unsaid0415@szmer.info to LinuxEnglish · 1 year agoYou can't cd or ls in a folder if you have no +x permissions on it. That is all. I wasted 3 hours of my life.message-squaremessage-square134fedilinkarrow-up1716arrow-down117
arrow-up1699arrow-down1message-squareYou can't cd or ls in a folder if you have no +x permissions on it. That is all. I wasted 3 hours of my life.unsaid0415@szmer.info to LinuxEnglish · 1 year agomessage-square134fedilink
minus-squarelloram239@feddit.delinkfedilinkarrow-up41arrow-down1·1 year agols reaction to this is unexpected: $ mkdir foo $ echo Foo > foo/file $ chmod a-x foo $ ls -l foo ls: cannot access 'foo/file': Permission denied total 0 -????????? ? ? ? ? ? file I expected to just get a “Permission denied”, but listing the content it can still do. So x is for following the name to the inode and r for listing directory content (i.e. just names)?
minus-squareZoidberg@lemm.eelinkfedilinkarrow-up2·1 year agoYou can still read the contents of the directory because you have -r on it. If you just run ls foo you’ll see your file on there, no problem. However, without -x you cannot read metadata in that directory. That’s why all information about the file shows as question marks.
ls
reaction to this is unexpected:$ mkdir foo $ echo Foo > foo/file $ chmod a-x foo $ ls -l foo ls: cannot access 'foo/file': Permission denied total 0 -????????? ? ? ? ? ? file
I expected to just get a “Permission denied”, but listing the content it can still do. So
x
is for following the name to the inode andr
for listing directory content (i.e. just names)?You can still read the contents of the directory because you have
-r
on it. If you just runls foo
you’ll see your file on there, no problem.However, without
-x
you cannot read metadata in that directory. That’s why all information about the file shows as question marks.