-b    0 2009-04-21 17:07 user-b.file
  ~$ su user-a
  user-a: ~$ umask
  0007
  user-a: ~$ cp -rv * ../common-directory/
  `user-a.dir' -> `../common-directory/user-a.dir'
  `user-a.file' -> `../common-directory/user-a.file'
  user-a: ~$ ls -l ../common-directory/
  total 4
  drwxrws--- 2 user-a common-group 4096 2009-04-21 17:15 user-a.dir
  -rw-rw---- 1 user-a common-group    0 2009-04-21 17:15 user-a.file
  
  
  So when I'm log in gnome with User "user-b" and I copy paste through nautilus 
the files in my home directory, the result is bellow :
  
  user-a: ~$ ls -l ../common-directory/
  total 8
  drwxrws--- 2 user-a common-group 4096 2009-04-21 17:15 user-a.dir
  -rw-rw---- 1 user-a common-group    0 2009-04-21 17:15 user-a.file
  drwxrwx--- 2 user-b common-group 4096 2009-04-21 17:24 user-b.dir
  -rw-rw---- 1 user-b group-b         0 2009-04-21 17:24 user-b.file
  
  Then, owner group isn't good for file copied from nautilus interface and
  setgid bit isn't present for direcory...
  
  NB: I tried to use gvfs-copy command. Result is good for file (good owner 
group, good permissions) but with directory, error message is :
  "Impossible to copy a repertory recursively"
  
  Thanks in advance for fix :)

-- 
copies don't respect setuid and setgid settings
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/364683
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to